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Updated: May 16, 2025
He is English, but we shall forgive him because he is a such ole frien' of mine." "Ah, yes," said Mellin. "Remember seeing you on the boat, running across the pond." "Yes, ev coss," responded Mr. Sneyd cordially. "I wawsn't so fawchnit as to meet you, but dyuh eold Cooley's talked ev you often. Heop I sh'll see maw of you hyuh."
She said 't little Jane could chew all she liked out on the farm, 'n' Gran'ma Mullins said 't she all but fell on her knees at her feet. She was down town this afternoon buyin' two dozen o' cotton an' one dozen o' glue, 'n' she says 't she sh'll spend the rest o' her allotted time in peace 'n' mendin'. "But Gran'ma Mullins' joy is more 'n balanced by Mrs. Brown, for Mrs.
"Well, that's all right, now. Remember be jest here with all the clo'es ye've got, at ten o'clock, Saturday night ten days off cut 'em in a stick every day the next Saturday after the next one, an' don't git mixed." The boy assured him that he should make no mistake. "When I come, I sh'll bring a hoss and wagin. It'll be a stiddy hoss, and I sh'll come here to this stump, an' stop till I seen ye.
"I sh'll want to dust father 'n' turn him out o' the window afore Mrs. Brown's son comes. After he's gone I'll wave my dish-towel, 'n' then you come out 'n' I 'll tell you what he says." They separated for the night, and Susan went to sleep with her own version of love's young dream. Mrs. Brown's son arrived quite promptly the next morning. He drove up in Mr.
He halted in the middle of the street and recited dramatically: "'Not marble, nor th' gilded monuments Of prinches sh'll outlive m' powerful rhyme." "How's that, Alonzho, b'gosh?" "Where did you learn it?" I demanded, momentarily forgetting his condition. "Fr'm Ralph," he replied, "says I wrote it. Can't remember...."
I sh'll take care o' the little woman, and atween you an' I, Parson, it's about the best thing as a man can do. Takin' care of a woman is the nateral thing for a man, an' no man ain't much as doesn't do it, and glad o' the job." The capacity of a country assembly for cakes, pies, and lemonade, is something quite unique, especially at a morning festival.
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