Page:Dickens - A Child s History of England, 1900.djvu/778

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
344
TOM TIDDLERS GROUND.

first time under a sullen cloud. There they were, at all their homes that day, being made much of, being taken out, being spoiled and made disagreeable, and caring nothing for her. It was like their artful selfishness always to tell her when they came back under pretence of confidence and friendship, all those details about where they had been, and what they had done and seen, and how often they had said, "Oh! If we had only darling little Kitty here!" Here indeed! I dare say! When they came back after the holidays, they were used to being received by Kitty, and to saying that coming to Kitty was like coming to another home. Very well then, why did they go away? If they meant it, why did they go away? Let them answer that. But they didn't mean it, and couldn't answer that, and they didn't tell the truth, and people who didn't tell the truth were hateful. When they came back next time they should be received in a new manner; they should be avoided and shunned.

And there, the while she sat all alone revolving how ill she was used, and how much better she was than the people who were not alone, the wedding breakfast was going on: no question of it! With a nasty bride-cake, and with those ridiculous orange-flowers, and with that conceited bride, and that hideous bridegroom, and those heartless bridesmaids, and Miss Pupford stuck up at the table! They thought they were enjoying themselves but it would come home to them one day to have thought so. They would all be dead in a few years, let them enjoy themselves ever so much. It was a religious comfort to know that.

It was such a comfort to know it, that little Miss Kitty Kimmeens suddenly sprang from the chair in which she had been musing in a corner, and cried out, "Oh those envious thoughts are not mine, Oh this wicked creature isn't me! Help me, somebody! I go wrong alone by my weak self. Help me, anybody!"

"—Miss Kimmeens is not a professed philosopher, sir," said Mr. Traveller, presenting her at the barred window, and smoothing her shining hair, *' but I apprehend there was some tincture of philosophy in her words, and in the prompt action with which she followed them. That action was, to emerge from her unnatural solitude, and