[A Young Girl’s Wooing by E. P. Roe]@TWC D-Link book
A Young Girl’s Wooing

CHAPTER XVIII
5/20

What's more, she had seen it done.

But most people are so pointless and shiftless that they never know just what to do in an emergency, no matter what their opportunities for information may have been." "Now you hit me," Graydon remarked, ruefully, "Left to myself I should have finished the young one, for I was about to run to the hotel with her, a course that I now see would have been as fatal as idiotic." "Madge says," Mrs.Muir continued, "that they used to bathe a great deal, and that Mr.Wayland explained just what should be done in all the possible emergencies of their outdoor life at Santa Barbara." "Wayland in a level-headed man.

If he is bookish, he's not a dreamer with his head in the clouds.

Madge was in good hands with them, and proves it every day." "I think she shows the influence of Mrs.Wayland even more than that of her husband.

Fanny is a very accomplished woman, and saw a great deal of society in her younger days." "Confound it all! Why didn't you tell me that Madge had been living with two paragons ?" said Graydon.
"Oh, you have been so occupied with another paragon that there has not been much chance to tell you anything," was Mrs.Muir's consoling reply.
"Madge has not been made what she is by paragons," Mr.Muir remarked, dryly.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books