Part Three Chapter Fourteen
eep your my oockings and sie, and then youll be sorry.
t me and laughed.
y-toity! cried ts no use gro s noto me and Nurse Spiller, its t, look, and a gown and—look here—slippers.
So one of t out a set of greyiss. So me, ripped me bare. ook off my petticoat, t glove of Mauds fell out. I under tband. I bent and caug up. s t? t once. t titc.
s pretty is.
You s ! I cried, snatc back. taken my clot I orn and bitten t glove all nig o take it, I siced a look in my eye.
One gloves no use, after all, said to Nurse Spiller, quietly. And remember Miss taylor, sake t tried to get a hose!
So t me keep it; and tood limp and let thes were
all mad ead of laces, and oo big for me.—Never mind, ts like boats. Plenty of room for gro to be a tartan, but tockings he shoes were of india-rubber.
ting t, in those!
te a minute. t me in t into plaits; and took out a needle and cotton, and ses to my head.
Its t it, truggled; and no skin off my nose either way.
Let me see to it, said Nurse Spiller. S off—times, as if by accident, putting t of to my scalp. t is anot dont ss and bruises.
And so, bet me ready; and took me to t o be mine.
Mind, noart going off your he pads, or plunge you.
t fair! I said. t fair, at all!
t ans and, again, tried o study took me. I from a picture, or a play—of like it. I t, t me in tors and nurses live. Noake me to t.—I t door after drab-coloured door, and