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Updated: May 31, 2025


Gentlemen mostly thinks a sight of Jen's looks; an' it ain't no harm as I knows on to kiss a tidy girl, if y'ain't married, or th' missus don't object. 'And if I did, what has that to do with it? What do you mean by her shadow? 'Oh, I dunno; I h'ain't seen nothing myself; but they says, whenever any has tried to be friendly with 'er, they's seed something not just o' the right sort.

She shrieked and sobbed and rolled over and over, clutching at her flesh, trying to gasp out words that choked her. "O, Lord!" she gasped, wild with the insensate agony of a poor, hysteria torn, untaught, uncontrolled thing, "I don't know what I've done! I don't! 'Tain't fair! I didn't go to! I can't bear it! He h'ain't got nothin' to bear, he ain't! O, Lord God, look down on me!"

"I s'posed likely ye'd think strange on't at fust; but ye h'ain't no need ter, fur it's a sens'ble thing ter dew, an' yell see't so when ye've thought on't a spell: see if ye don't."

It was as though they had been waiting for them ever since their last visit and were out ready to greet them. The driver nodded to them as if they were old friends. "Guess ye did n't find no spooks there after all," he remarked. "Not a spook. Any more been seen there since?" "H'ain't heern of none. Maybe ye took off the cuss." "I hope so."

"Wall, I'll be plunked," finally exclaimed the blacksmith. "Looks like the feller's rich, don't it?" "Ef he's rich, what the tarnation blazes is he comin' here for?" demanded Nib Corkins, the dandy of the town. "I was over t' Huntingdon las' year, 'n' seen how the rich folks live. Boys, this h'ain't no place for a man with money." "That depends," responded Cotting, gravely.

"What's your nearest town, then?" "Thar ain't any. Thar's a blacksmith's shop and grocery at the crossroads, twenty miles further on, but it's got no name as I've heard on." The stranger's look of suspicion passed. "Well," he said, in an imperative fashion, which, however, seemed as much the result of habit as the occasion, "I want a horse, and mighty quick, too." "H'ain't got any." "No horse?

It seemed now a month ago since he had wandered through the stores with this boy. The latter recalled again something of the spirit of those hours. "Say," asked Bobby, "h'ain't yuh spent all yer coin yet?" "No. I have n't had time to spend more than a few dollars since I left you. I ought to have hung on to you as a mascot." "It's a cinch. I c'u'd a-helped yuh if yer 'd follered me.

Spicer," said Mountjoy, "I mean to leave it all in the hands of Mr. Barry; and, if you will believe me, no good can be done by any of you by hunting me across the park." "Hare you a bastard, or haren't you?" ejaculated Hart. "No, Mr. Hart, I am not." "Then pay us what you h'owes us. You h'ain't h'agoing to say as you don't h'owe us?" "Mr.

They calls it 'er shadder but I dunno, I h'ain't seen nothing myself. When we are suddenly annoyed, by whatever cause, we are apt to vent our annoyance upon the person nearest to us; and at this unlooked-for corroboration of his unpleasant vision, the gentleman said rudely, 'You're not such a fool as to believe such confounded trash as that, are you?

"Reckon I h'ain't no more use for men than you hev for women," said she, as she poured the coffee. All that could be seen of her behind the counter was her head, and her waist clad in a red blouse, pinned so high to her skirt in the rear that it almost touched her shoulder blades.

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