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The Garden Without Walls

CHAPTER I-MY MOTHER

Word Count: 882    |    Released on: 17/11/2017

cing by the thousand. A man and woman were lying in bed; I was standing up in my cot, plucking at the woman with my podgy fingers. S

he same time as the body, but at a later period with the first glimmering of m

book will carry me much further. The scene is symbolic: a little child, inarticulate, early awakened in a sunlit room, vainly striving to make life an

at one summer's day, on a holiday at Ransby, she led me through lanes far out into the country till my legs were very tired. We came to a large white house, standing in a parkland. There we hid behind a clump of trees for hours. A horseman came riding down the avenue. My mother ran out from behind the trees and tried to make him speak

f I would like to have a sister. I refused stoutly. At dawn I was wakened by hurrying feet on the staircase. Next day I was given a ne

sidered rather dashing. She had been called "The gay Miss Fannie Evrard" and her marriage with my father had begun with an elopement. Her father was

only a reporter on the local paper at the time of his escapade; the Evrards lived at Woadley Hall and were reckoned

d not re-visit Ransby until years later. Pride prevented. My mother returned as often as finances would allow, in the vain hope of a reconciliatio

at her son's audacity. It was without parallel in her experience until I attempted to repeat his performance with an entirely indivi

n'. She was always mounted on a gray horse, with a touch of red about her. Sometimes it was a red feather in her hat and

me that my mother had gone to find her. I would sit for hour

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The Garden Without Walls
The Garden Without Walls
“It happened about six in the morning, in a large red room. A bar of sunlight streamed in at the window, in which dust-motes were dancing by the thousand. A man and woman were lying in bed; I was standing up in my cot, plucking at the woman with my podgy fingers. She stirred, turned, rubbed her eyes, smiled, stretched out her arms, and drew me under the bed-clothes beside her. The man slept on.”