[Warlock o’ Glenwarlock by George MacDonald]@TWC D-Link bookWarlock o’ Glenwarlock CHAPTER IX 12/13
If after that he read a chapter of his Bible, it was no more than was required by many a parent of many a boy who got little good of the task; but Cosmo's father had never enjoined it, on him; and when next he knelt down at his bedside, he did not merely "say his prayers." Then he took his slate, to try after something Aggie had made him know he did not understand:--for the finding of our own intellectual defects, nothing is like trying to teach another.
But before long, certain sensations began, to warn him there was an invention in the world called breakfast, and laying his slate aside, he went to the kitchen, where he found Grizzie making the porridge. "Min' ye pit saut eneuch in't the day, Grizzie," he said.
"It was unco wersh yesterday." "An' what was't like thestreen (yestere'en), Cosmo ?" asked the old woman, irritated at being found fault with in a matter wherein she counted herself as near perfection as ever mortal could come. "I had nane last nicht, ye min'," answered Cosmo, "I was oot a' the evenin'." "An' whaur got ye yer supper ?" "Ow, I didna want nane.
Hoot! I'm forgettin'! Aggie gied me a quarter o' breid as I cam by, or rather as I cam awa', efter giein' her a han' wi' her algebra." "What ca' ye that for a lass bairn to be takin' up her time wi'! I never h'ard o' sic a thing! What's the natur' o' 't, Cosmo ?" He tried to give her some far-off idea of the sort of thing algebra was, but apparently without success, for she cried at length, "Na, sirs! I hae h'ard o' cairts, an' bogles, an' witchcraft, an' astronomy, but sic a thing as this ye bring me noo, I never did hear tell o'! What can the warl' be comin' till!--An' dis the father o' ye, laddie, ken what ye spen' yer midnicht hoors gangin' teachin' to the lass-bairns o' the country roon' ?" She was interrupted by the entrance of the laird, and they sat down to breakfast.
The grandmother within the last year had begun to take hers in her own room. Grizzie was full of anxiety to know what the laird would say to the discovery she had just made, but she dared not hazard allusion to the CONDUCT of his son, and must therefore be content to lead the conversation in the direction of it, hoping it might naturally appear.
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