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Updated: May 17, 2025
I wouldn't marry a little old squashy fellow like him if he was worth the mint." "Renie! Re-nie!" "An old fellow, just because he's got money and " "Old! Max Hochenheimer ain't more than in his first thirties, and old she calls him!
"Aw, Mr. Hochenheimer, I ain't got thorns." Out from the velvet shadows his face came closer. "It's thorns to me, Miss Renie, because you're so pretty and sweet, and and seem so far away from a plain fellow like me." "I'm a plain man, Miss Renie, and I don't know how to talk much about the things I feel inside of me; but but I feel, all-righty." "Looks ain't everything."
"Listen, mamma. "Sounds like somebody's going out of the house, Renie. Who " "No, no. No one has been here, mamma. It's just the breeze." "I tell you it's a pleasure to have a daughter like mine! What excuses to make to Max Hochenheimer, a young man what comes all the way from Cincinnati to see her " "Listen, mamma; I I've only been fooling honest, I have." "What?" "I aw, mamma."
A man like Max Hochenheimer comes along, a man where the goodness looks out of his face, a man what can give her every comfort; and, because he ain't a fine talker like that long-haired Sollie Spitz, she " "You leave him out! Anyways, he's got fine feeling for something besides sausages." "Is it a crime, Renie, that I should want so much your happiness?
"Like I told your papa to-night on the car, I 'ain't got much to offer a beautiful young girl like you; money, I can see, don't count for so much with a fine girl like you, and I I don't need to be told that my face and my ways ain't my fortune." "It's the heart that counts, Mr. Hochenheimer."
Like I says to Shongut coming out on the street-car with him to-night, if it hadn't been that I thought maybe my mother would like a little fanciness after a hard life like hers, for my own part a little house and a big garden is all I ask for." "Ach, Mr. Hochenheimer, with such a grand house like that is sunk-in baths Mrs. Schwartz says you got!
"Say, wouldn't it be a treat for Wasserman Avenue to see me go loping off like that!" "This is the first little visit we've ever had together all by ourselves, ain't it, Miss Renie? Seems like, to a bashful fellow like me, you was always slipping away from me." "The flowers and the candies you kept sending me were grand, Mr. Hochenheimer and the letter to-day." "You read the letter, Miss Renie?"
All people don't like it when you make fun. Mr. Hochenheimer, you must excuse my husband; a great one he is to tease and make his little fun." Mr. Shongut's ancient-looking face, covered with a short, grizzled growth of beard and pale as a prophet's beneath, broke into a smile, and a minute network of lines sprang out from the corners of his eyes. "I was bashful in my life once, too eh, mamma?"
Hochenheimer." "Me and my mother ain't much for style, Miss Renie. Honest, you'd be surprised, but with my fine house I don't even keep an automobile. My mother, she's old, Miss Renie, and won't go in one. Alone it ain't no pleasure; and when I don't walk down to my factory the street-cars is good enough." "You should take it easier, Mr. Hochenheimer."
Nothing is so grand to me as nature, neither." "Up at Green Springs, in the Ozarks, where we went for ten days last summer, honest, Mr. Hochenheimer, I used to lie looking out the window all night. The stars up there shone so close it seemed like you could nearly touch them." "Ain't that wonderful, Miss Renie, you should be just like me again!" She smiled in the dark.
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