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Updated: July 16, 2025
And so, not the soft felt hat which really suited authorship, nor the black top hat which obliterated personality to the point of pain, but this gray thing with narrowish black band, very suitable, in truth, to a face of a pale buff color, to a moustache of a deep buff color streaked with a few gray hairs, to a black braided coat cut away from a buff-colored waistcoat, to his neat boots not patent leather faintly buffed with May-day dust.
This day's riding was the worst we had yet experienced. Our horses were fagged, the road abominable, great stones everywhere on the degenerated Turkish roads. The Turkish road is a narrowish path of flat paving-stones laid directly upon mother earth: but that is the first stage.
Wash clean, wipe dry, rub over well with salt, then prick in tiny gashes with a sharp-pointed knife, and rub in well black pepper, paprika, a very little dry mustard, then dash lightly with tabasco. Put a low rack in the bottom of a deep narrowish pan, set the meat upon it, letting only the backbone and rib-ends touch the rack. This puts it in a sort of Gothic arch.
'It IS the skeleton. The girls all drew back, and Alice said, 'Oswald, I wish you wouldn't. A moment later the discovery was unearthed, and Oswald lifted it up, with both hands. 'It's a dragon's head, Noel said, and it certainly looked like it. It was long and narrowish and bony, and with great yellow teeth sticking in the jaw.
Dodd took up the blue shawl, and said she would make Julia a peignoir of it; and the border, being narrowish, would do for the bottom. "That was a good notion, of yours, darling," said she, bestowing a sweet smile on Edward. He grunted. Then she took out a bundle of lace: "Oh, for pity's sake, no more," cried the "British Workman."
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