Page:Gissing - The Nether World, vol. I, 1889.djvu/108

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96
THE NETHER WORLD.

ness of you to let the troublesome thing lay 'ere all night."

Funeral guests were beginning to assemble. On arriving, they were conducted first of all into the front-room on the ground-floor, the Peckovers' parlour. It was richly furnished. In the centre stood a round table, which left small space for moving about, and was at present covered with refreshments. A polished sideboard supported a row of dessert plates propped on their edges, and a number of glass vessels, probably meant for ornament alone, as they could not possibly have been put to any use. A low cupboard in a recess was surmounted by a frosted cardboard model of St. Paul's under a glass case, behind which was reared an oval tray painted with flowers. Over the mantelpiece was the regulation mirror, its gilt frame enveloped in coarse yellow gauze; the mantelpiece itself bore a "wealth" of embellishments in glass and crockery. On each side of it hung a framed silhouette, portraits of ancestors. Other pictures there were many, the most impres-