What's Mine's Mine Author:George Macdonald Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: CHAPTER III. THE GIRLS' FIRST WALK. The Governor, Peregrine and Palmer as he was, did not care about walking at any time, not even when he had to do it bec... more »ause other people did ; the mother, of whom there would have been little left had the sweetness in her moral, and the [housekeeping in her practical nature, been subtracted, had things to see to within doors : the young people must go out by themselves ! They put on their 'hats, and issued. The temperature was keen, though it was now nearly the middle of August, by which time in those northern regions the earth has begun to get a little warm : the house stood high, and the atmosphere was thin. There was a certain sense of sadness in the pale sky and its cold brightness; but these young people felt no cold, and perceived no sadness. The air was exhilarating, and they breathed deep breaths of a pleasure more akin to the spiritual than they were capable of knowing. For as they gazed around them, they thought, like Hamlet's mother in the presence of her invisible husband, that they saw all there was to be seen. They did not know nature : in the school to which they had gone they patronized instead of revering her. She wrought upon them nevertheless after her own fashion with her children, unheedful whether they knew what she was about or not. The mere space, the mere height from which they looked, the rarity of the air, the soft aspiration of earth towards heaven, made them all more of children. But not one of them being capable of enjoying anything by herself, together they were unable to enjoy much; and, like the miser who, when he cannot much enjoy his money, desires more, began to desire more company to share in the already withering satisfaction of their new possession—to help them, that is, to get pleasure out of i...« less