The Woman Thou Gavest Me eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 874 pages of information about The Woman Thou Gavest Me.

The Woman Thou Gavest Me eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 874 pages of information about The Woman Thou Gavest Me.

Afterwards she became my drudge also—­washing my floor, bringing up my coals, and cleaning my grate, for sixpence a week, and giving me a great deal of information about my neighbours for nothing.

Thus she told me, speaking broad cockney with a Welsh accent, that the people opposite were named Wagstaffe and that the creaking noise I heard was that of a mangle, which Mrs. Wagstaffe had to keep because her husband was a drunkard, who stole her money and came home “a-Saturday nights, when the public-houses turned out, and beat her somethink shockin’,” though she always forgave him the next day and then the creaking went on as before.

But the greatest interest of this weird little woman, who had a premature knowledge of things a child ought not to know, was in a house half-way down the street on the other side, where steam was always coming from the open door to the front kitchen.

The people who lived there were named Jones.  Mrs. Jones “washed” and had a bed-ridden old mother (with two shillings from the Guardians) and a daughter named Maggie.

Maggie Jones, who was eighteen, and very pretty, used to work in the dairy, but the foreman had “tiken advantage of her” and she had just had a baby.

This foreman was named Owen Owens and he lived at the last number on our side, where two unmarried sisters “kept house” for him and sat in the “singing seat” at Zion.

Maggie thought it was the sisters’ fault that Owen Owens did not marry her, so she conceived a great scheme for “besting” them, and this was the tragedy which, through Emmerjane’s quick little eyes and her cockney-Welsh tongue, came to me in instalments day by day.

When her baby was a month old Maggie dressed it up “fine” and took it to the photographers for its “card di visit.”  The photographs were a long time coming, but when they came they were “heavenly lovely” and Maggie “cried to look at them.”

Then she put one in an envelope and addressed it to Owen Owens, and though it had only to cross the street, she went out after dark to a pillar-box a long way off lest anybody should see her posting it.

Next day she said, “He’ll have it now, for he always comes home to dinner.  He’ll take it up to his bedroom, look you, and stand it on the washstand, and if either of those sisters touch it he’ll give them what’s what.”

After that she waited anxiously for an acknowledgment, and every time the postman passed down our street her pretty pale face would be at the door, saying, “Anything for me to-day?” or “Are you sure there’s nothing for me, postman?”

At length a letter came, and Maggie Jones trembled so much that she dared not open it, but at last she tripped up to her room to be “all of herself,” and then . . . then there was a “wild screech,” and when Emmerjane ran upstairs Maggie was stretched out on the floor in a dead faint, clutching in her tight hand the photograph which Owen Owens had returned with the words, written in his heavy scrawl across the face—­Maggie Jones’s bastard.

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The Woman Thou Gavest Me from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.