[The Ship of Stars by Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch]@TWC D-Link book
The Ship of Stars

CHAPTER I
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As a matter of fact, the Reverend Samuel Raymond was senior curate there, with a stipend of ninety-five pounds a year.

Born at Tewkesbury, the son of a miller, he had won his way to a servitorship at Christ Church, Oxford; and somehow, in the course of one Long Vacation, had found money for travelling expenses to join a reading party under the Junior Censor.

The party spent six summer weeks at a farmhouse near Honiton, in Devon.

The farm belonged to an invalid widow named Venning, who let it be managed by her daughter Humility and two paid labourers, while she herself sat by the window in her kitchen parlour, busied incessantly with lace-work of that beautiful kind for which Honiton is famous.

He was an unassuming youth; and although in those days servitors were no longer called upon to black the boots of richer undergraduates, the widow and her daughter soon divined that he was lowlier than the others, and his position an awkward one, and were kind to him in small ways, and grew to like him.


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