"Get to bed, you naughty children; you're always quarreling," rang the
sharp voice, rising above Letitia's wail, and Arthur's storm of furious
sobs. The girl yielded, but the boy hung back; and it was not until after
a regular stand-up fight between him and the woman--a big, sturdy
woman too--that he was carried off, still desperately resisting, and
shouting that he would have his revenge as soon as ever papa came
home.
Letitia followed quietly enough, as if the scene were too common for
her to trouble herself much about it. The only other witness to it was
the portrait of the mild-faced foundress, which seemed through the
shadows of centuries to look down pitifully on these motherless
children, as if with a remembrance of her own two little sons, whose
sorrowful tale--is it not to be found in every English History, and why
repeat it here?
Motherless children indeed these were, and had been, pathetically, ever
since they were born. All the womanly bringing up they had had, even
in Mrs. Grey's lifetime, had come from that grim nurse, Phillis.
Phillis was not an ordinary woman. The elements of a tragedy where in
her low, broad, observant, and intelligent forehead, her keen black eyes,
and her full-lipped, under-hanging mouth.
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