Produced by Nick Hodson of London, England
Imprudence By F.E. Mills Young Published by Hodder and Stoughton Ltd, London. This edition dated 1920.
Imprudence, by F.E. Mills Young.
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________________________________________________________________________ IMPRUDENCE, BY F.E. MILLS YOUNG.
CHAPTER ONE.
"Now came still evening on." The fading light, warm and faintly glowing from the last rays of the May sun, lay with a lingering mellowness upon the fields, upon the light green of leafing trees, upon a white froth of late blackthorn blossoming in the hedges, upon the straggling township nestling in the hollow, and upon the tall red-brick chimneys dominating Wortheton--dominating the souls sheltering beneath the clustering roofs--dominating and subjugating brain and mind and body by the might of their crushing omnipotence, by the strength of wealth and industry and established order--gaunt chimneys, rising out of the green mist of the trees, grotesque, symbolic landmarks--index fingers witnessing in obelisk-like ugliness to the power and importance of successful commercial enterprise, to the dignity of capital and the drab necessity of labour, to, in short, the disproportionate values in most existing things.
In the evening light, between the lengthening shadows flung by the hedges along the dusty road that leads to Wortheton, a girl walked listlessly, a girl whose youth was marred by a look of world-weary wisdom, as much at variance with the young face as the tall brick chimneys with the harmonious beauty of the landscape. But for that look, and the sullen expression in the brown eyes, the girl would have been beautiful, as the scene was beautiful, and the soft primrose light upon the uplands; but the buoyant elasticity, the hope, and the freshness of youth, these were lacking; there remained only the pitiful fact that in years the girl was in the springtime of life and in experience more matured.
As she walked, her sullen gaze shifted furtively from the township below to the fair open country, growing momentarily dimmer and greyer as the light in the sky paled. A gap in the hedge revealed a narrow path between giant elms, and a cool shadowed coppice where the bracken fronds rose stiff and closely curled, and dark ivy twined thickly about the tree trunks. The girl turned aside into the coppice and, with the fugitive instinct of hiding from the light, penetrated its shaded depths, and paused and leaned her arms against the gnarled trunk of a sheltering beech tree, and rested her head upon her arms in dry-eyed tragic sorrow.
In a fork of the leafy branches overhead a bird had its nest, sitting in brooding satisfaction upon its delicate speckled eggs. The intrusion startled it from slumber: the round eyes betrayed a suspicious uneasiness, and the soft warm body nestled closer over the eggs it protected. Quaint thing of feathers and bright-eyed watchfulness and maternal instinct, with no sense of anything beyond the supreme importance of hatching those little speckled eggs--drawing its unconscious comparison by the pride of elemental right to the disproportion in values in this as in other matters, happy in its prospective motherhood, peering timorously through the green tracery sheltering it, home at the unhappy prospective human mothers with resentful eyes lifted curiously to observe its brooding content.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: Imprudence by F.E. Mills Young
- 2: And had their headquarters at Court Heatherleigh
- 3: The other five Miss Graynors were plain
- 4: Who were echoes of Miss Agatha
- 5: They do not necessarily add to the dissatisfaction
- 6: But she was afraid of Agatha Agatha
- 7: Mr Graynor looked not unnaturally amazed
- 8: Agatha treated her with chill disapproval
- 9: Prudence considered him handsome
- 10: With the springtime harmony about them
- 11: The primroses were so unmistakably dying
- 12: Said Prudence counting Bobby
- 13: Time will solve that difficulty
- 14: I don't fancy Miss Graynor gets it all her own way
- 15: Miss Graynor interrupted him frigidly
- 16: And Mr Graynor had nothing further to add to his reproof
- 17: Who were pale reflections of their eldest sister
- 18: Prudence had watched the smoker enter the garden
- 19: This remark pulled Prudence up sharply
- 20: In what colour is this event painted
- 21: She went downstairs in advance of Prudence
- 22: While the five Miss Graynors interchanged commonplaces
- 23: That was what Prudence admired most in him
- 24: Prudence made a strange discovery
- 25: The curate had eyes only for Prudence
- 26: Cried the curate enthusiastically
- 27: Bobby remarked one evening to Prudence
- 28: Bobby stared at her open mouthed
- 29: Marriage with him would not be moonshine exactly
