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Updated: May 12, 2025
Fact, 'twas the same old gentleman she'd been blamin' for spiritin' away the blind man; and now comes true he knows no more the sailor's whereabouts than them two twinses yon. But I've me cart afore me horse, as usual. For all along o' this, out comes from that elegant mansion another old person, the lady, Miss Laura Bonnicastle, by your leave.
When he related his emotion during their first meeting when he had told Dale that he was her brother, after yielding to the appeal in her eyes she smiled. "There was some excuse for it, after all," she declared. "An' you ain't blamin' me so much?" he asked. "No," she said. She blushed as she thought of the times she had kissed him.
"Bob's a fine lad a fine lad an' I'm not wonderin'," said her father teasingly. "Now, Tom," interceded Mrs. Black, "don't be tormentin' Bessie. O' course 'tis just Emily she's wantin' t' see. She's not thinkin' o' th' lads yet." "Oh, aye," said he, looking slyly out of the corner of his eye at Bessie, who was blushing now to the very roots of her hair, "I'm not blamin' she for likin' Bob.
When yo' see yor own go aat o' th' haas feet fermost, and yo' know it's for good an' o', there's summat taan aat o' yo' that nothin' ever maks up for at afterwards. I wor a long time afore I forgave th' Almeety for takin' aar Joe. And all the time I owed Him a grudge, and kep' on blamin' Him like; I got wurr and wurr, until I welly went mad.
All is, I wanted you should know just what you was blamin' me for " "I don't know that I blame you. I only wish you could have helped it managed some other way." "I did try to get over it, and all I done was to lose a night's rest.
But on the contrary, 'Lias emerged with fresh energy from the gulf of inarticulate argument in which his poor wits seemed to have lost themselves awhile. 'But I'm no blamin yo awthegither, he cried, raising himself, with a protesting wave of the hand. 'Theer's naw mak o' mischief i' this world, but t' women are at t' bottom o't. Whar's that proud foo of a wife o' yourn?
Inexorably intent upon the easing of his conscience Kenny told the tale of his penance with terrifying honesty and truth. Brian listened and dared not smile. "At first I I hoped to find a clue," finished Kenny, wiping the sweat from his forehead. "And then after I I saw Joan I hoped I wouldn't. You're not blamin' me, Brian?" "Not a bit. I'd have lingered myself."
And if they clawed each other's guts out he wouldn't care. He'd say they were livin' a nice, virtuous, respectable and moral life. "What rot it all is! "Stop her? As if any one could stop her! God knows she can't stop herself, poor girl. She's made like that. I'm not blamin' her." For, with whatever wildness Ranny started, he always came back to that He didn't blame her.
"My Gawd!" she whispered, owning defeat before that invulnerable selfishness of Duke's. Her tone stung even his young crocodile-hided sensibility. "You're always blamin' me. You'n Tom think I do everything mean on this ranch! You think Lance is an angel! He's your pet and you let him pick on me an' you never say a word. Lance can do any darn thing he pleases, an' so can Al.
"This is worse than shanghaiing for a Liverpool boardin'-house, and I won't " "S-s-s-sh!" hissed Hiram, flapping his hand. "That's the elder." "An elder? A man that uses that kind of language?" "He's had good reason for it," returned Hiram, fervently. "It's stout talk, but I ain't blamin' him." He locked the outside door.
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