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    Chapter 6

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    She became aware in time that this phase wouldn't have shone by
    lessons, the care of her education being now only one of the many
    duties devolving on Miss Overmore; a devolution as to which she was
    present at various passages between that lady and her father--passages
    significant, on either side, of dissent and even of displeasure. It was
    gathered by the child on these occasions that there was something in the
    situation for which her mother might "come down" on them all, though
    indeed the remark, always dropped by her father, was greeted on his
    companion's part with direct contradiction. Such scenes were usually
    brought to a climax by Miss Overmore's demanding, with more asperity
    than she applied to any other subject, in what position under the sun
    such a person as Mrs. Farange would find herself for coming down. As the
    months went on the little girl's interpretations thickened, and the more
    effectually that this stretch was the longest she had known without a
    break. She got used to the idea that her mother, for some reason, was
    in no hurry to reinstate her: that idea was forcibly expressed by her
    father whenever Miss Overmore, differing and decided, took him up on the
    question, which he was always putting forward, of the urgency of sending
    her to school. For a governess Miss Overmore differed surprisingly; far
    more for instance than would have entered into the bowed head of Mrs.
    Wix. She observed to Maisie many times that she was quite conscious of
    not doing her justice, and that Mr. Farange equally measured and equally
    lamented this deficiency. The reason of it was that she had mysterious
    responsibilities that interfered--responsibilities, Miss Overmore
    intimated, to Mr. Farange himself and to the friendly noisy little house
    and those who came there. Mr. Farange's remedy for every inconvenience
    was that the child should be put at school--there were such lots of
    splendid schools, as everybody knew, at Brighton and all over the place.
    That, however, Maisie learned, was just what would bring her mother
    down: from the moment he should delegate to others the housing of his
    little charge he hadn't a leg to stand on before the law. Didn't he keep
    her away from her mother precisely because Mrs. Farange was one of these
    others?


    There was also the solution of a second governess, a young person to
    come in by the day and really do the work; but to this Miss Overmore
    wouldn't for a moment listen, arguing against it with great public
    relish and wanting to know from all comers--she put it even to Maisie
    herself--they didn't see how frightfully it would give her away. "What
    am I supposed to be at all, don't you see, if I'm not here to look
    after her?" She was in a false position and so freely and loudly
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