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    Chapter 1

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    A long time ago, [Endnote: 1] in a town with which I used to be
    familiarly acquainted, there dwelt an elderly person of grim aspect,
    known by the name and title of Doctor Grimshawe,[Endnote: 2] whose
    household consisted of a remarkably pretty and vivacious boy, and a
    perfect rosebud of a girl, two or three years younger than he, and an
    old maid-of-all-work, of strangely mixed breed, crusty in temper and
    wonderfully sluttish in attire. [Endnote: 3] It might be partly owing to
    this handmaiden's characteristic lack of neatness (though primarily, no
    doubt, to the grim Doctor's antipathy to broom, brush, and dusting-
    cloths) that the house--at least in such portions of it as any casual
    visitor caught a glimpse of--was so overlaid with dust, that, in lack
    of a visiting card, you might write your name with your forefinger upon
    the tables; and so hung with cobwebs that they assumed the appearance
    of dusky upholstery.

    It grieves me to add an additional touch or two to the reader's
    disagreeable impression of Doctor Grimshawe's residence, by confessing
    that it stood in a shabby by-street, and cornered on a graveyard, with
    which the house communicated by a back door; so that with a hop, skip,
    and jump from the threshold, across a flat tombstone, the two children
    [Endnote: 4] were in the daily habit of using the dismal cemetery as
    their playground. In their graver moods they spelled out the names and
    learned by heart doleful verses on the headstones; and in their merrier
    ones (which were much the more frequent) they chased butterflies and
    gathered dandelions, played hide-and-seek among the slate and marble,
    and tumbled laughing over the grassy mounds which were too eminent for
    the short legs to bestride. On the whole, they were the better for the
    graveyard, and its legitimate inmates slept none the worse for the two
    children's gambols and shrill merriment overhead. Here were old brick
    tombs with curious sculptures on them, and quaint gravestones, some of
    which bore puffy little cherubs, and one or two others the effigies of
    eminent Puritans, wrought out to a button, a fold of the ruff, and a
    wrinkle of the skull-cap; and these frowned upon the two children as if
    death had not made them a whit more genial than they were in life. But
    the children were of a temper to be more encouraged by the good-natured

    smiles of the puffy cherubs, than frightened or disturbed by the sour
    Puritans.

    This graveyard (about which we shall say not a word more than may
    sooner or later be needful) was the most ancient in the town. The clay
    of the original settlers had been incorporated with the soil; those
    stalwart Englishmen of the Puritan epoch, whose immediate ancestors had
    been planted forth with succulent grass and daisies for the
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