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Yonge, Charlotte Mary, 1823-1901

"The Two Sides of the Shield"

Miss
Hacket is a regular old dear, but we none of us can bear Miss
Constance, except that mamma says we ought to be sorry for her because
she leads such a confined life. Miss Hacket and Aunt Jane always do go
on so about the G.F.S. They both are branch secretaries, you know.'
'I know! Aunt Jane did bother Mrs. Sefton so that she says she will
never have another of those G.F.S. girls. She says it is a society for
interference.'
'Mamma likes it,' said Mysie.
'Oh! but she is only just come.'
'Yes; but she always looked after the school children at Beechcroft
before she married, and she and Alethea and Phyllis had the soldiers'
children up on Sunday. Alethea taught the little drummer boys, and
they were so funny. I wonder who teaches them now! Gill always goes
down to help Miss Hacket with her G.F.S. classes. She has one on
Sunday afternoon, and one on Tuesday for sewing, and she is the only
young lady in the place who can do plain needlework properly.'
'Sewing-machines can work. What the use of fussing about it!'
'They can't mend,' said Mysie. 'Besides, do you know, in the American
war, all the sewing-machines in the Southern States got out of order,
and as all the machinery people were in the north, the poor ladies
didn't know what to do, and couldn't work without them.'
'Sewing-machines are a recent invention,' said Dolores.
'Oh! you didn't think I meant the great old War of Independence. No, I
meant the war about the slaves--secession they called it.


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