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Updated: May 4, 2025


No, sir-ee! I tell you there's a darky in this kindlin' pile. I'm goin' right down to see John this minute." He went, but, instead of helping the situation, he merely made it worse. He found John seated at his office desk apparently engaged in his old occupation, that of looking out of the window. The young man's face was pale and drawn, but his manner was perfectly calm.

Why, I don't suppose he'd let me dance with anybody else, or have any fun at all! No, sir-ee, Patricia Fairfield, you're going to have two or three years of your present satisfactory existence, before you wear anybody's diamond ring. And now, my Lady Gay, you'd better skip to bed, for to-morrow night you have a theatre party in prospect, and you want to look fairly decent for that."

I'll tell your Aunt Samantha that you've at last learned how to do something, even if it is only building an airship." "Don't you call my studies at Kentfield something, Uncle Ezra?" asked Dick. "No sir! No, sir-ee!" cried the elderly man. "That's time and money thrown away.

"Yes; but it came in the conversation, you know. She is no boaster. No sir-ee! She's the modestest, gentlest, sweetest little lady I ever saw. I just love her! Well, I answered a lot of letters for her, and she liked the way I did it, and she liked me, I guess, for she said she only hoped Miss Crowell would suit her as well." "She knows you're my sister?" "Of course.

He gave his crackling, snapping laugh that was strange and even startling in itself, but seemed the natural expression of his snapping eyes and tight-curling, wiry whiskers and hair. "So I fixed up my will. No pack of worthless heirs to make a mockery of my life and teachings after I'm gone. No, sir-ee!" Arthur was more at ease. "Appearances" were no longer against him distinctly the reverse.

To-be-sure, I went to Sunday School and meetin' with the rest I jing! I had to! Huh! My old dad would just naturally a took th' hide off me if I hadn't. Yes sir-ee, you bet I went to church. But all the same I didn't want to. An' they sorter foundered me on religi'n, I reckon, Jim and Bill and Tom and Dave.

"I'm getting all the spools," announced Dick, jamming all the chairs aside that he could move, and lifting a very hot face. "Yes, sir-ee! Come, Phronsie." "I think you ought to help him, Phronsie." So Phronsie slipped out of her mother's lap obediently, and wiped off her tears. "Come on," said little Dick, in great glee. "I'm going under the table; there's a lot under there."

THEY didn't want any breachin' of promises No sir-ee! Ho! ho!" She stopped to laugh in gleeful triumph. John laughed too. Captain Obed scratched his head. "But, hold on there; heave to, Imogene!" he ordered. "I don't seem to get the whole of this yet. You did agree to marry him. Suppose he'd said you'd got to marry him, what then?" "He wouldn't.

I sat telling them of my adventures and answering questions, flattered by their tender interest, until milking time. I thoroughly enjoyed all that. When I rose to go out with Uncle Peabody, Aunt Deel demanded my shoes. "Take 'em right off," said she. "It ain't a goin' to do to wear 'em common no, sir-ee! They're for meetin' or when company comes ayes!"

"I told him 'No, sir-ee, I'd give him my ball, and velocipede, and jackknife, but not baby." This was the day before Miss Betsey came, straight and prim as usual, but with a different look on her face and tone in her voice from anything Neil had known, as she asked him how he was feeling, and them, sitting down beside him, began abruptly: "I say, Neil, why, don't you rouse yourself?

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