Woman's Trials; Or, Tales and Sketches from the Life around Us
e family. Up to this time, not a word had come from her husband,
ving nothing for future rent bills, the cost of clothing, and education for the younger children. With all this, Mrs. Darlington's duties had been growing daily more and more severe. Nothing could be trusted to servants that was not, in some way, defectively done, causing repeated complaints from the boarders. What proved most annoying was the bad cooking, to remedy whic
became impatient, and Mr. Scragg, in particular, never let an oc
ne morning, about this time, a
nd manner, that he meant to be rude, though she
with some dignity of m
o lazy to bring it out of the cellar. If she'll send for me to-morrow morning, I'll
k as thought, the blood rushed
and felt towards him such utter disgu
gnation, "when a gentleman has any compl
threat in his voice, while his c
does it as a gentleman," repeated Mrs. Darlingto
said Scragg, dropping his hands fro
if you cannot understand, I will try to make them
rther explanation. Starting from the
om
ose and followed h
bending a little towards Miriam, who sat near him.
and soon retired. Ere dinner time, Mr. and Mrs. Scragg, with their whole brood, had left the ho
onviction that, in parting with the Scraggs, insufferable as they were, she had parted with the very means of sustaining herself, compl
silence which had continued for many minutes. "We have an income of on
d, but did
eek," repeated Mrs. Darli
remain vacant long,
t I can see," murmured Mrs. Darlington. "If a
s think that our expenses are too great for us to make any thing, even if
lars in six months. That is c
red to an extent almost equi
us a hundred and fifty dollars, is completely ruined. Half of the plates are broken, and there is sca
ragg's room to-d
of it?" aske
ook in there. You know the beautiful bo
es
d spout are off
di
om the edge of one of the drawers, and the whole surface marked over in a thousand lines. It looks as if the children had amused themselves by the hour in scratching it with pins
airly groaned at
using herself from a kind of stupor into which her m
e our expenses
educe them? We canno
f cour
r chamb
we dispense wi
to market, and do the dozen oth
our marketin
oh the table. W
to the chambermaid will se
esides waiting on the table
than we have yet done. Three dollars a week and
sighed heavily
if we were only their servants! I could bear his insolence no longer. Ah, to what mortifications are we not subjected in our present position! How little dreamed I of all this, when I decided to open a boarding-hou
rs. M
at was in her mind. Mrs. Darlington was s
pense of keeping Mrs. Marion.
laim of humanit
pay that claim," rem
ru
e case, are we justified in an
go? What will sh
o, unless there is a change in ou
e expense of keeping Mrs. Marion and her two children is not very great. Stil
bute it to others," replied Mrs. Darlington,
er state of dependence, and tries so in every possible way to make the pressure of her presence in our f
st sensibly. Ah me! into wh
!" said Edith. "It has brought us nothing but trouble from the beginnin
hat k
ome until after two o
d the mother in
, I could not go to bed. I said nothing to Miriam, but sat up alone. It was nearly half past two when he came home in com
icken mother, hiding her face
se of their trouble. Little was said to her then; but Edith, when she was alone with her soon after, fully explained the desperate condition
y poor mother! What pain she must suffer! No wonder that her co
en the troubles of others were mentioned to
sist through the house, so that the chambermaid can attend the door
let h
es
"But, if mother has lost so much already, will she not los
ms; then she thinks that she w
hope from the fir
far it has be
end? Uncle Hiram was right when he objected to mother's taking boarders, and said that it was the worst thing she could attempt to do. I wish we had take
er than replying to her sister, "now that all our money is gone
aid fifty
can we p
am. "What are we to do
, "by the close of another six months, ev
aculated Miria
r, but no gleam of light arose in their minds