ORFANS
Orfan Girls After They Do Leave Us

BY PENT

[ note 3 ]

We do keep the orfan girls from the time they come to us which is usually within six weeks after birth until the age of eleven or twelve when we do place them in employment, mostlie as servants in large houses.

The Great Orfanage has gained a considerable reputation for the girls we supply as servants, for we do train them well in the arts of house work, as well as in school-room lessons of the three R's.

By eleven or twelve, they are well ready to be valuable as a servant for the owners of a mansion, who all pay liberally to the Orfanage for their training we have given.

The Orfanage girls do indeed have a wonderful start in life, as all the world is waiting to have a girl who leaves our doors.

Gentle folk who seek one of our girls for their house do tell us first the type of work that they will do, and whether they seek a girl who is docile or sprightly, and we select likely candidates.

They then come to the Orfanage and interview and see the girls being punished, and so make their choice.

Some girls do start as a housemaid or chambermaid; others are used more to look after linens and to sew and use the hot-iron on clothes under supervision of the housekeeper or milady herself.

When a girl leaves the Orfanage to work in a mansion, she has a parting gift from us some articles of toilet for her personal cleanliness: a small clyster cylinder pump, a simple snuff box filled with soft grease to carry at all times in her pocket and a tapered dildoll to open her rosebud ready for her master to use.

Her employers always find her willing, hardworking and compliant for she has no other place in the whole world to go. She gets no payment in money, and she knows a hard spanking or caning on her bare bottom from the master, or the mistress of the house, can be expected for any infractions to their rules.

Her master and mistress often find it politic to have the orfan girl sleep in a room separated from the other servants, so she keeps her privacy. This is good when she is in need of discipline, so her bawling does not disturb the other servants, or when desired by her Master.

The Master of the house often chooses to attend to schooling the orfan girl in her room, so she may become a fit governess for the children he has or may have in the future. I have heard of many a man who felt such charity towards the young orfan girl that he spent much time to tutor her thus, specially when his wife was not home to require his duty and attentions for herself.

On her part, his wife was glad he finds some interest to keep him at home of a night, instead of spending his time in dubious company in town, drinking and gambling and other less savoury diversions. She knows too that the orfan girl is clean and also that the hours with her husband will result in no scandalous pregnancy.

A friend who stays some days at a house will sometimes spend much of his time with the orfan girl to give her lessons in particular things such as Mathematics or Geography.

One girl, Heather, did tell me of a Cambridge visitor who did offer her master that he would teach her the verbs of Latin so she could then teach his children.

This learned visitor did alway take the time to chastise Heather full well when she failed in her lessons which was often and she did spend many days in weeping.

He did have little success to teach Latin to Heather until that he did lie himself naked upon her bed and tell her to sit facing him with his rampant member up inside her bottom.

He did then make her recite as she did raise and lower herself:

Amo, I love
Amas, Thou doest love
Amat, He loves

and so on until they did together reach a climax to their learning and their great pleasure, and this did make her to remember his lessons for evermore.

The next day they did undertake another verb and so on until the end of the month for which he did stay.

The Cambridge don happen did visit oft and she became quite learned in Latin and could discourse freely in that language, and did then teach the children of her master and mistress.

I have since learned that many scholars at our great universities do oft, out of the great goodness of their hearts, use these same wayes to teach young servants in the houses where they stay so they may thus advance to the position of governess.

I never cease to wonder at the marvellous charity of those who give to others who are so much less fortunate than themselves, whether it be monies or learning.

The altruism and compassion of worldly men does oft amaze me.