[The Tenant of Wildfell Hall by Anne Bronte]@TWC D-Link book
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall

CHAPTER VII
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If you couldn't afford to occupy the whole house, and have it mended up, why couldn't you take a neat little cottage ?' 'Perhaps I was too proud, Mr.Fergus,' replied she, smiling; 'perhaps I took a particular fancy for this romantic, old-fashioned place--but, indeed, it has many advantages over a cottage--in the first place, you see, the rooms are larger and more airy; in the second place, the unoccupied apartments, which I don't pay for, may serve as lumber-rooms, if I have anything to put in them; and they are very useful for my little boy to run about in on rainy days when he can't go out; and then there is the garden for him to play in, and for me to work in.

You see I have effected some little improvement already,' continued she, turning to the window.

'There is a bed of young vegetables in that corner, and here are some snowdrops and primroses already in bloom--and there, too, is a yellow crocus just opening in the sunshine.' 'But then how can you bear such a situation--your nearest neighbours two miles distant, and nobody looking in or passing by?
Rose would go stark mad in such a place.

She can't put on life unless she sees half a dozen fresh gowns and bonnets a day--not to speak of the faces within; but you might sit watching at these windows all day long, and never see so much as an old woman carrying her eggs to market.' 'I am not sure the loneliness of the place was not one of its chief recommendations.

I take no pleasure in watching people pass the windows; and I like to be quiet.' 'Oh! as good as to say you wish we would all of us mind our own business, and let you alone.' 'No, I dislike an extensive acquaintance; but if I have a few friends, of course I am glad to see them occasionally.


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