[The Farringdons by Ellen Thorneycroft Fowler]@TWC D-Link bookThe Farringdons CHAPTER IV 1/21
CHAPTER IV. SCHOOL-DAYS Up to eighteen we fight with fears, And deal with problems grave and weighty, And smile our smiles and weep our tears, Just as we do in after years From eighteen up to eighty. When Elisabeth was sixteen her noonday was turned into night by the death of her beloved Cousin Anne.
For some time the younger Miss Farringdon had been in failing health; but it was her role to be delicate, and so nobody felt anxious about her until it was too late for anxiety to be of any use.
She glided out of life as gracefully as she had glided through it, trusting that the sternness of her principles would expiate the leniency of her practice; and was probably surprised at the discovery that it was the leniency of her practice which finally expiated the sternness of her principles. She left a blank, which was never quite filled up, in the lives of her sister Maria and her small cousin Elisabeth.
The former bore her sorrow better, on the whole, than did the latter, because she had acquired the habit of bearing sorrow; but Elisabeth mourned with all the hopeless misery of youth. "It is no use trying to make me interested in things," she sobbed in response to Christopher's clumsy though well-meant attempts to divert her.
"I shall never be interested in anything again--never.
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