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Updated: June 25, 2025
I've never been used to it, and to-night in particular that wolf's howl makes it all the more uncanny to me." The night had come on, uncommonly chill for the period of the year, and Henry also was willing to go. But when he returned to his little room it seemed littler than ever. This was not a fit place to be a home for a human being.
Everybody has seen the pictures of the littler Mozart and his little sister perched like robins on a piano stool and giving a concert before crowned heads, with the assistance of the father and the mother, themselves musicians. The elder Mozart made a life-work out of the career of his children, though he was a gifted musician and a shrewd and intelligent man on his own account.
I shan't like Seacove if they're going always to run races. In London they couldn't in the streets; it was only when we went in the gardens, and that wasn't every day, it was too far to go. I wish I had a brother or a sister littler than me; it's too much difference between Alie and me, thirteen and eight. I wish But here came a whoop from behind. 'Off, Biddy; look sharp one, two, three.
"Not you," he said slowly, as he looked down at me and seemed to measure me with his eye as one of my uncles did. "There's a much littler boy than you goes with one of the carts, and I see him cutting about the market with a book under his arm, looking as chuff as a pea on a shovel. He ain't nothing to you. Come along o' me. I'll take an old coat for wrapper, and you'll be as right as the mail.
"Yit," said he, "I've got to march just as far as any of you, carry just as big a gun, and do just as much shootin'." "You're wrong," said the medical-minded Alf Russell. "You ought to have less than the others, because you're smaller. The littler and younger the person the smaller the dose, always." "No," acceded the farmer Jim Humphreys. "Tain't natural, nor right.
"Buffle," whispered the barkeeper, who knew the great man by sight, "he's a littler man than you." "I know it, boss," replied Buffle, most brazenly. "He sez he don't drink." "Never saw him here before there, he's goin' out now," said the barkeeper. Buffle turned and dashed through the crowd; all who held glasses quickly laid them down and followed.
Mantalini's words, is no business just now of ours, but the writer of the reply to the attack, might have summed up by saying "that to him, Mr. LITTLER, whatever his Christian names might be, appeared as a Be-Littler." "MR. GLADSTONE ON RENTS IN WALES." What the Right Honble. Mr.
"Oh, I'm a good camper, all right," agreed Paul. "Mother and I have gone off in the woods, lots of times. When I was littler, I used to get spells when I was bad. I do still, even now, once in a while." Mr. Welles did not smile, but continued gravely eating his bread and bacon, his eyes on the little boy. "I don't know what's the matter. I feel all snarled up inside.
"I laugh still," said Mrs. Landis, "when people say what a lot of work so many children make. In many ways, like sewing and cookin' for them they do, but in other ways they are a big help to me and to each other. If I had just one now I'd have to dress it, but with so many they help the littler ones and all I got to do is tell them what to do. It don't hurt them to work a little.
It is a pleasure to record that I was able to show a substantial token of friendship when, through my influence, Senator Littler was appointed by President Cleveland one of the Pacific Railroad Commissioners. Speaking of Colonel Littler reminds me of our mutual friend, Mr. Rheuna Lawrence, an estimable citizen of Springfield in his day.
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