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"
Excuse
me
for
laughing
if
it
was
impolite
,
"
she
said
,
and
walked
out
of
the
room
,
leaving
Miss
Minchin
struggling
with
her
rage
,
and
the
girls
whispering
over
their
books
.
"
Did
you
see
her
?
Did
you
see
how
queer
she
looked
?
"
Jessie
broke
out
.
"
I
should
n't
be
at
all
surprised
if
she
did
turn
out
to
be
something
.
Suppose
she
should
!
"
When
one
lives
in
a
row
of
houses
,
it
is
interesting
to
think
of
the
things
which
are
being
done
and
said
on
the
other
side
of
the
wall
of
the
very
rooms
one
is
living
in
.
Sara
was
fond
of
amusing
herself
by
trying
to
imagine
the
things
hidden
by
the
wall
which
divided
the
Select
Seminary
from
the
Indian
gentleman
's
house
.
She
knew
that
the
schoolroom
was
next
to
the
Indian
gentleman
's
study
,
and
she
hoped
that
the
wall
was
thick
so
that
the
noise
made
sometimes
after
lesson
hours
would
not
disturb
him
.
"
I
am
growing
quite
fond
of
him
,
"
she
said
to
Ermengarde
;
"
I
should
not
like
him
to
be
disturbed
.
I
have
adopted
him
for
a
friend
.
You
can
do
that
with
people
you
never
speak
to
at
all
.
You
can
just
watch
them
,
and
think
about
them
and
be
sorry
for
them
,
until
they
seem
almost
like
relations
.
I
'm
quite
anxious
sometimes
when
I
see
the
doctor
call
twice
a
day
.
"
"
I
have
very
few
relations
,
"
said
Ermengarde
,
reflectively
,
"
and
I
'm
very
glad
of
it
.
I
do
n't
like
those
I
have
.
My
two
aunts
are
always
saying
,
'D
ear
me
,
Ermengarde
!
You
are
very
fat
.
You
should
n't
eat
sweets
,
'
and
my
uncle
is
always
asking
me
things
like
,
'
When
did
Edward
the
Third
ascend
the
throne
?
'
and
,
'
Who
died
of
a
surfeit
of
lampreys
?
'
"
Sara
laughed
.
"
People
you
never
speak
to
ca
n't
ask
you
questions
like
that
,
"
she
said
;
"
and
I
'm
sure
the
Indian
gentleman
would
n't
even
if
he
was
quite
intimate
with
you
.
I
am
fond
of
him
.
"
She
had
become
fond
of
the
Large
Family
because
they
looked
happy
;
but
she
had
become
fond
of
the
Indian
gentleman
because
he
looked
unhappy
.
He
had
evidently
not
fully
recovered
from
some
very
severe
illness
.
In
the
kitchen
--
where
,
of
course
,
the
servants
,
through
some
mysterious
means
,
knew
everything
--
there
was
much
discussion
of
his
case
.
He
was
not
an
Indian
gentleman
really
,
but
an
Englishman
who
had
lived
in
India
.
He
had
met
with
great
misfortunes
which
had
for
a
time
so
imperilled
his
whole
fortune
that
he
had
thought
himself
ruined
and
disgraced
forever
.
The
shock
had
been
so
great
that
he
had
almost
died
of
brain
fever
;
and
ever
since
he
had
been
shattered
in
health
,
though
his
fortunes
had
changed
and
all
his
possessions
had
been
restored
to
him
.
His
trouble
and
peril
had
been
connected
with
mines
.
"
And
mines
with
diamonds
in
'em
!
"
said
the
cook
.
"
No
savin
's
of
mine
never
goes
into
no
mines
--
particular
diamond
ones
"
--
with
a
side
glance
at
Sara
.
"
We
all
know
somethin'
of
THEM
.
"
"
He
felt
as
my
papa
felt
,
"
Sara
thought
.
"
He
was
ill
as
my
papa
was
;
but
he
did
not
die
.
"