"I've lost the place!" she
exclaimed helplessly. "Oh, mercy, what will become of me! I've lost the
place."
"Never mind," said Magdalen; "I'll soon find the place for you again."
She picked up the book, looked into the pages, and found that the
object of Mrs. Wragge's anxiety was nothing more important than an
old-fashioned Treatise on the Art of Cookery, reduced under the usual
heads of Fish, Flesh, and Fowl, and containing the customary series of
recipes. Turning over the leaves, Magdalen came to one particular page,
thickly studded with little drops of moisture half dry. "Curious!" she
said. "If this was anything but a cookery-book, I should say somebody
had been crying over it."
"Somebody?" echoed Mrs. Wragge, with a stare of amazement. "It isn't
somebody--it's Me. Thank you kindly, that's the place, sure enough.
Bless you, I'm used to crying over it. You'd cry, too, if you had to get
the captain's dinners out of it. As sure as ever I sit down to this book
the Buzzing in my head begins again. Who's to make it out? Sometimes
I think I've got it, and it all goes away from me. Sometimes I think I
haven't got it, and it all comes back in a heap.
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