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Updated: May 27, 2025


We ain't like to be the only two critters as hain't got a pass for the diggins. Ne'er a bit o't. We'll find deserters out theer es thick as blue-bottles on a barkiss. Certingly we shell. Besides, Petrick, we needn't take the knepsacks all the way out theer, nor the berra neythur, nor nuthin' else we've brought from the Fort."

I can't leave her. But I was dry, an' the thought of a glass of beer was very temptin', `no call to be anxious over that, says he; `you won't be gone not five minutes, an 'ere's this lady will keep an eye on her fur that little while, I'm sure. `Certingly, says the woman sitting next, who was a stranger to me but quite respectable-lookin'. `You come to me, my dearie! and she lifted Mollie on to her knee an' spoke kind to her, an' the child seemed satisfied; an' so I went."

"I mean," said Renshaw, reddening at what he conceived to be an allusion to the absconding propensities of Nott's previous tenants, "I mean that you shall keep the advance to cover any loss you might suffer through my giving up the rooms." "Certingly," said Nott, laying his hand with a large sympathy on Renshaw's shoulder; "but we'll drop that just now.

"Certingly," said Mrs. Brandon, looking at Maggie with a curious confidential smile a hateful smile, but there was no time to think about it. Maggie went out. She found Cowley Street without any difficulty. Dr. Abrams was up and having his breakfast. His close, musty room smelt of whisky and kippers.

"Brimberly," said he, "it is now very nearly two o'clock." "Very late, sir oh, very late, sir indeed, I was in the very hact of goin' to bed, sir I'd even unbuttoned my waistcoat, sir, when you rang two o'clock, sir dear me, a most un-'oly hour, sir " "Consequently, Brimberly, I am thinking of taking a little outing " "Certingly, sir oh, certingly!" "And I want some other clothes "

"Certingly, you bet!" said Uncle Billy enthusiastically, yet with a certain nervous abstraction. "I'm glad ye say so; for yer see I didn't know at first how you'd tumble to my doing it, until I'd made my pile. And ef I hadn't made it, I wouldn't hev set eyes on ye agin, old pard never!" "Do you mind my runnin' out a minit," said Uncle Billy, rising.

"Ay," observed the carpenter, "it might ha' been a good thing to ha' done that, certingly. But you haven't got nothin' to reproach yourself with, sir; you done what you did with a good and kind intention; and you wasn't to know that the fust thing he'd do when he come back to his senses 'd be to up and jump overboard. Oh no, sir, you ain't to blame in noways for what's happened.

"An object to work for, live for, be worthy of!" Here he fell to frowning into the fire again and stared thus so long that at last Mr. Brimberly felt impelled to say: "A hobject, of course, sir! A hobject certingly, sir!"

"Now there's jes one mo' tale," said Diddie, "and that's about 'Annie's Visit, an I'm tired of makin' up books; Chris, can't you make up that?" "I dunno hit," said Chris, "but I kin tell yer 'bout'n de tar baby, el dat'll do." "Don't you think that'll do jes as well, Dumps?" asked Diddie. 'Certingly!" replied Dumps. So Diddie drew her pencil through "Annie's Visit," and wrote in its place,

"Ay, ay sir; I sees it, plain enough," answered the man named Bill; while his companion, Tom, replied, "Yes; I can see something afloat out there, certingly; but I wouldn't like to take it upon me to say what it is." "Very well," said Leslie, turning to Bill; "you appear to have tolerably good eyes " "Main-top, there," interrupted Potter, "are you coming down out of that, or aren't you?

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