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Updated: June 22, 2025
Vaughn is a rich gentleman, who has come down here to marry the schoolmistress. It seems, too, that she's lately inherited some property by the death of somebody, I couldn't make out who some relative I suppose though it don't matter. Any ways, a cool fifty thousand has fell to her, and I don't know as I could point out a more deservin' person." "Wonders will never cease!" exclaimed Mrs.
"I shore am glad that Dickson made that strike," Ham again remarked, with something that looked suspiciously like moisture in his eyes. "He's a deservin' cuss; an' th' Leetle Woman's ben like a mother tew us all." Ham's expectations were fulfilled; for they found the log house vacant, with a sign on the door that read: "BACK ABOUT SUNDOWN."
So you'd better wait and make your statement in your own behalf to me whilst I'm settin' on the bench. I'll see that you git an opportunity to do so and I'll listen to it; and I'll give it all the consideration it's deservin' of. "And, on second thought, p'raps it would only be a waste of time and money fur you to go hirin' a lawyer specially to represent you.
"I beg your parding, ma'am," said the colonel, raising his hat politely with one hand, while he reopened the coach-door with the other, "but we're a-takin' up a collection fur some very deservin' object. We wuz a-goin' to make the gentlemen fork over the hull amount, but ez they hain't got enough, we'll hev to bother you." The old lady trembled, and felt for her pocketbook, and raised her vail.
"Uriel Basil," said the small boy on crutches, with a clear, bold, but rather sensitive voice. "Uriel Basil, a page in the House of Representatives, bein' an infirm, deservin' boy, willin' to work to support his mother. Infirm boy wants to be a page, on the recommendation of a Whig, to a Dimmycratic committee. I say, gen'lemen, what do you think of that, heigh?"
He must be havin' a wonderful lot o' places t' go to an' he's not deservin' t' be scolded now. He's sure doin' th' best he can I knows he's doin' th' best he can." "He were deservin' of un, an' more.
I know of no one more deservin' o' such fortune than Battersleigh, late of the Rile Irish, an' now a Citizen o' the World. Gad, but I've a'most a mind to buy a bit of land me own silf, an' marry the Maid o' the Mill, fer the sake o' roundin' out the play. Man, man, it's happy I am to-day!" "It looks a good deal like taking advantage of another's ignorance," said Franklin argumentatively.
His mistress telling him one day to put some ferns into his master's particular corner, and adding, "Though, indeed, Robert, he doesn't deserve them, for he wouldn't help me to gather them," "EH, MEM," replies Robert, "BUT I WOULDNAE SAY THAT, FOR I THINK HE'S JUST A MOST DESERVIN' GENTLEMAN." Again, two of our friends, who were on intimate terms, and accustomed to use language to each other, somewhat without the bounds of the parliamentary, happened to differ about the position of a seat in the garden.
Then he was released and stood back, sullen and defiant. For several moments not a word was spoken. Finally Dick Blake took a threatening step towards the Indian, and shaking his fist in the latter's face exclaimed: "Ye dirty coward! Ye'd do murder, would ye? Ye'd kill un, would ye?" "Hold on," said Douglas, "'bide a bit. 'Twill do no good t' beat un, though he's deservin' of it."
"But things has a way of comin' out, an' I reckon we'll get Kane out of this before long." Outside, on their horses, Moreton rode close to Lawler. "Kane, I reckon it's a damn lie about you killin' Link an' Givens the way that Wharton woman says you did in that damned paper just malicious, without them deservin' it?" "Moreton, I told you my side of the story a couple of months ago.
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