CHAPTER IV. THE YOUNG LIFE OF PAUL-5

1999 Words

In this summer season the pits never turned full time, particularly the soft coal. Mrs. Dakin, who lived next door to Mrs. Morel, going to the field fence to shake her hearthrug, would spy men coming slowly up the hill. She saw at once they were colliers. Then she waited, a tall, thin, shrew-faced woman, standing on the hill brow, almost like a menace to the poor colliers who were toiling up. It was only eleven o’clock. From the far-off wooded hills the haze that hangs like fine black crape at the back of a summer morning had not yet dissipated. The first man came to the stile. “Chock-chock!” went the gate under his thrust. “ What, han’ yer knocked off?” cried Mrs. Dakin. “ We han, missis.” “ It’s a pity as they letn yer goo,” she said sarcastically. “ It is that,” replied the man.

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