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When
she
went
down
to
breakfast
she
saw
that
her
seat
at
Miss
Minchin
's
side
was
occupied
by
Lavinia
,
and
Miss
Minchin
spoke
to
her
coldly
.
"
You
will
begin
your
new
duties
,
Sara
,
"
she
said
,
"
by
taking
your
seat
with
the
younger
children
at
a
smaller
table
.
You
must
keep
them
quiet
,
and
see
that
they
behave
well
and
do
not
waste
their
food
.
You
ought
to
have
been
down
earlier
.
Lottie
has
already
upset
her
tea
.
"
That
was
the
beginning
,
and
from
day
to
day
the
duties
given
to
her
were
added
to
.
She
taught
the
younger
children
French
and
heard
their
other
lessons
,
and
these
were
the
least
of
her
labors
.
It
was
found
that
she
could
be
made
use
of
in
numberless
directions
.
She
could
be
sent
on
errands
at
any
time
and
in
all
weathers
.
She
could
be
told
to
do
things
other
people
neglected
.
The
cook
and
the
housemaids
took
their
tone
from
Miss
Minchin
,
and
rather
enjoyed
ordering
about
the
"
young
one
"
who
had
been
made
so
much
fuss
over
for
so
long
.
They
were
not
servants
of
the
best
class
,
and
had
neither
good
manners
nor
good
tempers
,
and
it
was
frequently
convenient
to
have
at
hand
someone
on
whom
blame
could
be
laid
.
During
the
first
month
or
two
,
Sara
thought
that
her
willingness
to
do
things
as
well
as
she
could
,
and
her
silence
under
reproof
,
might
soften
those
who
drove
her
so
hard
.
In
her
proud
little
heart
she
wanted
them
to
see
that
she
was
trying
to
earn
her
living
and
not
accepting
charity
.
But
the
time
came
when
she
saw
that
no
one
was
softened
at
all
;
and
the
more
willing
she
was
to
do
as
she
was
told
,
the
more
domineering
and
exacting
careless
housemaids
became
,
and
the
more
ready
a
scolding
cook
was
to
blame
her
.
If
she
had
been
older
,
Miss
Minchin
would
have
given
her
the
bigger
girls
to
teach
and
saved
money
by
dismissing
an
instructress
;
but
while
she
remained
and
looked
like
a
child
,
she
could
be
made
more
useful
as
a
sort
of
little
superior
errand
girl
and
maid
of
all
work
.
An
ordinary
errand
boy
would
not
have
been
so
clever
and
reliable
.
Sara
could
be
trusted
with
difficult
commissions
and
complicated
messages
.
She
could
even
go
and
pay
bills
,
and
she
combined
with
this
the
ability
to
dust
a
room
well
and
to
set
things
in
order
.
Her
own
lessons
became
things
of
the
past
.
She
was
taught
nothing
,
and
only
after
long
and
busy
days
spent
in
running
here
and
there
at
everybody
's
orders
was
she
grudgingly
allowed
to
go
into
the
deserted
schoolroom
,
with
a
pile
of
old
books
,
and
study
alone
at
night
.
"
If
I
do
not
remind
myself
of
the
things
I
have
learned
,
perhaps
I
may
forget
them
,
"
she
said
to
herself
.
"
I
am
almost
a
scullery
maid
,
and
if
I
am
a
scullery
maid
who
knows
nothing
,
I
shall
be
like
poor
Becky
.
I
wonder
if
I
could
QUITE
forget
and
begin
to
drop
my
H
'S
and
not
remember
that
Henry
the
Eighth
had
six
wives
.
"
One
of
the
most
curious
things
in
her
new
existence
was
her
changed
position
among
the
pupils
.
Instead
of
being
a
sort
of
small
royal
personage
among
them
,
she
no
longer
seemed
to
be
one
of
their
number
at
all
.
She
was
kept
so
constantly
at
work
that
she
scarcely
ever
had
an
opportunity
of
speaking
to
any
of
them
,
and
she
could
not
avoid
seeing
that
Miss
Minchin
preferred
that
she
should
live
a
life
apart
from
that
of
the
occupants
of
the
schoolroom
.
"
I
will
not
have
her
forming
intimacies
and
talking
to
the
other
children
,
"
that
lady
said
.
"
Girls
like
a
grievance
,
and
if
she
begins
to
tell
romantic
stories
about
herself
,
she
will
become
an
ill-used
heroine
,
and
parents
will
be
given
a
wrong
impression
.
It
is
better
that
she
should
live
a
separate
life
--
one
suited
to
her
circumstances
.
I
am
giving
her
a
home
,
and
that
is
more
than
she
has
any
right
to
expect
from
me
.
"