Elizabeth Partridge is a recovery room nurse in London. She comes from Somerset, once the daughter of the manor; after her father and then her mother died, her elder stepbrother inherited and made it clear that Beth and her younger brother, William, were no longer welcome. So they moved to London, she to train and then work as a nurse and William to study to become a physician.
Beth, on her bicycle, runs into a large man one day. He turns out to be a Dutch professor of surgery, Alexander van Zeust. His sister is later brought in with acute appendicitis; she has 4 children who are in need of a temporary nanny. Since Beth has a holiday due, William volunteers her services to Professor van Zeust.
So in her temporary role, Beth accompanies them to the Professor's home in London, then to his home in Somerset. While there, Alexander takes her to Chifney, her old home, and buys her elderly mate and pony, Beauty and Sugar, for the children. Just in time, for her stepbrother intended on selling them to the knacker the very next day.
Then Alexander and his sister ask her to go to Holland with them for a couple more weeks. By this time, Beth knows she is in love with the Professor and so she agrees. She knows he is attracted to her, but since she doesn't think she is pretty, thinks he can't be serious.
A misunderstanding arises with the children and Beth is forced to go back to England, but Alexander is determined to not lose her. He follows her, finds her at the train station, declares himself and proposes.
There are some lovely bits in this one, particularly when Alexander quotes part of a poem from which the book is titled. Not much angst, outside the dust-up with Dirk -no OW in this one.
Not in the top 10, certainly, but probably in the top half. 3 1/2 stars.