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The Perpetual Curate

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Carlingford is, as is well known, essentially a quiet place.

There is no trade in the town, properly so called. To be sure, there are two or three small counting-houses at the other end of George Street, in that ambitious pile called Gresham Chambers; but the owners of these places of business live, as a general rule, in villas, either detached or semi-detached, in the North-end, the new quarter, which, as everybody knows, is a region totally unrepresented in society.

In Carlingford proper there is no trade, no manufactures, no anything in particular, except very pleasant parties and a superior class of people - a very superior class of people, indeed, to anything one expects to meet with in a country town, which is not even a county town, nor the seat of any particular interest.

It is the boast of the place that it has no particular interest - not even a public school: for no reason in the world but because they like it, have so many nice people collected together in those pretty houses in Grange Lane - which is, of course, a very much higher tribute to the town than if any special inducement had led them there

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Product Details
pubOne.info
2819915256 / 9782819915256
eBook (EPUB)
23/06/2010
English
375 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%