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Updated: July 4, 2025


I couldn't learn to play on the painer, though I'm clean crazy about music. I couldn't learn none of the things I yearned for inside, so I said to myself, 'You learn to laugh, laugh hearty. And somehow it's helped a lot, laughin' has. There's many a time I done it to keep tears back. Ain't nobody but has tears to shed some time or other.

'She liked 'im, an'-I kin walk. 'Yes, sez ole marster, laughin', 'I s'pose you's already done giv' her yo'se'f, an' nex' thing I know you'll be givin' her this plantation and all my niggers.

"None o' yer laughin' at dis knife," said Uncle Braddock, with a frown. "I done made dis hyar knife mese'f." A better knife, however, was produced by Dick Ford, and the pencil was sharpened. Then Gregory Montague stretched himself out on the floor, resting on his elbows, with the paper before him and the pencil in his hand. "Is you ready?" said Aunt Matilda. "All right," said Gregory.

And I shall also see that a cabin is reserved for you on the first out-going steamer, and I'll personally take you on board." "Thank ye very much, sir. An' may I have the twenty pounds?" "Certainly. Here it is," and he handed her the money. "I'm much obliged to ye. An' I'm sorry if I hurt ye by laughin' just now. But I thought ye were jokin', I did." "Please never refer to it again."

So off we set, an we splittin' our sides laughin' ha, ha, ha at the figure the priest cut. However, we could do no good, an' he never could pull up the horse, till he came full flight to his own house, opposite the pound there below, and the whole town in convulsions when they seen him.

"You mustn't mind my laughin'," explained Nat, still chuckling. "It ain't at you. It's just because I was wonderin' what you'd look like if I should meet you and now Ho! ho! You see, Mr. Ellery, I've heard of you, same as you said you'd heard of me." Ellery smiled, but not too broadly. "Yes," he admitted, "I imagined you had." "Yes, seems to me dad mentioned your name once or twice.

For my part, I'm the laughin' philosopher the giggling philosopher, by George! he! he! Come Katy, let's walk." Katy was glad enough to get her lover away fro her brother. She hated quarreling, and didn't see why people couldn't be peaceable. And so she took Mr.

Hodgson, smilin, "I think you had as well 'let a-be for let a-be' there. They have been sadly mauled by you, I understand, and it strikes me to be a drawn battle between you." "Weel, weel," said I, laughin, "e'en let it be sae, then; but the scoonrils ocht to be mair carefu' wha they lay their hands on." "They ought, no doubt," said Mr.

So I pretended to read from the book, and sez, in a low voice and very solemn, like I was openin' the funeral, 'If any you birds here starts laughin' I'll see him after the show and I'll knock the daylight outa him. "'Amen, sez Rathbone, very piously.

And whiles they was findin' a place to set it, she and young Marsh was laughin' down in the hall." "Who is she?" demanded Grandmother. "Where did she come from? How long is she goin' to stay? Where'd Mis' Marsh get to know her?" "The milkman's wife was over last Monday," Matilda continued, "to help with the washin', and she says she never see such clothes in all her born days nor so many of 'em.

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