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    Chapter 8 - Page 2

    The 'Coming Out'
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    next month; but I want to be there to assist her in making preparations, and to make the best of her company while we have her.'

    'Why didn't you tell me before?'

    'I've only got the news in this letter, which you stigmatize as dull and stupid, and won't let me read.'

    'To whom is she to be married?'

    'To Mr. Richardson, the vicar of a neighbouring parish.'

    'Is he rich?'

    'No; only comfortable.'

    'Is he handsome?'

    'No; only decent.'

    'Young?'

    'No; only middling.'

    'Oh, mercy! what a wretch! What sort of a house is it?'

    'A quiet little vicarage, with an ivy-clad porch, an old-fashioned garden, and - '

    'Oh, stop! - you'll make me sick. How can she bear it?'

    'I expect she'll not only be able to bear it, but to be very happy. You did not ask me if Mr. Richardson were a good, wise, or amiable man; I could have answered Yes, to all these questions - at least so Mary thinks, and I hope she will not find herself mistaken.'

    'But - miserable creature! how can she think of spending her life there, cooped up with that nasty old man; and no hope of change?'

    'He is not old: he's only six or seven and thirty; and she herself is twenty-eight, and as sober as if she were fifty.'

    'Oh! that's better then - they're well matched; but do they call him the "worthy vicar"?'

    'I don't know; but if they do, I believe he merits the epithet.'

    'Mercy, how shocking! and will she wear a white apron and make pies and puddings?'

    'I don't know about the white apron, but I dare say she will make pies and puddings now and then; but that will be no great hardship, as she has done it before.'

    'And will she go about in a plain shawl, and a large straw bonnet, carrying tracts and bone soup to her husband's poor parishioners?'

    'I'm not clear about that; but I dare say she will do her best to make them comfortable in body and mind, in accordance with our mother's example.'
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