[Ruth by Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell]@TWC D-Link bookRuth CHAPTER XII 24/25
We have about eighteen miles of plain, and then we come to the moors and the rising ground, amidst which Eccleston lies.
I wish we were there, for my brother is sadly tired." The first wonder in Ruth's mind was, why then, if Mr Benson were so tired, did they not stop where they were for the night; for she knew little of the expenses of a night at an inn.
The next thought was, to beg that Mr Benson would take her place inside the coach, and allow her to mount up by Miss Benson.
She proposed this, and Miss Benson was evidently pleased. "Well, if you're not tired, it would make a rest and a change for him, to be sure; and if you were by me I could show you the first sight of Eccleston, if we reach there before it is quite dark." So Mr Benson got down, and changed places with Ruth. She hardly yet understood the numerous small economies which he and his sister had to practise--the little daily self-denials,--all endured so cheerfully, and simply, that they had almost ceased to require an effort, and it had become natural to them to think of others before themselves.
Ruth had not understood that it was for economy that their places had been taken on the outside of the coach, while hers, as an invalid requiring rest, was to be the inside; and that the biscuits which supplied the place of a dinner were, in fact, chosen because the difference in price between the two would go a little way towards fulfilling their plan for receiving her as an inmate.
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