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Updated: May 13, 2025
But she went out of the room, and slowly off, upstairs. Pretty soon she came down again, with her eyes very tearful, and her shabby shawl and bonnet on. "I'm going, mum," said she, as one resolved to face calmly whatever might befall. "I didn't mean it to be sudden, but it are. And I wouldn't never a gone, if I'd a thought anybody cared for me the leastest bit that ever was.
She did not know how lovely she was, nor how "The light of the heaven she came from Still lingered and gleamed in her hair." "I wisht 'twouldn't get out," said she. "What do you mean by out?" "O, unwetted, and un-comb-bid, and un-parted." "That's because you fly about like such a little witch." "I doesn't do the leastest nuffin, Dotty Dimpwill! Folks ought to let me to go to churches."
When he had done, I looked at him in astonishment. "You are as sure as that?" I said. "We are sure, beyond the very leastest doubt, that at last there is a plot to kill the King. There are rumours and rumours. Well, these are of the right kind. And we are convinced that my Lord Shaftesbury is behind it, and my Lord Essex, and Mr. Sidney; and who else we do not know.
"I couldn't leave un," declared Will's wife. "'T is my duty to keep along wi'un for better or worse." "Us'll talk 'bout all that later. I be gwaine to act prompt an' sell every stick, an' then away, a free man." "All our furniture an' property!" moaned Phoebe, looking round her in dismay. "All to the leastest bit o' cracked cloam." "A forced sale brings nought," sighed Damaris.
"Shag," asked the colonel, still chuckling, "what do you think that nincompoop had the infernal audacity to offer me in the way of a book?" "I ain't got no idea, Colonel not th' leastest in th' world!" "He offered me a detective story, Shag!" "Oh, mah good Lord, Colonel! Not really?" "Yes, he did, Shag! A detective story!" "Oh, mah good Lord!"
"De ve'y leastest a man kin do," Jordan continued, as leaning forward he presented the hat "de ve'y leastest he kin do is ter live up ter 'is name, an' ef my name was Dolittle I sho' would try ter live up ter dat, ef I didn't pass beyond it!"
"I declare to goodness I'se dat kerflusteredcated dat I can't extradition myself forward in dis line ob progression de leastest moment longer!" exclaimed Washington at length, coming to a halt. "I'se prognosticated in de lower extremities!" "I suppose he means he's too tired to go any further and his legs ache," translated Professor Henderson.
Sometimes I des lets 'em loose p'omiskyus fur a while tell ev'ybody see blue lightnin' in de air, an' de mo'ner's bench is full, an' when I see ev'ybody is ready ter run fur 'is life, of co'se I eases up an' settles down on whatever sinner seem like he's de leastest skeered tell I nails 'im fast." He hesitated here a moment. "De onies' trouble," he resumed, presently.
"Hasn't that boy got home yet?" "No, he hasn't come yet, and I am worried to death about him," replied Mrs. Somers, opening the door of her brother's room. "What o'clock is it?" "After twelve. Thomas never stayed out so late in his life before. What do you suppose has become of him?" "Law sake! I haven't the leastest idea," answered the old man.
"Me and Sam are the regular keepers now; but the Board lets him live on here, and he's terrible clever at polishing." "He knows the lamp so well as ever he did," broke in the old woman; "the leastest little scratch, he don't miss it. How he doesn' break his poor neck is more'n I can tell; but he don't though 'tis a sore trial."
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