Go to the home page for Odour of Chrysanthemums, a text in process

Uncorrected proofs, 1910

Page 14 (3 of 33)

James T. Boulton


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"Are you at that brook?" she asked sternly.

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For answer the child showed himself before the raspberry-
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canes that rose like whips towards alders. He was a small,
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sturdy boy of five, and he stood quite still, like some "farouche"
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creature.

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"Oh!" said the mother, conciliated. "I thought you were
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down at that wet brook--and you remember what I told
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you----"

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The boy did not move or answer.

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"Come, come on in," she said more gently, "it's getting
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dark and cold--and listen, there's your grandfather's engine
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coming down the line!"

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The lad came slowly forward, with resentful, taciturn
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movement. He was dressed in trousers and waistcoat of cloth
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that was too thick and hard for the size of the garments. They
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were evidently cut down from a man's clothes. He wore no coat,
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and his mother looked at his little flannelette shirt-sleeves as
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she waited for him to precede her up the path.

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"You'll be catching cold, out at nightfall without your
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jacket," she said.

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As they went slowly towards the house he tore at the ragged
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pink locks of the pale chrysanthemums and dropped the petals
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in handfuls along the path.

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"Don't do that--it does look nasty," said his mother. He
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refrained, and she, suddenly pitiful, broke off a twig with three
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or four small, wan flowers and held them against her face.
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When they reached the yard her hand hesitated, and instead of
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throwing the flower away, she pushed it in her apron band.
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Mother and boy stood at the foot of the wooden steps looking
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across the bay of lines at the passing home of the miners. The

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