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Updated: May 6, 2025
"Come, shall uncle make you some boats to sail in the wash-tub?" "Wiv a mast an' sails an' everyfing?" cried John wildly; and throwing his spoon to the floor, he scrambled from his chair. "Oh yes, Nunkey dear Nunkey!" "Dea Unkey!" echoed the shadow. "Oh, you cupboard lovers, you!" said Mahony as, order restored and sticky mouths wiped, two pudgy hands were thrust with a new kindness into his.
I fink they're not good people, and they won't come near the house. I daresay they're somewhere down the lane, not far off but don't you fink perhaps us had better not look for them any more, but just go home, and when Grandmamma comes in tell her everyfing. Even if she is raver angry, wouldn't it be better, bruvver?
And then Toddie the airy sprite whom his mother described as being irresistibly drawn to whatever was beautiful Toddie glared upon me as a butcher's apprentice might stare at a doomed lamb, and remarked: "Bliaff's head was all bluggy, an' David's sword was all bluggy bluggy as everyfing."
"I'm full of thinking how nice it would be to buy a bowl just the same, and take it in and give it to poor Biddy, and then she wouldn't be scolded. I don't think I'd mind telling Grandmamma once us had got the bowl. She'd be so pleased to have one the same." "I fink she'd be most pleased for us to tell her everyfing," maintained Pamela stoutly.
So I guess" he drawled it out sneeringly "as long as you ain't got any classes that exactly fit her, she'd better lie fallow for a while." The little girl shot a proud glance at the Yankton man as she heard the eldest brother's praise, and, emboldened, spoke up for herself. "I can read all the chart," she declared, "and I can read everyfing in the First Reader.
"Surely," said little Pamela one day with a great sigh, "surely Grandmamma must know everyfing;" while Duke's breast swelled with the thought that he too, like his father and grandfather before him, would journey some day to those distant lands, there, if need were, like them "to fight for the king."
"Us is always going to tell Grandmamma everyfing now," said Pamela. "And us is always going to listen to the talking of that little voice," added Duke. But the first excitement over, old Barbara began to notice that the children were looking very white and tired.
The little girl had twisted half around to look at a Dutch child, and the teacher, angry because he had neglected to look over the geography lesson, jerked her into place again by her sleeve. "Now, you read," he said; "look at the end of my pointer and read." "I can read them words 'thout looking at 'em," she protested, pointing at an inquiring line, "'cause I can read everyfing in this."
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