[A Lady of Quality by Frances Hodgson Burnett]@TWC D-Link book
A Lady of Quality

CHAPTER XIX--A piteous story is told, and the old cellars walled in
12/17

"You have not seen him ?" The girl shook her fair locks, weeping with piteous little sobs.
"He has not," she cried, "and I know not what to do--and the great town seems full of evil men and wicked women.

I know not which way to turn, for all plot wrong against me, and would drag me down to shamefulness--and back to my poor mother I cannot go." "Wherefore not, poor child ?" my lady asked her.
"I have not been made an honest, wedded woman, and none would believe my story, and--and he might come back." "And if he came back ?" said her ladyship.
At this question the girl slipped from her grasp and down upon her knees again, catching at her rich petticoat and holding it, her eyes searching the great lady's in imploring piteousness, her own streaming.
"I love him," she wept--"I love him so--I cannot leave the place where he might be.

He was so beautiful and grand a gentleman, and, sure, he loved me better than all else--and I cannot thrust away from me that last night when he held me to his breast near our cottage door, and the nightingale sang in the roses, and he spake such words to me.

I lie and sob all night on my hard pillow--I so long to see him and to hear his voice--and hearing he had been with you that last morning, I dared to come, praying that you might have heard him let drop some word that would tell me where he may be, for I cannot go away thinking he may come back longing for me--and I lose him and never see his face again.

Oh! my lady, my lady, this place is so full of wickedness and fierce people--and dark kennels where crimes are done.


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