[The People of the Abyss by Jack London]@TWC D-Link book
The People of the Abyss

CHAPTER XV--THE SEA WIFE
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They expected nothing else, desired nothing else.
They lived simply.

Their wants were few--a pint of beer at the end of the day, sipped in the semi-subterranean kitchen, a weekly paper to pore over for seven nights hand-running, and conversation as meditative and vacant as the chewing of a heifer's cud.

From a wood engraving on the wall a slender, angelic girl looked down upon them, and underneath was the legend: "Our Future Queen." And from a highly coloured lithograph alongside looked down a stout and elderly lady, with underneath: "Our Queen--Diamond Jubilee." "What you earn is sweetest," quoth Mrs.Mugridge, when I suggested that it was about time they took a rest.
"No, an' we don't want help," said Thomas Mugridge, in reply to my question as to whether the children lent them a hand.
"We'll work till we dry up and blow away, mother an' me," he added; and Mrs.Mugridge nodded her head in vigorous indorsement.
Fifteen children she had borne, and all were away and gone, or dead.

The "baby," however, lived in Maidstone, and she was twenty-seven.

When the children married they had their hands full with their own families and troubles, like their fathers and mothers before them.
Where were the children?
Ah, where were they not?
Lizzie was in Australia; Mary was in Buenos Ayres; Poll was in New York; Joe had died in India--and so they called them up, the living and the dead, soldier and sailor, and colonist's wife, for the traveller's sake who sat in their kitchen.
They passed me a photograph.


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