The Mountain Girl by Emma Payne Erskine Chapter 10 Page 4

the father on a pallet of corn-husks covered with soiled bedclothing. The windows were mere holes in the walls, unglazed, unframed, and closed at night or in bad weather by wooden shutters, when the room was lighted only by the flames from the now black and empty fireplace. Here, while mother and children were out by “the branch” washing, the injured man lay alone, stoically patient, declaring that his “laig” was some better, that he did not feel “so much misery in hit as yesterday.”

Thryng had seen much squalor and wretchedness, but never before in a home in the country where women and children were to be found. For a moment he looked helplessly at the silent, staring group, and at the man, who feebly tried to indicate to his wife the extending of some courtesy to the stranger.