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Updated: May 20, 2025
There is mackerel and there is salmon. And there is some that knows the difference and some that doos n't. I had a little account with that boarder that he forgot to settle before he went off, so all of a suddin. I sha'n't say anything about it.
As fah fo'th as Clem went, I guess there wa'n't any let about it. I guess she'd made up her mind from the staht, and she was goin' to have him if she had to hold him on his feet to do it. Look he'a! W hat would you done?" "Oh, I presume we're all fools!" said Mrs. Claxon, impatient of a sex not always so frank with itself. "But that don't excuse him." "I don't say it doos," her husband admitted.
The lady come herself and see me yes'day, and she ses, 'Jo, she ses, 'we thought we'd lost you, Jo, she ses; and she sits down a-smilin' so quiet, and don't pass a word nor yit a look upon me for having done it, she don't; and I turns agin the wall, I doos, Mr. Snagsby. And Mr.
Keeler, who had apparently forgotten his passenger altogether, broke into song, "She's my darlin' hanky-panky And she wears a number two, Her father keeps a barber shop Way out in Kalamazoo." He sang the foregoing twice over and then added a chorus, plainly improvised, made up of "Di doos" and "Di dums" ad lib.
I don't believe there's any harm in that young gentleman, I don't care what people say. I suppose he likes this place just as other people like it, and cares more for walking in the woods and paddling about in the water than he doos for company; and if he doos, whose business is it, I should like to know?" The third of the speakers was Miranda, who had her own way of judging people.
Well, they went, and not a word have we heard sence but just one letter from Vesta, sayin' they hadn't found no trace yet, but they hoped to every day, and land sakes, we knew that, I should hope. Dr. Brown comes in every day to cheer her up, though I do declare I need it more than she doos, seems's though. He's as close as an oyster, Dr. Brown is; I can't even get the news out of him, most times.
It's all as plain as piecrust. An' Passon ain't done nothin' either but jest his dooty as he allus doos it, he ain't been up to the Manor more'n once, he ain't been at the 'All, an' Miss Vancourt she ain't been 'ere neither since the day he broke his best lilac for her. So it can't be she what's done mischief nor him, nor any on 'em. So I sez to myself, what is it? What's come over the old place?
As she arranged her skirt and settled herself, from an earthen drum just outside the house and an arghool there came a crude sound of native music, to which almost immediately added itself a high and quavering voice, singing: "Doos ya' lellee! Doos ya' lellee!" At the same moment Aïyoub came into the room, without noise, and handed to Baroudi, who was sitting opposite to Mrs.
"Look here, Nick: do you want to rout out Captain Purlrose and his gang?" "Do I want to, Master Ralph? Do I want to get his head under a stone, and sarve it like I would a nut? Yes, I doos." "Then pick the men. Bind them to be silent, and meet me as soon as the lights are all out. Will you do this?" "Won't I?" said the man exultantly; "and won't we? Master Ralph, sir, I am proud on you.
It air all very well for the king to send out his red-coats; but I tell you what it is, I ain't seen a red-coat that lives that's equal to the natyve pro-vincial. Who air the ones that doos the best fightin' out here? The pro-vincials! Who air the men that's druv the wild and bloodthusty Injin back to his natyve woods? The pro-vincial!
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