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Updated: May 13, 2025


Lasette, who are so willing to help, for the purpose of holding mother's meetings. I would try to have the church the great centre of moral, spiritual and intellectual life for the young, and try to present counter attractions to the debasing influence of the low grogshops, gambling dens and houses of ill fame." But I now refer to a special part.

Lasette and occasionally called at her uncle's, but there was an air of restraint in the social atmosphere which repressed and chilled him. In that home he missed the cordial freedom and genial companionship which he always found at Mrs.

I thought you would have been married before now. I have your wedding present all ready for you." "Mrs. Lasette," Annette said, while her voice trembled with inexpressible sorrow, "it is all over." Mrs.

"No," said Annette, sadly, and then in the ears of her sympathizing friend she poured her tale of bitter disappointment. Mrs. Lasette folded the stricken girl to her heart in tenderest manner. "Oh, Mrs. Lasette," she said, "you make me feel how good it is for girls to have a mother." "Annette, my brave, my noble girl, I am so glad." "Glad of what, Mrs. Lasette?"

Lasette somewhat absently. "If you do, won't you tell me?" Again Mrs. Lasette answered in the same absent manner. "Why mama, what is the matter with you; you say yes to everything and yet you are not paying any attention to anything that I say. You seem like someone who hears, but does not listen; who sees, but does not look.

Lasette was a model hostess who would have thought her entertainment a failure had any one gone from it smarting under a sense of social neglect. Shy and easily embarrassed Annette who was very seldom invited anywhere, found herself almost alone in that gay and chattering throng.

Lasette, she had no business calling me a nigger." "No; I don't want her to call me anything of the kind, neither negro nor nigger. She shan't even call me black." "But, Annette, are you not black?" "I don't care if I am, she shan't call me so." "But suppose you were to say to Miss Joseph, 'How white your face is, do you suppose she would get angry because you said that she looked white?"

Hanson, "you all do wrong in puffing up Annette with the idea that she is something extra. You think, Mrs. Lasette, that there is something wonderful about Annette, but I can't see it, and I hear a lot of people say she hasn't got good sense." "They do not understand the child." "They all say that she is very odd and queer and often goes out into the street as if she never saw a looking glass.

"I don't know what he sees in Annette with her big nose and plain face." "My father," said Laura Lasette, "says that Annette is a credit to her race and my mother is just delighted because Mr. Luzerne is attracted to her, but, girls, had we not better be careful how we talk about her?

Charley was promoted just the same as others according to his merits. Time had dealt kindly with Mrs. Lasette, as he scattered his silvery crystals amid her hair, and of her it might be said, Each silver hair, each wrinkle there Records some good deed done, Some flower she scattered by the way Some spark from love's bright sun. Mrs.

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