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Updated: May 6, 2025
That's right, ain't it? I ask you, as a man of eddication, to say if that ain't right; as a representative of the Press, I asks you to say. Hubert nodded, and the pale-eyed man continued. 'Well, that's what the public won't see, can't see. Raphael, says I, could 'ave done a masterpiece with them 'ere chalks and a nice smooth stone. But do yer think 'e 'd 'ave been allowed?
What I mean is, marriage is a sort of eddication of itself, wot don't learn you nuthin' till you git unmarried. Savee?" The girl shook her head in bewilderment. "That's sure too bright fer me." "That's 'cos you ain't been married. Y'see, I have." "Can't you put it easier seein' I ain't been married?" "Sure I can."
He can't be a Father, he says, because he can't git the eddication now; but he can be a Brother; and I can't find a word to say ag'inst it, when it gits to talkin', Jacob." "I ain't saying anything against his priests, 'Liz'beth," said Dryfoos. "They're all well enough in their way; they've given up their lives to it, and it's a matter of business with them, like any other.
He wus an eddication in langwidge, sir, sech as 'ud per-suade a wall-eyed mule to do what he didn't want, and wa'n't goin' to do anyways. "I corralled the boys up in the yard, an' the feller got good an' goin'. He spotted Joe right off; fixed him wi' his eye an' focussed him dead centre, an' talked right at him.
Tom looked on with a grin, while little Tom and Peggy reached out their hands in delight, their mother vigorously blocking their intentions. "Ye've earned it yerself," said Polly Ann, forestalling my protest; "'tis what ye got by the mill, and I've laid it by bit by bit for yer eddication." "And what do you get?" I cried, striving by feigned anger to keep the tears back from my eyes.
"You must have been riz in a queer place not to know what likely is. Why, it's good-looking; and anybody knows you're that. But I suppose you didn't have much eddication, they mostly don't in England; my man didn't know even his letters; but I have pretty good book larnin' and so we got on all right," she continued, with a retrospective look on her not unkindly face.
But that ain't all; if you lads kin git ol' Eddy's son out o' the air on this contraption you're makin' an' hear him talk fer sure, I'm goin' to see to it that you kin git all the tec tec what you call it? eddication there is goin' an' I'm goin' to put Perfesser Gray wise on that, too, soon's he comes back. No don't you say a word now.
"Why, I found out that, if you give good dinners and big parties, and keep a carriage, and have a conservatory, and rent a pew up near the altar, your little shortcomin's in grammar isn't no objection to you. 'Money makes the mare go. However, eddication, as Miss Pillbody says, is a good thing of itself, and I shall keep on tryin' to get it."
"Eddication, Bill, he ses one evening, 'that's the thing! You can't argufy without it; you only talk foolish, like you are doing now. "'There's eddication and there's common sense, I ses. 'Some people 'as one and some people 'as the other. Give me common sense. "'That's wot you want, he ses, nodding.
Bond; 'they're al'ys for meddling with business, an they know no more about it than my black filly. 'Ah, said Mr. Bond, 'they're too high learnt to have much common-sense. 'Well, remarked Mr. Hackit, in a modest and dubious tone, as if throwing out a hypothesis which might be considered bold, 'I should say that's a bad sort of eddication as makes folks onreasonable.
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