[Elizabeth’s Campaign by Mrs. Humphrey Ward]@TWC D-Link book
Elizabeth’s Campaign

CHAPTER VII
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We wasn't brought up to 'em.' 'Well, if you go, you don't come back!' said the Squire, shaking a threatening hand.
'Thank you, sir.

But there's work for all on us nowadays,' said the woman placidly.
Then the Squire, with Gregson's help, set himself fiercely to the business.

In little more than an hour, and with the help of some pieces of rope, the gate had been firmly barricaded with hurdles and barbed wire, wicket-gate and all, and the Squire, taking a poster in large letters from his pocket, affixed it to the outside of the gate.

It signified to all and sundry that the Chetworth gate of Mannering Park could now only be opened by violence, and that those offering such violence would be proceeded against according to law.
When it was done, the Squire first addressed a few scathing words to the pair of park-keepers, who smoked imperturbably through them, and then transferred a pound-note to the ready palm of Gregson, who was, it seemed, on the point of accepting work as a stock-keeper from another of the Squire's farmers--a brother culprit, only less 'hustled' than himself by the formidable County Committee, which was rapidly putting the fear of God into every bad husbandman throughout Brookshire.

Then the Squire hurried off homewards.
His chief thought now was--what would that most opinionated young woman at home say to him?
He was at once burning to have it out with her, and--though he would have scorned to confess it--nervous as to how he might get through the encounter.
* * * * * Fate, however, ordained that his thoughts about the person who had now grown so important to his household should be affected, before he saw her again, from a new quarter.


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