[Mercy Philbrick’s Choice by Helen Hunt Jackson]@TWC D-Link book
Mercy Philbrick’s Choice

CHAPTER I
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Often we see the tacit recognition of its uselessness in an old gate shoved back to its farthest, and left standing so till the very grass roots have embanked themselves on each side of it, and it can never again be closed without digging away the sods in which it is wedged.

The gate on which Stephen White was leaning had stood open in that way for years before Stephen rented the house; had stood open, in fact, ever since old Billy Jacobs, the owner of the house, had been carried out of it dead, in a coffin so wide that at first the bearers had thought it could not pass through the gate; but by huddling close, three at the head and three at the feet, they managed to tug the heavy old man through without taking down the palings.

This was so long ago that now there was nobody left who remembered Billy Jacobs distinctly, except his widow, who lived in a poor little house on the outskirts of the town, her only income being that derived from the renting of the large house, in which she had once lived in comfort with her husband and son.
The house was a double house; and for a few years Billy Jacobs's twin brother, a sea captain, had lived in the other half of it.

But Mrs.Billy could not abide Mrs.John, and so with a big heart wrench the two brothers, who loved each other as only twin children can love, had separated.

Captain John took his wife and went to sea again.


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