Aunt Deborah, by Mary Russell 
Mitford 
 
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Title: Aunt Deborah 
Author: Mary Russell Mitford 
Release Date: October 2, 2007 [EBook #22843] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AUNT 
DEBORAH *** 
 
Produced by David Widger 
 
AUNT DEBORAH. 
By Mary Russell Mitford 
A crosser old woman than Mrs. Deborah Thornby was certainly not to
be found in the whole village of Hilton. Worth, in country phrase, a 
power of money, and living (to borrow another rustic expression) upon 
her means, the exercise of her extraordinary faculty for grumbling and 
scolding seemed the sole occupation of her existence, her only pursuit, 
solace, and amusement; and really it would have been a great pity to 
have deprived the poor woman of a pastime so consolatory to herself, 
and which did harm to nobody: her family consisting only of an old 
labourer, to guard the house, take care of her horse, her cow, and her 
chaise and cart, and work in the garden, who was happily, for his 
comfort, stone deaf, and could not hear her vituperation, and of a parish 
girl of twelve, to do the indoor work, who had been so used to be 
scolded all her life, that she minded the noise no more than a miller 
minds the clack of his mill, or than people who live in a churchyard 
mind the sound of the church bells, and would probably, from long 
habit, have felt some miss of the sound had it ceased, of which, by the 
way, there was small danger, so long as Mrs. Deborah continued in this 
life. Her crossness was so far innocent that it hurt nobody except 
herself. But she was also cross-grained, and that evil quality is 
unluckily apt to injure other people; and did so very materially in the 
present instance. 
Mrs. Deborah was the only daughter of old Simon Thornby, of Chalcott 
great farm; she had had one brother, who having married the 
rosy-cheeked daughter of the parish clerk, a girl with no portion except 
her modesty, her good-nature, and her prettiness, had been discarded by 
his father, and after trying various ways to gain a living, and failing in 
all, had finally died broken-hearted, leaving the unfortunate clerk's 
daughter, rosy-cheeked no longer, and one little boy, to the tender 
mercy of his family. Old Simon showed none. He drove his son's 
widow from the door as he had before driven off his son; and when he 
also died, an event which occurred within a year or two, bequeathed all 
his property to his daughter Deborah. 
This bequest was exceedingly agreeable to Mrs. Deborah, (for she was 
already of an age to assume that title,) who valued money, not certainly 
for the comforts and luxuries which it may be the means of procuring, 
nor even for its own sake, as the phrase goes, but for that which, to a
woman of her temper, was perhaps the highest that she was capable of 
enjoying, the power which wealth confers over all who are connected 
with or dependent on its possessor. 
The principal subjects of her despotic dominion were the young widow 
and her boy, whom she placed in a cottage near her own house, and 
with whose comfort and happiness she dallied pretty much as a cat 
plays with the mouse which she has got into her clutches, and lets go 
only to catch again, or an angler with the trout which he has fairly 
hooked, and merely suffers to struggle in the stream until it is 
sufficiently exhausted to bring to land. She did not mean to be cruel, 
but she could not help it; so her poor mice were mocked with the 
semblance of liberty, although surrounded by restraints; and the awful 
paw seemingly sheathed in velvet, whilst they were in reality never out 
of reach of the horrors of the pat. 
It sometimes, however, happens that the little mouse makes her escape 
from madam pussy at the very moment when she seems to have the 
unlucky trembler actually within her claws; and so it occurred in the 
present instance. 
The dwelling to which Mrs. Deborah retired after the death of her 
father, was exceedingly romantic and beautiful in point of situation. It 
was a small but picturesque farm-house, on the very banks of the 
Loddon, a small branch of which, diverging from the parent stream, 
and crossed by a pretty footbridge, swept round the homestead, the 
orchard and garden,    
    
		
	
	
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