ch he meant to throw into the garden of the
school, where the young ladies walked daily after breakfast if fine. I
objected that his sister and cousin might find them. He did not care.
"It will make them all so damned randy, that they won't know whether
their arses are at their backs or fronts." This was all through my
telling him what I had heard the two girls in the bathroom say to
each other; and he actually that night got over the wall, into the
pleasure-grounds, and laid the prints in a long building, half shed half
summer-house. From his bed-room window we could see over the wall which
separated the Reverend's garden from the school-garden. I suggested
sending them to a young lady by post. "No, she would keep them to
herself." I must mention that each lady had a separate bedroom; they
were not allowed to go to each other's bed-room, they met only at meals,
or in the class-room, or drawing-room, or when out of doors. No,--the
prints had better be seen by several, they would tell each other, and
thus all see them. The idea of the girls seeing baudy pictures tickled
us immensely. I had then wondered why the school-mistresses made it a
rule that no lady should go into another's bed-room, and once asked my
female cousin. She said she did not know.
Directly after breakfast we saw the ladies in the garden, pulled down
our blind, and peeped. "There is Carry," said Fred laughing as his
sister showed among them. We saw a group approach the spot, the next
instant all their heads were close together, looking at something.
Every now and then one would stealthily look up towards the house, then
another would, as if they feared being seen. On being joined by two or
three others, they all moved out of sight into the shed, and we saw no
more.
Fred was delighted, he did nothing but suggest how such and such a one
felt at that moment. "I dare say their cunts are as hot as fire, their
thighs squeeze, their arses wriggle as they walk; they will all frig
themselves to-night."
Fred soon afterwards said he must go to town by the next train. I would
go too. "I must go to so and so," said he, "so can't be with you much."
I resolved to stay. Going into the house I saw Mrs. Maria dressed, she
was going to town. "I will walk with you," said Fred, "to the station,
we shall go up together." Mrs. Maria went to London to make purchases,
and do all the business for the school. Neither came back till the
latest train; I was sitting smoking wi
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