With wide, pitiful eyes
Jane looked at each group she passed. Three years ago she would have
seen nothing but the ordinary and the inevitable in such spectacles,
but since then her moral and intellectual being had grown on rare
nourishment; there was indignation as well as heartache in the
feeling with which she had learnt to regard the world of her
familiarity. To enter the house at which she paused it was necessary
to squeeze through a conglomerate of dirty little bodies. At the
head of the first flight of stairs she came upon a girl sitting in a
weary attitude on the top step and beating the wood listlessly with
the last remnant of a hearth-brush; on her lap was one more specimen
of the infinitely-multiplied baby, and a child of two years sprawled
behind her on the landing.
'Waiting for him to come home, Pennyloaf?' said Jane.
'Oh, is that you, Miss Snowdon!' exclaimed the other, returning to
consciousness and manifesting some shame at being discovered in this
position. Hastily she drew together the front of her dress, which
for the baby's sake had been wide open, and rose to her feet.
Pennyloaf was not a bit more womanly in figure than on the day of
her marriage; her voice was still an immature treble; the same
rueful irresponsibility marked her features; but all her poor
prettiness was wasted under the disfigurement of pains and cares,
Incongruously enough, she wore a gown of bright-patterned calico,
and about her neck had a collar of pretentious lace; her hair was
dressed as if for a holiday, and a daub recently made on her cheeks
by the baby's fingers lent emphasis to the fact that she had but a
little while ago washed herself with much care.
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