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Updated: May 19, 2025
"I'm not blaming you, except that I wish you had told me at once. This experience will probably quite cure Shirley from running off. Heigh-o, I wonder what you girls will think of to do next?" Moreland was the town adjoining Eastshore, and ten minutes' ride brought them to the door of the police station. Rosemary clung tightly to her brother's arm as they went up the steps.
By this time a crowd had gathered about the angry man, and were asking him what was the matter. "Matter!" he shrieked, "that black object on the pump gave me impudence!" "Heigh-O!" cried little Elsa. "How could a cat give thee impudence!" "Ask him then," said the man. "He can talk like any Christian."
When the lines, "The rat takes the cheese," are sung, the players inside the circle and those forming it jump up and down and clap their hands in a grand confusion, and the game breaks up. The farmer in the dell, The farmer in the dell, Heigh-o! the cherry-oh! The farmer in the dell. The farmer takes a wife, The farmer takes a wife, Heigh-o! the cherry-oh! The farmer takes a wife.
And Tommie, seated on the pump in the bright winter sunshine, looked as if he had something in his mind that pleased him. "Heigh-O," said one of the passers-by. "Here's a witch-cat!" "You are mistaken," replied Tommie with a wink. "I belong to Mother Huldah, and she is the best woman in the village."
The wife takes a child, The wife takes a child, Heigh-o! the cherry-oh! The wife takes a child. The child takes a nurse, etc. The nurse takes a cat, etc. The cat takes a rat, etc. The rat takes the cheese, etc. The succeeding verses vary only in the choice in each, and follow in this order. The King of France with forty thousand men Marched up the hill and then marched down again.
Freckles faced the Angel from his banked wall of brown, blue, and crimson, with its background of solid green, and lifting his face to the sky, he sang the first thing that came into his mind. It was a children's song that he had led for the little folks at the Home many times, recalled to his mind by the Angel's exclamation: "To fairyland we go, With a song of joy, heigh-o.
But, heigh-o! she cried, at the Christmas-tide, That dead she would rather be-O! Pale and wan she crept out of sight, and wept 'Tis a sorry A loud knock that echoed ominously through the mean chamber, fell in that instant upon the door. And with it came a panting cry of "Open, Cris! Open, for the love of God!"
"Yes, it will," said Tommie, "long before your withered old soul will reach a haven of peace." Henley was so excited over the first words that he didn't even hear the last ones. He hopped about on one leg, and was rushing off at last when Tommie cried, "Heigh-O, you haven't paid me!" The miser felt in his pockets and drew out a silver coin and laid it on the handkerchief.
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