Light O' the Morning: The Story of an Irish Girl by L. T. Meade (best chinese ebook reader .TXT) ๐
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- Author: L. T. Meade
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โWake up! wake up!โ said a voice; and then Nora, who had been dreaming of her father, and also of Andy Neil, started up, crying as she did so, โOh, don't, Andy! I know father will let you stay a little longer in the cot. Don't, don't, Andy!โ
โWho, in the name of fortune, is Andy?โ called the clear voice of Molly Hartrick. โDo wake up, Nora, and don't look so dazed. You really are a most exciting person to have staying in the house. Who is Andy, and what cot are you going to turn him out of? Is he a baby?โ
Nora now began to laugh.
โI quite forgot that I was in England,โ she said. โAm I really in England? Are youโare youโโOh, now I remember everything. You are Molly Hartrick. What is the hour? Is it late? Have I missed breakfast?โ
โBless you, child! lie down and keep quiet; it's not more than six o'clock. I wanted to see some more of you all by myself. I am out of punishment now; it ended at midnight, and I am as free as anybody else; but as it is extremely likely I shall be back in punishment by the evening, I thought we would have a little chat while I was able to have it. Just make way for me in your bed; I'll nestle up close to you, and we'll be ever so jolly.โ
โOh, do,โ said Nora, in a hearty tone.
Molly scrambled in, taking the lion's share of the bed, Nora lay on the edge.
โI am glad you are facing the light, for I can examine your features well,โ said Molly. โYou certainly are very nice-looking. How prettily your eyebrows are arched, and what white teeth you have! And, although you have that wonderful black hair, you have a fair skin, and your cheeks have just enough color; not too much. I hate florid people; but you are just perfect.โ
โI wish you would not flatter me, Molly,โ said Nora; โnobody flatters me in Ireland.โ
โThey don't? But I thought they were a perfect nation of flatterers. I am sure it is always said of them.โ
โOh, if you mean the poor people,โ said Nora; โthey make pretty speeches, but nobody thinks anything about that. Everybody makes pretty speeches to everybody else, except when we are having a violent scold by way of a change.โ
โHow delicious!โ said Molly. โAnd what sort of house have you? Like this?โ
โNo, not the least like this,โ answered Nora.
โWith what emphasis you speak. Do you know that father told me you lived in a beautiful place, a castle hanging over the sea, and that your mountains and your sea and your old castle were things to be proud of?โ
โDid he? Did your father really say that?โ asked Nora. She sat up on her elbow; her eyes were shining; they assumed a look which Nora's eyes often wore when she was, as she expressed it, โseeing things out of her head.โ Far-off castles in the clouds would Nora look at then; rainbow-tinted were they, and their summits reached heaven. Molly gazed at her with deepening interest.
โYes, Nora,โ she said; โhe did say it. He told me so before Terence came; but Iโdo forgive meโI don't care for Terence.โ
โYou must not talk against him to me,โ said Nora, โbecause he happens to be my brother; but I'll just whisper one thing back to you, Mollyโif he was not my brother he would not suit me.โ
โHow nice of you to say that! We shall get on splendidly. Of course, you must stick up for him, being your brother; he stuck up for you before you came. It is very nice and loyal of you, and I quite understand. But, dear me! I am not likely to see much of you while you are here.โ
โWhy not? Are you not going to stay here?โ
โOh, my dear, yes; I'll stay. School has just begun over again, you know, and I am always in hot water. I cannot help it; it is a sort of way of mine. This is the kind of way I live. Breakfast every morning; then a lecture from mother or from father. Off I go in low spirits, with a great, sore heart inside me; then comes the hateful discipline of school; and every day I get into disgrace. I have a lot of lessons returned, and am low down in my class, instead of high up, and am treated from first to last as a naughty child. By the middle of the day I am a very naughty child indeed.โ
โBut you are not a child at all, Molly; you are a woman. Why, you are older than I.โ
โOh, what have years to do with it?โ interrupted Molly. โI shall be a child all my days, I tell you. I shall never be really old. I like mischief and insubordination, andโandโlet me whisper it to you, little Noraโvulgarity. Yes, I do love to be vulgar. I like shocking mother; I like shocking father. Since Terence came I have had rare fun shocking him. I have learned a lot of slang, and whenever I see Terence I shout it at him. He has got quite nervous lately, and avoids me. He likes Linda awfully, but he avoids me. But, to go on with my day. I am back from school to early dinner, generally in disgrace. I am not allowed to speak at dinner. Back again I go to school, and I am home, or supposed to be home, at half-past four; but not a bit of it, my dear; I don't get home till about six, because I am kept in to learn my lessons. It is disgraceful, of course; but it is a fact. Then back I come, and mother has a talk with me. However busy mother may be, and she is a very busy woman, Noraโyou will soon find that outโshe always has time to find out if I have done anything naughty; and, as fibs are not any of my accomplishments, I always tell her the truth; and then what do you think happens? An evening quite to myself in my bedroom; my dinner sent up to me there, and I eating it in solitary state. They are all accustomed to it. They open their eyes and almost glare at me when by a mere chance I do come down to dinner. They are quite uncomfortable, because, you see, I am waiting my opportunity to fire slang at one of them. I always do, and always will. I never could fit into the dull life of the English.โ
โYou must be Irish, really,โ said Nora.
โYou don't say so! But I am afraid I am not. I would give all the world to be, but am quite certain I am not. There, now, of course I'd be awfully scolded if it was found out that I had awakened you at this hour, and had confided my little history to you. I am over sixteen. I shall be seventeen in ten months' time. And that is my history, insubordination from first to last. I don't suppose anybody really likes me, unless it is poor Annie Jefferson at school.โ
โWho is Annie Jefferson, Molly?โ
โA very shabby sort of girl, who is always in hot water too. I have taken to her, and she just adores me. There is no one else who loves me; and she, poor child,
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