[The Daisy Chain by Charlotte Yonge]@TWC D-Link book
The Daisy Chain

CHAPTER VI
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It ended when ten o'clock struck, and he went down--Margaret hearing the bell, the sounds of the assembling servants, the shutting of the door, the stillness of prayer-time, the opening again, the feet moving off in different directions, then brothers and sisters coming in to kiss her and bid her good-night, nurse and Flora arranging her for the night, Flora coming to sleep in her little bed in the corner of the room, and, lastly, her father's tender good-night, and melancholy look at her, and all was quiet, except the low voices and movements as Richard attended him in his own room.
Margaret could think: "Dear, dear Ethel, how noble and high she is! But I am afraid! It is what people call a difficult, dangerous age, and the grander she is, the greater danger of not managing her rightly.

If those high purposes should run only into romance like mine, or grow out into eccentricities and unfemininesses, what a grievous pity it would be! And I, so little older, so much less clever, with just sympathy enough not to be a wise restraint--I am the person who has the responsibility, and oh, what shall I do?
Mamma trusted to me to be a mother to them, papa looks to me, and I so unfit, besides this helplessness.

But God sent it, and put me in my place.

He made me lie here, and will raise me up if it is good, so I trust He will help me with my sisters." "Grant me to have a right judgment in all things, and evermore to rejoice in Thy holy comfort.".


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