[Mary’s Meadow by Juliana Horatia Ewing]@TWC D-Link bookMary’s Meadow CHAPTER XII 66/73
We like the bits out of books, in small print; but I could not understand the bits to the word _temperament_, and I do not think Margery could either, though she can understand much more than I can. There is a very odd bit to the word _temperamental_, and it is signed _Brown_; but we do not know if that means our Dr.Brown.This is the bit: "That _temperamental_ dignotions, and conjecture of prevalent humours, may be collected from spots in our nails, we concede."-- _Brown_. We could not understand it, so we lifted down the other volume (one is just as heavy as the other), and looked out "Dignotion," and it means "distinction, distinguishing mark," and then there is the same bit over again, but at the end is "_Brown's Vulgar Errors_." And we did not like to ask Dr.Brown if they were his vulgar errors, for fear he should think us rude.
I thought we might perhaps ask him if they were his errors, and leave out _vulgar_, which is rather a rude word, but Margery thought it better not, and she is sure to be right.
She always is. But we should have liked to ask Dr.Brown about it, if it had not been rude, because we think a good deal of spots on our nails.
All we know about them is that you begin at your thumb, and count on to your little finger, in this way, "A Gift, a Beau, A Friend, a Foe, A Journey to go." I like having a Beau, or a Friend; Margery likes a Gift, or a Journey to go.
We neither of us like having Foes. And it shows that it does come true, because Margery had a white spot in the middle of her left little finger-nail, just when our father's old friend wrote to Grandmamma, for one of us to go and pay him a visit; and Margery went, because she was the elder of the two. I do not know how I bore parting with her, except with hoping that she would enjoy herself, for she always had wanted so very much to have a journey to go.
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