Sunday, November 30.
Robin is better. This morning he woke quite free from pain, so mother has let him up again. Perhaps God did hear, in spite of the harping,—foolish Elizabeth!
The diary chronicles a struggling family who keep a boarding house after the father’s death, portraying everyday pressures, financial strain, and relations with a wealthy uncle. The narrator records domestic details and family personalities: a studious son who gives up personal plans to help, a mischievous younger daughter, a serious cousin with social advantages, and a disabled little brother, alongside a resolutely optimistic mother. Recollections include the late father’s unfinished flying-machine in the attic and how private ambitions, modest inventions, thrift, and incoming boarders shape the family’s hopes, tensions, and loyalties.
Robin is better. This morning he woke quite free from pain, so mother has let him up again. Perhaps God did hear, in spite of the harping,—foolish Elizabeth!