Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !

Updated: May 24, 2025


That many of his stories were in the best sense "lived" there can be no doubt he has at odd times confessed it, confessions painfully wrung from him, as he is no friend of the interviewer. The white-hot sharpness of the impressions which he has projected upon paper recalls Taine's dictum: "les sensations sont des hallucinations vraies."

When he come home I ask him. Who will I tell him wants to ask him about old coin?" "Tell him a gentleman visiting Arrowhead Village would like to call and show him some old pieces of money, said to be Roman ones." The Interviewer had just remembered that he had two or three old battered bits of copper which he had picked up at a tollman's, where they had been passed off for cents.

The world going to nothing way I see it." Interviewer: Miss Irene Robertson Person interviewed: Isom Starnes, Marianna, Arkansas Age: 78 "I was born in Marshall County, Alabama near Guntersville. Father belong to the Starnes. They bought him in Alabama. My parents' name was Jane and Burrel Starnes. They had two children I knew of. When they was set free they left and started renting.

The Interviewer asked all sorts of questions about everybody in the village. When he came to inquire about Maurice, the youth showed a remarkable interest regarding him. The greatest curiosity, he said, existed with reference to this personage. Everybody was trying to find out what his story was, for a story, and a strange one, he must surely have, and nobody had succeeded.

The Secretary asked the Interviewer if he knew the young gentleman who called himself Maurice Kirkwood. "What," he answered, "the man that paddles a birch canoe, and rides all the wild horses of the neighborhood? No, I don't know him, but I have met him once or twice, out walking. A mighty shy fellow, they tell me. Do you know anything particular about him?" "Not much.

Isaac to make angel food, coffee cake, white bread and white cakes. From that I made the other kinds my own self." Interviewer's Comment People in Forrest City send for Ida and keep her a week or two baking Christmas and wedding cakes. Interviewer: Miss Irene Robertson Person interviewed: Milton Ritchie R.F.D., Brinkley, Arkansas Age: 78 "I was born in Marietta Hotel at Marietta, Georgia.

Interviewer: Miss Irene Robertson Person Interviewed: Lula Taylor, R.F.D., east of town, Brinkley, Arkansas Age: 71 "My mother was sold five times. She was sold when she was too little to remember her mother. Her mother was Charity Linnerman. They favored. She was dark and granny was light colored. My mother didn't love her mother like I loved her.

Storms takin' 'em away here and war in them other countries." Interviewer: Miss Irene Robertson Person interviewed: J. Roberts, Brinkley, Arkansas Age: 45 or 50 Occupation: Methodist preacher "My father was a Federal soldier in the Civil War. He was from Winston, Virginia. He went to war and soon after the end he came to Holly Grove.

Not only was he impervious, but he seemed to be densely ignorant; all the hints of Churchill glided off him like arrows from a steel breast-plate, all the most delicate and skilful art of the interviewer failed. So far as concerned the subject of politics, Sylvia was unknown to Mr. Grayson.

Then when they were through, they would take the disguise off again and go on back about their business, Old man Wolf, he used to tell me about it. Occupation "I nursed for every prominent doctor in Little Rock, Dr. Judd, Dr. Flynch, Dr. Flynn, Dr. Fly, Dr. Morgan Smith, and a number of others." Interviewer: Mrs.

Word Of The Day

abitou

Others Looking