[The Daisy Chain by Charlotte Yonge]@TWC D-Link bookThe Daisy Chain CHAPTER II 5/11
Come, do lend me them." "I'm sure I shan't let you wear them," said Harry.
"I shan't go, if you choose to make yourself such an object." "Ah!" said the father, "the boys thought it time to put a stop to it when it came to a caricature of the little doctor in petticoats." "Yes, in Norman's Lexicon," said Ethel, "a capital likeness of you, papa; but I never could get him to tell me who drew it." Nor did Ethel know that that caricature had been the cause of the black eye that Harry had brought home last summer.
Harry returned, to protest that he would not join the walk, if she chose to be seen in the spectacles, while she undauntedly continued her petition, though answered that she would attract the attacks of the quarrymen, who would take her for an attenuated owl. "I wish you were obliged to go about without them yourself, papa!" cried Ethel, "and then you would know how tiresome it is not to see twice the length of your own nose." "Not such a very short allowance either," said the doctor quaintly, and therewith the dinner concluded.
There was apt to be a race between the two eldest girls for the honour of bringing down the baby; but this time their father strode up three steps at once, turned at the top of the first flight, made his bow to them, and presently came down with his little daughter in his arms, nodded triumphantly at the sisters, and set her down on her mother's lap. "There, Maggie, you are complete, you old hen-and-chicken daisy.
Can't you take her portrait in the character, Margaret ?" "With her pink cap, and Blanche and Aubrey as they are now, on each side ?" said Flora. "Margaret ought to be in the picture herself," said Ethel.
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