[The Story of Bawn by Katharine Tynan]@TWC D-Link bookThe Story of Bawn CHAPTER VI 9/11
Och, the good days! the good days!" "They were good when Theobald was here," I said.
"He made enough noise, Maureen; didn't he? You used to scold then because he made so much." "I always thought more of a boy than a girl," she answered.
"You're bonny enough, Miss Bawn, but you're not to be compared with Master Theobald, let alone them I nursed at my breast--Master Luke and your mother and your Aunt Eleanor." "Mary Cashel thinks the world of me," I said, with enjoyment.
Mary Cashel is my foster-mother, and lives at the head of the Glen. "She's a poor, foolish, talkative creature," Maureen said.
"If her Ladyship had listened to me she'd never have had Mary Cashel in the house." Just then the setting sun glinted on the windows of Brosna, the great house that neighbours ours, which belongs to the Cardews, and has been empty, as its owner, Anthony Cardew, has been away from it many years. The sun was going down in a great glory, and window after window in the long house-front took fire and flamed like a torch. "You would think," said I, "that they were lighting fires over there against Captain Cardew's return." Maureen rose from her place and peered curiously in the direction of my gaze. "I wonder he doesn't be selling it," she said, "and not be letting it go to rack and ruin and him never comin' home.
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