Volume Ii Part 23 (2/2)
”Will you wash Jewel for me, there's a good girl?”
”No, a' won't,” cried Polly, standing on her dignity. ”Sich jobs belong to Lunnon servants. Us country folk be above stooping to sich dirty work. A' wud put soap inter's eyes, 'an choak um', by letting the water get down un's throat.”
”Get me some warm water then, an' a piece of soap,” said Martha sulkily.
”Yer must get it yersel, for a' must hurry up with the taters.”
The crafty Martha found for once, the simple country girl had got the master of her.
”Never mind,” thought she; ”I will make her wash him yet.”
When Polly returned to the kitchen, she found her London friend on her knees beside the keeler, in which she generally washed her dishes, cleansing the dust from Jewel's woolly coat. The dog looked a pitiful spectacle s.h.i.+vering in the water, his hair out of curl and clinging to his pink skin.
”What an objeckt he do look,” said Polly. ”A' never seed any think so ridiculus. Why do'ant yer let the poor beast alone?”
”He's a pest, I hate and detest him,” said Martha giving the poodle a vicious shake, ”but the job has to be done. Give me a cloth to rub him dry, and hand me that basket to put him in.”
”Why do you put 'um in the basket?” asked the wondering Polly.
”Till he gets dry by the fire, or else he would crawl among the ashes and make himself as dirty as ever.”
”Well, I hope our Pincher won't find him out. He'd toomble ow'r the basket, an' chaw him up in a minit.”
”I should like to see him do it,” said Martha, more in earnest than joke. ”He would get what would keep him quiet, I think. Who's that plain dark girl, Polly,” she said, looking up from the dog, ”that your old mistress calls Dorothy?”
”A plain dark gal. Miss Dolly plain. All the gentlemen calls her a booty. A's a great sight handsomer than yer mistrus, wi' her low forehead that ha' scarce room for her eyebrows. Sich small cunning looking eyes, an' a nose as long as the pump handel, an' thin sich a big bony cross looking mouth. I 'spose yer think she be handsomer than our dear Miss Dorothy.”
”Well, I did not say that; two blacks don't make a white,” and Martha laughed heartily. ”I never said she was a beauty, and I only wish she heard you describe her. She has a very low mean forehead, not like mine that the gentleman who visited our Inst.i.tution said was _magnificent_.”
”Doth that mean bold an' imperdent?” said Polly.
”Do you think I look bold and impudent?” Martha was on her feet in a moment, her eyes flas.h.i.+ng, and her fists half clenched.
”I thought that wor what yer meant by magnificent, I do'ant understan yer fine Lunnon words,” and Polly looked at her companion's angry face, with the utmost innocence.
”You are a poor ignorant creature,” returned Martha. ”My parents gave me a good education, and nature a fine intellect. I need not care for what you think of me.”
END OF THE SECOND VOLUME.
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