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ing could tyrannise over la petite Madelaine,--she was so gentle, so loving (when she dared show her love), so perfectly tractable and unoffending; but in the Chateau du Resnel no one could have passed two whole days without perceiving she was no favourite, except with one old servant--the same who had placed her in her dying father's arms, and recorded for her his last precious benediction--and with her little brother, who always vowed to those most in his confidence, and to Madelaine herself, when her tears flowed for some short, sharp sorrow, that when he was a man, "toutes ces demoiselles"--meaning his elder sisters and monitresses--should go and live away where they pleased, and leave him and la petite Madelaine to keep house together. Except from these two, any one would have observed that there were "shortcomings" towards her; "shortcomings" of tenderness from the superiors of the household--"shortcomings" of observances from the menials; anything was good enough for Madelaine--any time was time enough for Madelaine. She had to finish wearing out all her sisters' old frocks and wardrobes in general, to eat the crumb of the loaf they had pared the crust from, and to be satisfied with half a portion of soupe au lait, if they had chosen to take double allowance; and, blessedly for la petite Madelaine, it was her nature to be satisfied with everything not embittered by marked and intentional unkindness. It was her nature to sacrifice itself for others. Might that sacrifice have been repaid by a return of love, her little heart would have overflowed with happiness. As it was, she had not yet learnt to reason upon the want of sympathy; she felt without analysing. She was not harshly treated,--was seldom found fault with, though far more rarely commended,--was admitted to share in her sisters' sports, with the proviso that she had no choice in them,--old Jeannette and le petit frere Armand loved her dearly; so did Roland, her father's old faithful hound,--and on the whole, la petite Madelaine was a happy little girl. And happier she was, a thousand times happier, than her cousin Adrienne--than Adrienne de St Hilaire, the spoilt child of fortune and of her doting parents, who lived but in her and for her, exhausting all the ingenuity of love, and all the resources of wealth, in vain endeavours to perfect the felicity of their beautiful but heartless idol. The families of St Hilaire and Du Resnel were, as has been m
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