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    Ruth

    Ruth

    4.1 29

    by Elizabeth Gaskell


    eBook

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      BN ID: 2940012757371
    • Publisher: SAP
    • Publication date: 07/20/2011
    • Sold by: Barnes & Noble
    • Format: eBook
    • File size: 411 KB

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    CONTENTS

    I. The Dressmaker's Apprentice at Work
    II. Ruth Goes to the Shire-Hall
    III. Sunday at Mrs Mason's
    IV. Treading in Perilous Places
    V. In North Wales
    VI. Troubles Gather About Ruth
    VII. The Crisis--Watching and Waiting
    VIII. Mrs Bellingham "Does the Thing Handsomely"
    IX. The Storm-Spirit Subdued
    X. A Note and the Answer
    XI. Thurstan and Faith Benson
    XII. Losing Sight of the Welsh Mountains
    XIII. The Dissenting Minister's Household
    XIV. Ruth's First Sunday at Eccleston
    XV. Mother and Child
    XVI. Sally Tells of Her Sweethearts, and Discourses
    on the Duties of Life
    XVII. Leonard's Christening
    XVIII. Ruth Becomes a Governess in Mr Bradshaw's Family
    XIX. After Five Years
    XX. Jemima Refuses to Be Managed
    XXI. Mr Farquhar's Attentions Transferred
    XXII. The Liberal Candidate and His Precursor
    XXIII. Recognition
    XXIV. The Meeting on the Sands
    XXV. Jemima Makes a Discovery
    XXVI. Mr Bradshaw's Virtuous Indignation
    XXVII. Preparing to Stand on the Truth
    XXVIII. An Understanding Between Lovers
    XXIX. Sally Takes Her Money Out of the Bank
    XXX. The Forged Deed
    XXXI. An Accident to the Dover Coach
    XXXII. The Bradshaw Pew Again Occupied
    XXXIII. A Mother to Be Proud Of
    XXXIV. "I Must Go and Nurse Mr Bellingham"
    XXXV. Out of Darkness into Light
    XXXVI. The End




    Drop, drop, slow tears!
    And bathe those beauteous feet,
    Which brought from heaven
    The news and Prince of peace.
    Cease not, wet eyes,
    For mercy to entreat:
    To cry for vengeance
    Sin doth never cease.
    In your deep floods
    Drown all my faults and fears;
    Nor let His eye
    See sin, but through my tears.

    _Phineas Fletcher_




    CHAPTER I

    The Dressmaker's Apprentice at Work


    There is an assize-town in one of the eastern counties which was much
    distinguished by the Tudor sovereigns, and, in consequence of their
    favour and protection, attained a degree of importance that surprises
    the modern traveller.

    A hundred years ago its appearance was that of picturesque grandeur.
    The old houses, which were the temporary residences of such of the
    county-families as contented themselves with the gaieties of a
    provincial town, crowded the streets and gave them the irregular but
    noble appearance yet to be seen in the cities of Belgium. The sides
    of the streets had a quaint richness, from the effect of the gables,
    and the stacks of chimneys which cut against the blue sky above;
    while, if the eye fell lower down, the attention was arrested by all
    kinds of projections in the shape of balcony and oriel; and it was
    amusing to see the infinite variety of windows that had been crammed
    into the walls long before Mr Pitt's days of taxation. The streets
    below suffered from all these projections and advanced stories above;
    they were dark, and ill-paved with large, round, jolting pebbles, and
    with no side-path protected by kerb-stones; there were no lamp-posts
    for long winter nights; and no regard was paid to the wants of the
    middle class, who neither drove about in coaches of their own, nor
    were carried by their own men in their own sedans into the very
    halls of their friends. The professional men and their wives, the
    shopkeepers and their spouses, and all such people, walked about at
    considerable peril both night and day. The broad unwieldy carriages
    hemmed them up against the houses in the narrow streets. The
    inhospitable houses projected their flights of steps almost into the
    carriage-way, forcing pedestrians again into the danger they had
    avoided for twenty or thirty paces. Then, at night, the only light
    was derived from the glaring, flaring oil-lamps hung above the doors
    of the more aristocratic mansions; just allowing space for the
    passers-by to become visible, before they again disappeared into the
    darkness, where it was no uncommon thing for robbers to be in waiting
    for their prey.

    The traditions of those bygone times, even to the smallest social
    particular, enable one to understand more clearly the circumstances
    which contributed to the formation of character. The daily life
    into which people are born, and into which they are absorbed before
    they are well aware, forms chains which only one in a hundred has
    moral strength enough to despise, and to break when the right time
    comes--when an inward necessity for independent individual action
    arises, which is superior to all outward conventionalities.

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