[A Flat Iron for a Farthing by Juliana Horatia Ewing]@TWC D-Link bookA Flat Iron for a Farthing PREFACE 14/18
My nurse was out for the evening, but Mrs. Cadman from the village was of the party, and neither cakes nor conversation flagged.
Mrs.Cadman had hollow eyes, and (on occasion) a hollow voice, which was very impressive.
She wore curl-papers continually, which once caused me to ask my nurse if she ever took them out. "On Sundays she do," said Nurse. "She's very religious then, I suppose," said I; and I did really think it a great compliment that she paid to the first day of the week. I was only just four years old at this time--an age when one is apt to ask inconvenient questions and to make strange observations--when one is struggling to understand life through the mist of novelties about one, and the additional confusion of falsehood which it is so common to speak or to insinuate without scruple to very young children. The housekeeper and Mrs.Cadman had conversed for some time after tea without diverting my attention from the new box of bricks which Mrs. Bundle (commissioned by my father) had brought from the town for me; but when I had put all the round arches on the pairs of pillars, and had made a very successful "Tower of Babel" with cross layers of the bricks tapering towards the top, I had leisure to look round and listen. "I never know'd one with that look as lived," Mrs.Cadman was saying, in her hollow tone.
"It took notice from the first.
Mark my words, ma'am, a sweeter child I never saw, but it's _too_ good and _too_ pretty to be long for this world." It is difficult to say exactly how much one understands at four years old, or rather how far one quite comprehends the things one perceives in part.
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