[Red Pottage by Mary Cholmondeley]@TWC D-Link bookRed Pottage CHAPTER XIV 2/9
Sybell Loftus had often told Hester that she could have no idea of the happiness of a child's touch till she was a mother; that she herself had not an inkling till then.
But perhaps some poor substitute for that exquisite feeling was vouchsafed to Hester. "The tail is still on," she whispered, not too cheerfully, but as one who in darkness sees light beyond. The cow's tail was painted in blue upon its side. "When I bought it," said Regie, in a strangled voice, "and it was a great-deal-of-money cow, I did wish its tail had been out behind; but I think now it is safer like that." "All the best cows have their tails on the side," said Hester.
"And to-morrow morning, when you are dressed, run up to my room, and you will find it just like it was before." And she carefully put aside the bits with the injured animal. "And now what has Stella got ?" Stella produced a bag of "bull's-eyes," which, in striking contrast with the cow, had, in the course of the drive home, cohered so tightly together that it was doubtful if they would ever be separated again. "Fraeulein never eats bull's-eyes," said Mary, who was what her parents called "a very truthful child." "I eats them," said Stella, reversing her small cauliflower-like person on the sofa till only a circle of white rims with a nucleus of coventry frilling, with two pink legs kicking gently upward, were visible. Stella always turned upsidedown if the conversation took a personal turn.
In later and more conventional years we find a poor equivalent for marking our disapproval by changing the subject. Hester had hardly set Stella right side upward when the door opened once more and Mrs.Gresley entered, hot and exhausted. "Run up-stairs, my pets," she said.
"Hester, you should not keep them down here now.
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