[After London by Richard Jefferies]@TWC D-Link book
After London

CHAPTER I
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Only one window in the house contained more than two such panes (it was in the Baroness's sitting-room), and most of them had none at all.

The glass left by the ancients in their dwellings had long since been used up or broken, and the fragments that remained were too precious to be put in ordinary rooms.

When larger pieces were discovered, they were taken for the palaces of the princes, and even these were but sparingly supplied, so that the saying "he has glass in his window" was equivalent to "he belongs to the upper ranks".
On the recess of the window was an inkstand, which had been recently in use, for a quill lay beside it, and a sheet of parchment partly covered with writing.

The ink was thick and very dark, made of powdered charcoal, leaving a slightly raised writing, which could be perceived by the finger on rubbing it lightly over.

Beneath the window on the bare floor was an open chest, in which were several similar parchments and books, and from which the sheet on the recess had evidently been taken.
This chest, though small, was extremely heavy and strong, being dug out with the chisel and gouge from a solid block of oak.


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