For some years the poor man lived on alone with the children, caring for them as best he could; but everything in the house seemed to go wrong without a woman to look after it, and at last he made up his mind to marry again, feeling that a wife would bring peace and order to his household and take care of his
motherless children.
Now, Leandre's business called him frequently and upon long journeys from home, and his
motherless daughter was coming to stay with her aunts at Cote Joyeuse.
But by this means they could not only enjoy the slow advent of their pleasure; they had also ample leisure to talk of Silas Marner's strange history, and arrive by due degrees at the conclusion that he had brought a blessing on himself by acting like a father to a lone
motherless child.
I'm glad to see him, poor
motherless thing!" And the loving attentions Aunt Polly lavished upon him were the one thing capable of making him more uncomfortable than he was before.
Carey thought Philip very young for this, and her heart went out to the
motherless child; but her attempts to gain his affection were awkward, and the boy, feeling shy, received her demonstrations with so much sullenness that she was mortified.
"You've got it, Jessie; and, with you to help me, I hope to make the child feel that she is not quite fatherless and
motherless."
"Now, now, Cornelia," remonstrated Captain Jim, who had been reading a sea novel in a corner of the living room, "you shouldn't say that about those two poor,
motherless Gilman boys, unless you've got certain proof.
"Marse Tom, I just grabbed her up to my breast and says, 'Oh, you po' dear little
motherless thing, you ain't got a fault in the world, and you can do anything you want to, and tear the house down, and yo' old black mammy won't say a word!'"
He has done generous by these yer poor little lambs that he loved and sheltered, and that's left fatherless and
motherless. Yes, and we that knowed him knows that he would a done MORE generous by 'em if he hadn't ben afeard o' woundin' his dear William and me.
It was not the first
motherless lamb he had found and he knew what to do with it.
She was the
motherless child of a sort of cousin of my father's.
One of the signs he used to make me was to link one hand in the other, to show me he wished to marry me; and though I should have been glad if that could be, being alone and
motherless I knew not whom to open my mind to, and so I left it as it was, showing him no favour, except when my father, and his too, were from home, to raise the curtain or the lattice a little and let him see me plainly, at which he would show such delight that he seemed as if he were going mad.