[The Debtor by Mary E. Wilkins Freeman]@TWC D-Link bookThe Debtor CHAPTER II 2/47
The rich play, or work that they may play, as do the poor.
Everybody is up and wide awake and doing.
The earth and the habitations thereof are rubbed, cleaned, and swept, or skylarked over; the boy plays with his marbles on the sidewalk or whoops over the fields; the housewives fling wide open their house windows, and the dust of the winter flies out like smoke; the tradesmen set out their new wares to public view, the bees make honey, the birds repeat their world-old nesting songs, the cocks crow straight through the day; nothing stops till the sun sets, and even then it is hard for such an ardent clock of life to quite run down. It was that spirit of unrest which had sent the two ladies out making calls.
There was not one where, if the womenkind were at home at all and not afield, but they had been possessed of the spring activity, until they reached the Ranger place, where the new-comers to Banbridge lived.
The Ranger place was, in some respects the most imposing house in Banbridge.
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