Login
Password
Don't have an account? Sign up now!
Ebooks for mobile phones Reading ebooks with a cell phone

Read anywhere you go at wap.tx2ph.com
 
New Arrivals
Romeo and Juliet, by W.Shakespeare
The Monster, by S.M.Tenneshaw
The Premiere, by R.Sabia
I Was a Teen-Age Secret Weapon, by R.Sabia
The White Feather Hex, by D.Peterson
Disturbing Sun, by R.S.Richardson
The Bell Tone, by E.H.Leftwich
The Invisible Man, by H.G.Wells
The Hunters, by W.Morrison
Divinity, by W.Morrison
Popular Titles
The Crystal Egg, by H.G.Wells
Star Born, by A.Norton
Omnilingual, by H.Beam Piper
Warlord of Mars (vol.3), by E.R.Burroughs
A Princess of Mars (vol.1), by E.R.Burroughs
Pellucidar, by E.R.Burroughs
The Moon Pool, by A.Merritt
Highways in Hiding, by G.O.Smith
Treachery in Outer Space, by C.Rockwell
The Leavenworth Case, by A.K.Green
 
PRIVACY policy
Miss Ludington's Sister,by E.Bellamy

She asked nothing better. If she was nothing to the present, the present was still less to her. As to society, her sensitiveness to the unpleasant impression made by her personal appearance rendered social gatherings distasteful to her, and she wore a heavy veil when she went to church.

She was an only child. Her mother had long been dead, and when about this time her father died she was left without near kin. With no ties of contemporary interest to hold her to the present she fell more and more under the influence of the habit of retrospection.

The only brightness of colour which life could ever have for her lay behind in the girlhood which had ended but yesterday, and was yet so completely ended. She found her only happiness in the recollections of that period which she retained. These were the only goods she prized, and it was the grief of her life that, while she had strong boxes for her money, and locks and keys for her silver and her linen, there was no device whereby she could protect her store of memories from the slow wasting of forgetfulness.

She lived with a servant quite alone in the old Ludington homestead, which it was her absorbing care to keep in precisely the same condition, even to the arrangement of the furniture, in which it had always been.

If she could have insured the same permanence in the village of Hilton, outside the homestead enclosure, she would have been spared the cause of her keenest unhappiness. For the hand of change was making havoc with the village: the railroad had come, shops had been built, and stores and new houses were going up on every side, and the beautiful hamlet, with its score or two of old-fashioned dwellings, which had been the scene of her girlhood, was in a fair way to be transformed into a vile manufacturing village.

Miss Ludington, to whom every stick and stone of the place was dear, could not walk abroad without missing some ancient landmark removed since she had passed that way before, perhaps a tree felled, some meadow, that had been a playground of her childhood, dug up for building-lots, or a row of brick tenements going up on the site of a sacred grove.

Her neighbours generally had succumbed to the rage for improvement, as they called it. There was a general remodelling and modernizing of houses, and, where nothing more expensive could be afforded, the paint-brush wrought its cheap metamorphosis. "You wouldn't know Hilton was the same place," was the complacent verdict of her neighbours, to which Miss Ludington sorrowfully assented.

It would be hard to describe her impotent wrath, her sense of outrage and irreparable loss, as one by one these changes effaced some souvenir of her early life. The past was once dead already; they were killing it a second time. Her feelings at length became so intolerable that she kept her house, pretty much ceasing to walk abroad.

At this period, when she was between thirty and thirty-five years old, a distant relative left her a large fortune. She had been well-to-do before, but now she was very rich.

Read On |  Back to cell phone book list

Share your thoughts about this text!

Select the text you wish to comment with your mouse
and click the Comment button.


*Nickame (required):

Email (for verification, won't be published):
 PRIVACY policy
Website (optional):


*Prove your humanhood (required):

Enter the text from the picture above:

*Comment (required):

2000 characters max. Allowed tags: <b>, <a href="">, <strike>, <em>.
Inappropriate comments may be deleted at our sole discretion.