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Updated: May 10, 2025


"And there is another thing," exclaimed Margery. "You should not say Mr. Raybold and his party. He was the only one of them who behaved badly." "That is true," said Mrs. Archibald. "His sister is somewhat obtrusive, but she is a lady, gentle and polite, and it would have been very painful to her and as painful to us had it been necessary forcibly to eject her brother from our camp.

But at this moment some one stepped up quickly behind Raybold, and with a hand upon his shoulder, partly turned him around. "I think," said the bishop, "that I heard this lady tell you to go. If so, go." "I did say it," said Mrs. Archibald, hurriedly. "Please be as quiet as you can, but make him go." "Do you hear what Mrs. Archibald says?" asked the bishop, sternly. "Depart, or "

Now that suits me very well indeed. My sister Corona is a very fine young woman, and I think it would be an excellent thing to have two young ladies here instead of one." "Yes," said Mrs. Archibald, "that might be very pleasant. I should be glad for Margery to have a companion of her own sex." "I understand precisely," said Raybold, nodding his head sagaciously; "of her own sex.

The reading of the paper occupied at least half an hour, and when it was finished, and Corona had begun to make some remarks on a portion of it which she had not fully elaborated, Mrs. Perkenpine approached, and stood before her. "Well, miss," said she, "I'm off." Miss Raybold fixed her eye-glasses upon her. "What do you mean?" she asked. "I'm goin' back to Sadler's," she replied.

She might as well live in a cellar and have pamphlets and reformers shoved down to her through the coal-hole." Messrs. Clyde and Raybold accompanied the larger boat in their own skiff. It was an unwieldy craft, with but one pair of oars, and as the two young men were not accustomed to rowing together, and as Mr. Raybold was not accustomed to rowing at all and did not like it, Mr.

Raybold I was engaged to him, that of course would put an end to the young man's attentions. We were engaged only yesterday, so we haven't had any time to tell anybody, but we intended to do it to-day, beginning with you and Uncle Archibald.

But I'll find out about it! I'll thrash that fellow in black, and before I let him up I'll make him tell me what he did to Martin. I'd do a good deal to get hold of something that would take the conceit out of that fellow." Mr. Arthur Raybold was a deep-minded person, and sometimes it was difficult for him, with the fathoming apparatus he had on hand, to discover the very bottom of his mind.

The Dodworths don't go into camp at all, but expect to stay here for two weeks longer, and then they go to the sea-shore. Mrs. Henderson leaves day after to-morrow. "Mr. Clyde and his friend live in Boston. They are both just beginning to practise law, though Mr. Clyde says that Mr. Raybold would rather be an actor, but his family objects.

You needn't trouble yourself to write to me, I'll hear about you from Hendricks; and I'd rather know what he thinks about you than what you think about yourself." "How little you know," thought Martin, as he entered the coach, "what I am or what I think about myself. As if my purpose could be changed by words of yours!" And he smiled a smile which would have done justice to Arthur Raybold.

"You forget," said Mrs. Archibald, with a smile, "that we are associate hermits." "No, I do not," said her husband, "I remember it, and that is the reason I am off before Miss Raybold emerges upon the scene." "I do not know," said Mrs. Archibald to Clyde, "exactly how I am going to assert myself to-day, but I shall do it one way or the other; I am not going to be left out in the cold."

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