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Updated: May 23, 2025


It's not so badly biled, I will say that for Hannah Cook, though she is rampagious sometimes." He longed to ask her what words Madeline had used, even in speaking on such a subject as this; but he did not dare to do so. Mrs. Baker was very fond of talking about Miss Madeline, but Graham was by no means assured that he should find an ally in Mrs. Baker if he told her all the truth.

She knows I'm a going to tell, here his delight broke out again, 'and has made off. Would you be so good as look arter her, Mawther, for a minute? Mrs. Gummidge nodded and disappeared. 'If this ain't, said Mr. Peggotty, sitting down among us by the fire, 'the brightest night o' my life, I'm a shellfish biled too and more I can't say.

Then, when they have got ready for dinner, a button is touched; the dinner comes down from the kitchen in the attic, where it wuz all cooked by electricity, baked, roasted, or biled, whatever it is. When the vittles are put on the table, they are kept warm by electric warmin' furnaces.

Mulrooney O'Shaughnessy, whose ancestors at least must have Irish blood in their veins, I went over. You may not be awair, by the way, that I've been a invalid here to home for sev'ril weeks. And it's all owin to my own improodens. Not feelin like eating a full meal when the cars stopt for dinner, in the South, where I lately was, I went into a Resterater and et 20 hard biled eggs.

"No, he won't be kind to nobody," she gasped. "You has gwyn been lost, Miss Vessy. You is measured in. De good Lord try an' bress you! Hominy ain't measured in yit. Hominy's kivered herseff wid cammermile, an' drunk biled lizzer tea. Hominy's gone an' got Quaker." "What's Quaker, Aunt Hominy?"

Markham designated as a "dish of biled vittles." Richard had seen his mother dip candles before nay, had sometimes assisted at the dipping. He had seen her short striped gown and blue woolen stockings, and smelled the cooking cabbage, but they never struck him with so great a sense of discomfort as they did to-day when he stood, hat in hand, wondering why home seemed so cheerless.

Granny says the Chinese eats it, to make them cheerful, but they don't seem to eat enough. "There's Slippery Elm. It's awfully good for loosening up a cold, if you drink the juice the bark's bin biled in. One spring Granny made a bucketful. She set it outside to cool, an' the pig he drunk it all up, an' he must a had a cold, for it loosened him up so he dropped his back teeth.

The first and second butlers came running in with a frightened look. There was also a startled movement from somebody above stairs. 'I do sneeze powerful, sometimes, said Uncle Eb from under his red bandanna. ''S enough if scare anybody. They brought in our breakfast then a great array of tempting dishes. 'Jest hev four pancakes 'n a biled egg, said Uncle Eb as he sipped his tea.

There's a plenty o' cold biled meat and bread and you kin try your hand at making porridge." The girls had tried their hand, but so far without much success. The first day it had been too thin. The next day so thick that you could cut it in slices. And both days it had been burned. "I hate porridge," said Faith viciously.

Cherries ain't ripe yet, and " "We didn't we didn't!" came in a perfect chorus of wails from the little fence birds. "Of course they did, Mis' Mayberry!" exclaimed their mother relentlessly. "It was two jars of cherry preserves that Prissy put up and clean forgot to seed 'fore she biled 'em, and the children done took and et 'em on the sly. Now they're going to suffer for it."

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