[Pearl-Maiden by H. Rider Haggard]@TWC D-Link bookPearl-Maiden CHAPTER V 10/14
Oh! it would not be difficult for all their high talk; I have learned as much as that, for Nature is apt to make a mock of those who deny Nature, and there is no parchment rule that a woman cannot bring to nothing.
Yet, since they mean well, laugh at them and let them be, say I.And now come into the house, which is good, although did women manage it, it would be better." So Nehushta went into that house with the nurse and her husband, and there for several days dwelt in great comfort.
Indeed, there was nothing that she or the child, or those with them, could want which was not provided in plenty.
Messages reached her even, through the woman, to ask if she would wish the rooms altered in any way, and when she said that there was not light enough in that in which the child slept, some of the elders of the Essenes arrived and pierced a new window in the wall, working very hard to finish the task before sunset.
Also even the husband of the nurse was not allowed to attend to his own beasts, which were groomed and fed for him, till at length he grew so weary of doing nothing, that on the third day he went out to plough with the Essenes and worked in the fields till dark. It was on the fourth morning that the full Court gathered in the great meeting-house, and Nehushta was summoned to appear before it, bringing the babe with her.
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