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Updated: May 21, 2025
She would just put her arm round Miss Beryl and tell Mars Lennox: 'If you help to hang my friend's child, you shan't marry my daughter! Your ma had pluck enuff to stop him. Mark what I say; that poor child is innercent, and the Lord will clear up everything some day, and then He will require the blood of them that condemned the innercent. Suppos'n appearances are agin her?
"Anastasy," said the old woman aside, "let Hannah go!" "Hannah's a-going to keep to hum Well, about Lucy," she said, as Fleda rose to go "I can't just say suppos'n you come here to-morrow afternoon there's a few coming to quilt and Lucy 'll be to hum then. I should admire to have you, and then you and Lucy can agree what you'll fix upon. You can get somebody to bring you, can't you?"
For there sat Daisy and there stood Sam, as still as the stones. Time went by. At last a sigh came from Daisy's weary little body, which she had not dared to move an inch for half an hour. "Tain't no good, Miss Daisy," whispered Sam. "I can't keep it still," said Daisy under her breath, as if the fishes would hear and understand her. "Suppos'n you try t'other bait, Miss Daisy." "What bait?"
"I humbly submit," said the doctor, graciously, "that nothing ought to be expected of gentlemen that a are so unhappy as to be alone; for they really a have nothing to give but themselves." There was a shout of merriment. "And suppos'n that's a gift that nobody wants?" said Mrs. Douglass's sharp eye and voice at once.
Just put it in a tin pail, dear, and hang it down in the well; and it'll be fresh." This was done, and Diana came in and took a seat by her old friend. "You needn't do that for me, Mother Bartlett. I don't care what I have to eat." "Most folks like what is good," said the old lady; "suppos'n they know it." "Yes, and so do I, but" "I made a pot-pie for ye," the old lady went on contentedly.
"I humbly submit," said the doctor graciously, "that nothing ought to be expected of gentlemen that a are so unhappy as to be alone; for they really a have nothing to give, but themselves." There was a shout of merriment. "And suppos'n that's a gift that nobody wants?" said Mrs, Douglass's sharp eye and voice at once.
"Wade, I reckon you want to go fetch Wils?" queried Lem. "If it's all the same to you. I'd rather not," replied Wade. "By Golly! I don't blame you. Boys, shore'n hell, Burley's after Wils." "Wal, suppos'n' he is," said Montana. "You can gamble Wils ain't agoin' to run. I'd jest like to see him face thet outfit. Burley's a pretty square fellar. An' he's no fool."
I say, Ellen, suppos'n' we follow the brook instead of climbing up yonder again; it will take us out to the open fields by and by." "Oh, do let's!" said Ellen; "that will be lovely." It proved a rough way; but Ellen still thought and called it "lovely."
For there sat Daisy, and there stood Sam, as still as the stones. Time went by. At last a sigh came from Daisy's weary little body, which she had not dared to move an inch for half an hour. "Tain't no good, Miss Daisy," whispered Sam. "I can't keep it still," said Daisy, under her breath, as if the fishes would hear and understand her. "Suppos'n you try t'other bait, Miss Daisy." "What bait?"
"Well, when my niece give it to me to keep for her I took and hid it inside o' the straw tick o' my bed, not wishin' to bank it for the few days we'd be here, and considerin' the bed a safe place, we not bein' used to niggers, and suppos'n' 'em honest, like servants in England.
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