This was gall and wormwood to Jennet.
“She’ll be hard to please when she goes home again, after playing the fine dame here,” pursued the steward.
“Then ey hope she’ll never come home again,” rejoined Jennet; spitefully, “fo’ we dunna want fine dames i’ our poor cottage.”
“For my part I do not wonder Alizon pleases the gentle folks,” observed Sampson Harrop, “since such pains have been taken with her manners and education; and I must say she does great credit to her instructor, who, for reasons unnecessary to mention, shall be nameless. I wish I could say the same for you, Jennet; but though you’re not deficient in ability, you’ve no perseverance or pleasure in study.”
“Ey knoa os much os ey care to knoa,” replied Jennet, “an more than yo con teach me, Mester Harrop. Why is Alizon always to be thrown i’ my teeth?”
“Because she’s the best model you can have,” rejoined Sampson. “Ah! if I’d my own way wi’ ye, lass, I’d mend your temper and manners. But you come of an ill stock, ye saucy hussy.”
“Ey come fro’ th’ same stock as Alizon, onny how,” said Jennet.
“Unluckily that cannot be denied,” replied Sampson; “but you’re as different from her as light from darkness.”
Jennet eyed him bitterly, and then rose from the table.
“Ey’n go,” she said.
“No—no; sit down,” interposed the good-natured steward. “The dancing and pastimes will begin presently, and you will see your sister. She will come down with the ladies.”
“That’s the very reason she wishes to go,” said Sampson Harrop. “The spiteful little creature cannot bear to see her sister better treated than herself. Go your ways, then. It is the best thing you can do. Alizon would blush to see you here.”
“Then ey’n een stay an vex her,” replied Jennet, sharply; “boh ey winna sit near yo onny longer, Mester Sampson Harrop, who ca’ yersel gentleman usher, boh who are nah gentleman at aw, nor owt like it, boh merely parish clerk an schoolmester, an a poor schoolmester to boot. Eyn go an sit by Sukey Worseley an Nancy Holt, whom ey see yonder.”
“You’ve found your match, Master Harrop,” said the steward, laughing, as the little girl walked away.
“I should account it a disgrace to bandy words with the like of her, Adam,” rejoined the clerk, angrily; “but I’m greatly out in my reckoning, if she does not make a second Mother Demdike, and worse could not well befall her.”
Jennet’s society could have been very well dispensed with by her two friends, but she would not be shaken off. On the contrary, finding herself in the way, she only determined the more pertinaciously to remain, and began to exercise all her powers of teasing, which have been described as considerable, and which on this occasion proved eminently successful. And the worst of it was, there was no crushing the plaguy little insect; any effort made to catch her only resulting in an escape on her part, and a new charge on some undefended quarter, with sharper stinging and more intolerable buzzing than ever.