The Three Miss Kings: An Australian Story

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, New Age, History, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book The Three Miss Kings: An Australian Story by Ada Cambridge, Library of Alexandria
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Ada Cambridge ISBN: 9781465605856
Publisher: Library of Alexandria Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Ada Cambridge
ISBN: 9781465605856
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English
On the second of January, in the year 1880, three newly-orphaned sisters, finding themselves left to their own devices, with an income of exactly one hundred pounds a year a-piece, sat down to consult together as to the use they should make of their independence. The place where they sat was a grassy cliff overlooking a wide bay of the Southern Ocean—a lonely spot, whence no sign of human life was visible, except in the sail of a little fishing boat far away. The low sun, that blazed at the back of their heads, and threw their shadows and the shadow of every blade of grass into relief, touched that distant sail and made it shine like bridal satin; while a certain island rock, the home of sea-birds, blushed like a rose in the same necromantic light. As they sat, they could hear the waves breaking and seething on the sands and stones beneath them, but could only see the level plain of blue and purple water stretching from the toes of their boots to the indistinct horizon. That particular Friday was a terribly hot day for the colony, as weather records testify, but in this favoured spot it had been merely a little too warm for comfort, and, the sea-breeze coming up fresher and stronger as the sun went down, it was the perfection of an Australian summer evening at the hour of which I am writing. "What I want," said Patty King (Patty was the middle one), "is to make a dash—a straight-out plunge into the world, Elizabeth—no shilly-shallying and dawdling about, frittering our money away before we begin. Suppose we go to London—we shall have enough to cover our travelling expenses, and our income to start fair with—surely we could live anywhere on three hundred a year, in the greatest comfort—and take rooms near the British Museum?—or in South Kensington?—or suppose we go to one of those intellectual German towns, and study music and languages? What do you think, Nell? I am sure we could do it easily if we tried." "Oh," said Eleanor, the youngest of the trio, "I don't care so long as we go somewhere, and do something." "What do you think, Elizabeth?" pursued the enterprising Patty, alert and earnest. "Life is short, and there is so much for us to see and learn—all these years and years we have been out of it so utterly! Oh, I wonder how we have borne it! How havewe borne it—to hear about things and never to know or do them, like other people! Let us get into the thick of it at once, and recover lost time. Once in Europe, everything would be to our hand—everything would be possible. What do you think?" "My dear," said Elizabeth, with characteristic caution, "I think we are too young and ignorant to go so far afield just yet." "We are all over twenty-one," replied Patty quickly, "and though we have lived the lives of hermits, we are not more stupid than other people. We can speak French and German, and we are quite sharp enough to know when we are being cheated. We should travel in perfect safety, finding our way as we went along. And we do know something of those places—of Melbourne we know nothing."
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
On the second of January, in the year 1880, three newly-orphaned sisters, finding themselves left to their own devices, with an income of exactly one hundred pounds a year a-piece, sat down to consult together as to the use they should make of their independence. The place where they sat was a grassy cliff overlooking a wide bay of the Southern Ocean—a lonely spot, whence no sign of human life was visible, except in the sail of a little fishing boat far away. The low sun, that blazed at the back of their heads, and threw their shadows and the shadow of every blade of grass into relief, touched that distant sail and made it shine like bridal satin; while a certain island rock, the home of sea-birds, blushed like a rose in the same necromantic light. As they sat, they could hear the waves breaking and seething on the sands and stones beneath them, but could only see the level plain of blue and purple water stretching from the toes of their boots to the indistinct horizon. That particular Friday was a terribly hot day for the colony, as weather records testify, but in this favoured spot it had been merely a little too warm for comfort, and, the sea-breeze coming up fresher and stronger as the sun went down, it was the perfection of an Australian summer evening at the hour of which I am writing. "What I want," said Patty King (Patty was the middle one), "is to make a dash—a straight-out plunge into the world, Elizabeth—no shilly-shallying and dawdling about, frittering our money away before we begin. Suppose we go to London—we shall have enough to cover our travelling expenses, and our income to start fair with—surely we could live anywhere on three hundred a year, in the greatest comfort—and take rooms near the British Museum?—or in South Kensington?—or suppose we go to one of those intellectual German towns, and study music and languages? What do you think, Nell? I am sure we could do it easily if we tried." "Oh," said Eleanor, the youngest of the trio, "I don't care so long as we go somewhere, and do something." "What do you think, Elizabeth?" pursued the enterprising Patty, alert and earnest. "Life is short, and there is so much for us to see and learn—all these years and years we have been out of it so utterly! Oh, I wonder how we have borne it! How havewe borne it—to hear about things and never to know or do them, like other people! Let us get into the thick of it at once, and recover lost time. Once in Europe, everything would be to our hand—everything would be possible. What do you think?" "My dear," said Elizabeth, with characteristic caution, "I think we are too young and ignorant to go so far afield just yet." "We are all over twenty-one," replied Patty quickly, "and though we have lived the lives of hermits, we are not more stupid than other people. We can speak French and German, and we are quite sharp enough to know when we are being cheated. We should travel in perfect safety, finding our way as we went along. And we do know something of those places—of Melbourne we know nothing."

More books from Library of Alexandria

Cover of the book A Half Century of Conflict: France and England in North America (Complete) by Ada Cambridge
Cover of the book The River Motor Boat Boys on the Mississippi on the Trail to the Gulf by Ada Cambridge
Cover of the book The Boudoir: A Magazine of Scandal, Facetiae, &C. by Ada Cambridge
Cover of the book Common Science by Ada Cambridge
Cover of the book The Whip Hand: A Tale of the Pine Country by Ada Cambridge
Cover of the book My Days and Nights on the Battle-Field by Ada Cambridge
Cover of the book Unconscious Comedians by Ada Cambridge
Cover of the book Sodom: A Play by Ada Cambridge
Cover of the book Atrocious Judges: Lives of Judges Infamous as Tools of Tyrants and Instruments of Oppression by Ada Cambridge
Cover of the book The History of Chivalry by Ada Cambridge
Cover of the book Fruits of Culture by Ada Cambridge
Cover of the book Rocky Mountain Boys: Camping in the Big Game Country by Ada Cambridge
Cover of the book The Reckoning by Ada Cambridge
Cover of the book Agnes Strickland's Queens of England Abridged and Fully Illustrated (Complete) by Ada Cambridge
Cover of the book Medical Experts: Investigation of Insanity by Juries by Ada Cambridge
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy