[The Mill on the Floss by George Eliot]@TWC D-Link bookThe Mill on the Floss CHAPTER VII 2/35
But Bessy was always weak! So if Mrs.Glegg's front to-day was more fuzzy and lax than usual, she had a design under it: she intended the most pointed and cutting allusion to Mrs.Tulliver's bunches of blond curls, separated from each other by a due wave of smoothness on each side of the parting. Mrs.Tulliver had shed tears several times at sister Glegg's unkindness on the subject of these unmatronly curls, but the consciousness of looking the handsomer for them naturally administered support.
Mrs.Glegg chose to wear her bonnet in the house to-day,--untied and tilted slightly, of course--a frequent practice of hers when she was on a visit, and happened to be in a severe humor: she didn't know what draughts there might be in strange houses.
For the same reason she wore a small sable tippet, which reached just to her shoulders, and was very far from meeting across her well-formed chest, while her long neck was protected by a _chevaux-de-frise_ of miscellaneous frilling.
One would need to be learned in the fashions of those times to know how far in the rear of them Mrs.Glegg's slate-colored silk gown must have been; but from certain constellations of small yellow spots upon it, and a mouldy odor about it suggestive of a damp clothes-chest, it was probable that it belonged to a stratum of garments just old enough to have come recently into wear. Mrs.Glegg held her large gold watch in her hand with the many-doubled chain round her fingers, and observed to Mrs.Tulliver, who had just returned from a visit to the kitchen, that whatever it might be by other people's clocks and watches, it was gone half-past twelve by hers. "I don't know what ails sister Pullet," she continued.
"It used to be the way in our family for one to be as early as another,--I'm sure it was so in my poor father's time,--and not for one sister to sit half an hour before the others came.
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