A Widow's Tale and Other Stories

Fiction & Literature, Short Stories, Classics, Romance
Cover of the book A Widow's Tale and Other Stories by Mrs. Margaret Oliphant, WILLIAM BLACKWOOD AND SONS
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Mrs. Margaret Oliphant ISBN: 1230000226117
Publisher: WILLIAM BLACKWOOD AND SONS Publication: March 18, 2014
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Mrs. Margaret Oliphant
ISBN: 1230000226117
Publisher: WILLIAM BLACKWOOD AND SONS
Publication: March 18, 2014
Imprint:
Language: English

A Widow's Tale and Other Stories

These things were being turned over in her mind by Miss Bampton, while she sat looking out upon the lawn where everything looked so fresh and cool under the trees. She was busy with her usual knitting, but this did not in any way interfere with the acuteness of her senses, or the course of her thoughts. Though May and she were spoken of as if on the same level, as the Miss Bamptons, this lady was twenty years older than her sister, and had discharged for half of that time the functions of mother to that heedless little girl. May had made Julia old, indeed, when she had no right to be considered old. When the mother died she had been a handsome quiet young woman, thirty indeed, which is considered, though quite falsely, an unromantic age yet quite capable of being taken for twenty-eight, or even twenty-five, and with admirers and prospects of her own. After her mourning was over she had become Miss Bampton, the feminine head of the house, managing everything, receiving the few guests her father cared to see, who were almost all contemporaries of his own, as if she were as old as any of them—and had moved up to a totally different level of life. Such a transformation is not unusual in a widower's house. Miss Bampton took the position of her father's wife rather than of his daughter, and no one thought it strange. If she sacrificed any feelings of her own in doing so, no one found it out. She was a mother to May; she had found her position, it seemed, taken possession of her place in the world, at the head of a house which was her own house, though it was not her husband's but her father's. It was generally supposed that the position suited her admirably, and that she had never wished for any other: which indeed I agree was very probably the case, though in such matters no one can ever be confident. It was thus that she happened to be so absorbed in May, so watchful of this (she thought) undesirable interposition of Mr Fitzroy, of the partial withdrawal of Bertie Harcourt, and of many things of equal, or rather equally little, moment to the general world.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

A Widow's Tale and Other Stories

These things were being turned over in her mind by Miss Bampton, while she sat looking out upon the lawn where everything looked so fresh and cool under the trees. She was busy with her usual knitting, but this did not in any way interfere with the acuteness of her senses, or the course of her thoughts. Though May and she were spoken of as if on the same level, as the Miss Bamptons, this lady was twenty years older than her sister, and had discharged for half of that time the functions of mother to that heedless little girl. May had made Julia old, indeed, when she had no right to be considered old. When the mother died she had been a handsome quiet young woman, thirty indeed, which is considered, though quite falsely, an unromantic age yet quite capable of being taken for twenty-eight, or even twenty-five, and with admirers and prospects of her own. After her mourning was over she had become Miss Bampton, the feminine head of the house, managing everything, receiving the few guests her father cared to see, who were almost all contemporaries of his own, as if she were as old as any of them—and had moved up to a totally different level of life. Such a transformation is not unusual in a widower's house. Miss Bampton took the position of her father's wife rather than of his daughter, and no one thought it strange. If she sacrificed any feelings of her own in doing so, no one found it out. She was a mother to May; she had found her position, it seemed, taken possession of her place in the world, at the head of a house which was her own house, though it was not her husband's but her father's. It was generally supposed that the position suited her admirably, and that she had never wished for any other: which indeed I agree was very probably the case, though in such matters no one can ever be confident. It was thus that she happened to be so absorbed in May, so watchful of this (she thought) undesirable interposition of Mr Fitzroy, of the partial withdrawal of Bertie Harcourt, and of many things of equal, or rather equally little, moment to the general world.

More books from Romance

Cover of the book PRIDE AND PREJUDICE Vol 2 - A Jane Austen Classic by Mrs. Margaret Oliphant
Cover of the book The Temporary Betrothal by Mrs. Margaret Oliphant
Cover of the book Wounded Hearts by Mrs. Margaret Oliphant
Cover of the book A Decade for Darius by Mrs. Margaret Oliphant
Cover of the book Satan's Sword (Imp Book 2) by Mrs. Margaret Oliphant
Cover of the book Desert Rogues: The Runaway Princess by Mrs. Margaret Oliphant
Cover of the book Zoe: Spanked by Mrs. Margaret Oliphant
Cover of the book THE BAD BOYS - Masters of passion by Mrs. Margaret Oliphant
Cover of the book Black Soul - Saison 2 by Mrs. Margaret Oliphant
Cover of the book Moi, 34 ans, Asperger et amoureux by Mrs. Margaret Oliphant
Cover of the book Unter funkelnden Sternen by Mrs. Margaret Oliphant
Cover of the book Pearl in the Mist by Mrs. Margaret Oliphant
Cover of the book His Dirty Secret 8: Kim's Story by Mrs. Margaret Oliphant
Cover of the book Tempting Evil by Mrs. Margaret Oliphant
Cover of the book Romantic Thriller Trio #6: Drei Romane by Mrs. Margaret Oliphant
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy