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"'Elspie, s'I, stern, 'ain't you no feelin', s'I, 'for the loss o' the only home you've got to your back? "'Oh, I donno, s'she, an' I could see her smilin' in that bright light, 'oh, I donno. It'll be some place to come to, afterwards. When I go out walkin', s'she, 'I ain't no place to head for. I sort o' circle 'round an' come back.

But it's such a nice night I'm going to walk around." "Things are going to go your way to that meeting, I guess," said Simeon; "ain't you always found fault with Christmas?" "They's a lot o' nonsense about it," Mary assented; "I don't ever bother myself much with it. Why?" "I donno but we'll all come round to your way of thinking to-night," said Simeon. "For just this year!"

I just say, 'You look some like a loose shutter, but mebbe you can fair bang the house down, if you rilly get to blowin'. It was that way with Eb Goodnight. "I donno how it is other places.

"She don't quite register on the line we've adopted to make him talk. Kind o' kept that in the background. Women are soft." "Ask she come up," said Van Diest. And Laurence went out passing Blayney who was on duty outside the door. "What's the bend, Chief?" demanded Hipps. Van Diest shook his head thoughtfully. "Donno, donno. Wass awful if we mus' do someting. Eh? Hipps, eh?"

Finally he said: "Andy, gi' me ma clothes." Andy did not dare to disobey him. He gave his clothes to him, and helped him to dress. The man was so sick and dizzy still that he could hardly stand. He crossed the room, took his cap from its hook and put it on his head. "An' where do yez be goin' to I donno?" inquired Andy, anxiously. "I'm a-goin' to the breaker," replied Bachelor Billy.

And that night I was not minded to have them about, for it might befall that it would be necessary to understand other things as well. "Miss Linda would 'a' cared to," said Mis' Amanda, thoughtfully, "but I donno, myself, about Mis' Proudfit an' Miss Clementina for sure." So bold an innovation as the Proudfits' omission, however, moved Timothy Toplady to doubt.

At the risk of all that he might suffer, Tom came forward again, and put all the cotton in his sack into the woman's. "O, you mustn't! you donno what they'll do to ye!" said the woman. "I can bar it!" said Tom, "better 'n you;" and he was at his place again. It passed in a moment.

"Wishing him?" said Mary, in a tone of inquiry. "Ay; donno' ye know what 'wishing' means? There's none can die in the arms of those who are wishing them sore to stay on earth. The soul o' them as holds them won't let the dying soul go free; so it has a hard struggle for the quiet of death. We mun get him away fra' his mother, or he'll have a hard death, poor lile* fellow."

"I donno but I might as well walk around by Mary Chavah's house," he thought. "I needn't stay long...." At Mary Chavah's house the two big parlours, the hall, the stairs, the dining room, even the tiny bedroom with the owl wall paper, were filled with folk come to welcome the little boy.

I don't care who he was or what he was worth he was lit up, too. I donno why he was a clerk nor anything of him excep' that the lit kind ain't always the money-makers but he could talk to her her way.