Arnold Bennett - Son of Stoke-on-Trent |
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Hilda Lessways
"The Lessways household, consisting of Hilda and her widowed mother, was temporarily without a servant. Hilda hated domestic work, and because she hated it she often did it passionately and thoroughly. That afternoon, as she emerged from the kitchen, her dark, defiant face was full of grim satisfaction in the fact that she had left a kitchen polished and irreproachable, a kitchen without the slightest indication that it ever had been or ever would be used for preparing human nature's daily food; a show kitchen. Even the apron which she had worn was hung in concealment behind the scullery door. The lobby
clock, which stood over six feet high and had to be wound up every night
by hauling on a rope, was noisily getting ready to strike two. But for
Mrs. Lessways' disorderly and undesired assistance, Hilda's task might
have been finished a quarter of an hour earlier. She passed quietly up the
stairs. When she was near the top, her mother's voice, at once querulous
and amiable, came from the sitting-room:...."
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next: The Matador of the Five
Towns
previous: The Card
contents: Bennett's 'Five Towns'
books