[Red Pottage by Mary Cholmondeley]@TWC D-Link bookRed Pottage CHAPTER XI 9/12
She was silly enough to think she knew Middleshire fairly well, but after she settled at Warpington she gradually discovered the existence of a large undercurrent of society of which she knew nothing at all, in which, whether she were willing or not, she was plunged by the fact that she was her brother's sister. Hester perceived clearly enough that her brother did not by birth belong to this set, though his profession brought him in contact with it, but he had evidently, though involuntarily, adopted it for better for worse; perhaps because a dictatorial habit is generally constrained to find companionship in a social grade lower than its own, where a loud voice and a tendency to monologue checkered by prehistoric jokes and tortured puns may meet with a more patient audience.
Hester made many discoveries about herself during the first months of her life at Warpington, and the first of the series amazed her more than any of the later ones. She discovered that she was proud.
Perhaps she had not the enormous opinion of herself which Mrs.Gresley so frequently deplored, for Hester's thoughts seldom dwelt upon herself.
But the altered circumstances of her life forced them momentarily upon herself nevertheless, as a burst pipe will spread its waters down a damask curtain. So far, during the eight years since she had left the school-room, she had always been "Miss Gresley," a little personage treated with consideration wherever she went, and _choyee_ for her delicate humor and talent for conversation.
She now experienced the interesting sensation, as novel to her as it is familiar to most of us, of being nobody, and she disliked it.
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