True Tilda. Arthur Quiller-Couch

True Tilda - Arthur Quiller-Couch


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       Arthur Quiller-Couch

      True Tilda

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066196585

       CHAPTER I

       CHAPTER II

       CHAPTER III

       CHAPTER IV

       CHAPTER V

       CHAPTER VI.

       CHAPTER VII.

       CHAPTER VIII.

       CHAPTER IX.

       CHAPTER X.

       CHAPTER XI.

       CHAPTER XII.

       CHAPTER XIII.

       CHAPTER XIV.

       CHAPTER XV.

       CHAPTER XVI.

       CHAPTER XVII.

       CHAPTER XVIII.

       CHAPTER XIX.

       CHAPTER XX.

       CHAPTER XXI.

       CHAPTER XXII.

       CHAPTER XXIII.

       CHAPTER XXIV.

       CHAPTER XXV.

       CHAPTER XXVI.

       EPILOGUE

      CHAPTER

      I AT THE SIGN OF THE GOOD SAMARITAN.

      II HOW TRUE TILDA CAME TO DOLOROUS GARD

      III A KIDNAPPING

      IV IN WHICH CHILDE ARTHUR LOSES ONE MOTHER AND GAINS ANOTHER

      V TEMPORARY EMBARRASSMENTS OF A THESPIAN

      VI MR. MORTIMER'S ADVENTURE

      VII IN WHICH MR. HUCKS TAKES A HAND

      VIII FLIGHT

      IX FREEDOM

      X THE FOUR DIAMONDS.

      XI THE "STRATFORD-ON-AVON"

      XII PURSUED

      XIII ADVENTURE OF THE FURRED COLLAR

      XIV ADVENTURE OF THE PRIMROSE FETE

      XV ADVENTURE OF THE FAT LADY

      XVI ADVENTURES OF THE "FOUR ALLS" AND OF THE CELESTIAL CHEMIST

      XVII BY WESTON WEIR

      XVIII DOWN AVON

      XIX THE S.S. EVAN EVANS

      XX INISTOW FARM

      XXI THE HUNTED STAG

      XXII THE VOYAGE

      XXIII THE ISLAND

      XXIV GLASSON IN CHASE

      XXV MISS SALLY BREAKS THE DOORS

      XXVI THE RESCUE

      EPILOGUE

      CHAPTER I

       Table of Contents

      AT THE SIGN OF THE GOOD SAMARITAN

      "That it may please Thee to preserve all that travel by land or by water … all sick persons, and young children."—THE LITANY.

      "I love my love with a H'aitch, because he's 'andsome—"

      Tilda turned over on her right side—she could do so now without pain—and lifting herself a little, eyed the occupant of the next bed. The other six beds in the ward were empty.

      "I 'ate 'im, because—look 'ere, I don't believe you're listenin'?"

      The figure in the next bed stirred feebly; the figure of a woman, straight and gaunt under the hospital bedclothes. A tress of her hair had come uncoiled and looped itself across the pillow—reddish auburn hair, streaked with grey. She had been brought in, three nights ago, drenched, bedraggled, chattering in a high fever; a case of acute pneumonia. Her delirium had kept Tilda—who was preternaturally sharp for her nine years—awake and curious during the better part of two night-watches. Thereafter, for a day and a night and half a day, the patient had lain somnolent, breathing hard, at intervals feebly conscious. In one of these intervals her eyes had wandered and found the child; and since then had painfully sought her a dozen times, and found her again and rested on her.

      Tilda, meeting that look, had done her best. The code of the show-folk, to whom she belonged, ruled that persons in trouble were to be helped. Moreover, the long whitewashed ward, with its seven oblong windows set high in the wall—the smell of it, the solitude, the silence—bored her inexpressibly. She had lain here three weeks with a hurt thigh-bone bruised, but luckily not splintered, by the kick of a performing pony.

      The ward reeked of yellow soap and iodoform. She would have exchanged these odours at the price of her soul—but souls are not vendible, and besides she did not know she possessed one—for the familiar redolences of naphtha and horse-dung and trodden turf. These were far away: they had quite forsaken her, or at best floated idly across her dreams.


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