- 30: Some raindrops form into puddles
- 31: The curate was cycling from the opposite direction
- 32: The workpeople think very highly of him
- 33: Prudence shook hands hurriedly
- 34: Prudence bent suddenly over the bundle in her arms
- 35: Miss Agatha met her in the hall
- 36: Prudence began to feel sympathetic
- 37: Prudence returned with suspicious meekness
- 38: But the curate was throwing sweets for them
- 39: With an ambiguity equal to his own
- 40: Occasioned Matilda considerable comfort
- 41: Mr Graynor said plenty of time
- 42: Matilda was naturally submissive
- 43: Prudence lifted a face pale with indignation to the speaker
- 44: Lizzie had occupied the back seat
- 45: And assisted Prudence to the ground
- 46: He addressed himself to Mr Graynor
- 47: Mr Graynor accompanied him into the hall
- 48: Mr Graynor said in displeased tones
- 49: Matilda looked a little doubtful
- 50: But Mr Morgan was not accommodating
- 51: This disparity he recognised as a barrier
- 52: Mr Morgan showed surprise at her question
- 53: So many young men emigrate to the Colonies nowadays
- 54: Have decreased the influence of the absent Steele
- 55: Prudence missed him after he left
- 56: Prudence let it pass unchallenged
- 57: And hired cycles aren't reliable
- 58: His frankness embarrassed Prudence
- 59: He wouldn't trust the old cycle again
- 60: And advised Prudence to sit down and rest
- 61: And her plum cakes are excellent
- 62: And then glanced curiously at Prudence
- 63: Prudence's heart stood still on perceiving the cyclist
- 64: Mr Graynor raised a protesting hand
- 65: Exclaimed Prudence when she read this letter
- 66: Miss Agatha inquired conversationally
- 67: Refusing to relinquish the dish of scones
- 68: Prudence relinquished her cue to him and sat down
- 69: Prudence insisted upon a long engagement
- 70: Prudence was once more in favour
- 71: Prudence took her seat in the carriage
- 72: The stodginess of it was getting on her nerves
- 73: Prudence stood back and waved her hand to him
- 74: And a show of sly surreptitiousness
- 75: The thought of wearing the pearls
- 76: The visit to Morningside hung over her like a nightmare
- 77: Prudence will help to rejuvenate me
- 78: Prudence explained apologetically
- 79: And duly presented to Prudence
- 80: She smiled agreeably at Prudence
- 81: Made the Morningside household more noticeably dull
- 82: Both speech and manner disconcerted Prudence
- 83: Nevertheless he claimed two dances from Prudence
- 84: That night Prudence asked Edward Morgan for her release
- 85: While Mr Morgan tossed restlessly on his bed
- 86: And Prudence entertained the mystified visitor alone
- 87: She took Prudence out motoring
- 88: An arrangement which suited Prudence
- 89: Prudence said with her face averted
- 90: I beg you not to jilt him in this heartless manner
- 91: Old Mr Graynor took little notice of her
- 92: Morgan is a refined edition of Uncle William
- 93: Prudence had effected a compromise
- 94: The Graynor honour is safe in your keeping
- 95: Where the honeymoon was to be spent
- 96: Prudence was unaccustomed to sleep with them closed
- 97: The great disaster brought added prosperity
- 98: Which scandalised Edward Morgan as well as his mother
- 99: If his love for Prudence had diminished
- 100: Always animated and gay and tireless in her enjoyment
- 101: Seeing Mr Morgan standing disconsolately in the doorway
- 102: Had forgotten everything else for the moment
- 103: It's jolly out there always summer
- 104: Mr Morgan was even then on his way to discover their retreat
- 105: The Edward Morgans left the dance early
- 106: What has there been between you and Steele in the past
- 107: She had never loved Edward Morgan
- 108: On Court Heatherleigh and its inmates
- 109: He accepted her reappearance in the home without question
- 110: Prudence had sought only to avoid a further meeting
- 111: Prudence grasped the bannister and began the descent
- 112: It was yesterday that we picked primroses together
- 113: She was altogether too civilised
- 114: And a loveless marriage was dishonouring
- 115: Prudence struggled against him
- 116: He resumed more quietly Prudence
- 117: But clean and decent living appeals to me
- 118: Yet the standard of physical courage
- 119: And caught sight of Mr Graynor
- 120: Mr Graynor silenced him with a gesture
- 121: Indicating William with a brief nod
- 122: Bessie Clapp took the cheque and stood with it in her hand
- 123: Mr Graynor fixed his dim angry eyes on his son's face
- 124: Prudence looked swiftly into his face
- 125: A child to be spoilt and petted
- 126: Prudence accompanied him upstairs
- 127: Mr Morgan was as eager to make concessions as Prudence
- 128: It is on account of his parentage I wish it
