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Updated: June 11, 2025
"There there's truth in what you say," he admitted, at length, after seeking counsel in vain from his red bandanna. "There's truth in what you say, I aint denyin' that. But what I look at, you see, is my duty.
She said she might have been able to convince her mind that there wasn't no bunion on her foot, but she couldn't convince her foot. She said there wasn't no such thing as pain, and the bunion made it its first business to do a little denyin' on its own account. You have to be awful careful not to offend a bunion.
"And to think that on Christmas day of all days I should live to hear my own husband that I've loved and cherished and worked my fingers to the bone and never got any thanks and other women keepin' two and three hired girls, and after him denyin' his own children things to get expensive presents for a shameless creature like that Budlong woman "
"Fer God's sake, Lindy," she begged, "don't go on denyin' me no more. We used ter love one another ... when I was married ye stud up with me ... when yore fust baby war born I set by yore bedside ... now I'm nigh heart-broke!"
There was another short silence, which presently Bill opened his lips to break. "Lin, it makes me sick to quit. I ain't denyin' thet for a long time I've had hopes of ketchin' Wildfire. He's the grandest hoss I ever laid eyes on. I reckon no man, onless he was an Arab, ever seen as good a one. But now thet's neither here nor there. . . . We've got to hit the back trail."
There must be people who think beautiful things, and do beautiful work " "Oh, there's plenty o' work done there" and the waggoner flicked his long whip against the sturdy flanks of his labouring horses "I ain't denyin' that. An' YOU'll 'ave to work, my gel! you bet! you'll 'ave to wash down steps an' sweep kitchens a good while afore you gits into the way of it!
An' my work, lately, has been all sorts, not leavin' me any time for little jobs of my own. An' I want to quit." "Wade, you've clashed with Jack!" exclaimed the rancher, jerking erect. "Nothin' of the kind. Jack an' me haven't had words a good while. I'm not denyin' we might, an' probably would clash sooner or later. But that's not my reason for quittin'."
"Why, yes, my dear," interposed her mother, as if to shut out all evil tidings; "nothing has happened to him." "Wal, I'm sorry to say that he has been hurt worse than Fred," was the alarming response, accompanied by a deep sigh. "How bad? How much worse? Tell us, tell us," insisted the wife. "Thar's no use of denyin' that he got it bad; fact is he couldn't have been hit harder."
Then, reading the sympathy in our eyes, she continued quickly: "I ain't denyin' that Jaspar has a right to do what he pleases with what lies out o' doors. He never interfered with me in my kitchen, never! Would you gen'lemen fancy a glass o' lemonade? No? Wal I'm glad you called in, fer I hev been feelin' kind o' lonesome lately."
"Why thin now do you think me sich a born nathral as to give in to that? as if the ringin' iv the bell, barrin' it was a blissed bell, could do the like. I tell you it's unpossible." "Ah, nothin' 's unpossible to God." "Sure I wasn't denyin' that; but I say the bell is unpossible."
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