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Updated: June 29, 2025


"I told Miss Lamb that the cabin was locked up, but that Cap'n Tarbell was expected back in about 'arf-an-hour's time. Then I found 'er an old newspaper and a comfortable chair and sat down to wait. I couldn't go on the wharf for fear she'd want to come with me, and I sat there as patient as I could, till a little clicking noise made us both start up and look at each other.

"Cap'n Tarbell was the man I tried to do a good turn to; a man what used to be master of a ketch called the Lizzie and Annie, trading between 'ere and Shoremouth. 'Artful Jack' he used to be called, and if ever a man deserved the name, he did. A widder-man of about fifty, and as silly as a boy of fifteen.

The two great silver dollars which she drew from her purse looked very large to the widow Tarbell, yet it was with a feeling of exultation that she paid them as ransom for the white dog. In return for the money she received a small, round piece of metal with a hole bored through it, bearing a certain mystic legend which was to act as a talisman to the wearer.

W.D. Foulke, Fighting the Spoilsman , describes the relation of the administration to the civil service; for the Dingley tariff, Stanwood, Tarbell and Taussig. The literature on the Spanish war is extensive.

These five, in their order from the main entrance are: No. 87, devoted to the old-masterlike works of Frank Duveneck, who, more perhaps than any other American, shows the great manner of Velasquez, Rembrandt and Franz Hals, and to whom the jury has recommended that a special medal be given for his influence on American art; No. 88 filled with the admirable Impressionist landscapes of E. W. Redfield; 89 and 93, given up to the widely contrasted work of Edmund C. Tarbell and John H. Twachtman, each in his own fashion a master and enjoying a well-earned popularity, Twachtman's pictures in particular commanding almost as high prices as those of the men in Room 54; and No. 90, just off the Tarbell room, containing a small loan collection which very incompletely represents William Keith.

Pupil of Ross Turner, Joseph de Camp, Edmund C. Tarbell, and George de Forest Brush. Mrs. Sears has also studied by herself with the criticism of masters. She paints portraits, figures, and flowers, and is much interested in the applied arts.

Tarbell would answer, "Exactly, my love, by all means; and so is your friend Mrs. Pegley a great talker, and a fine-looking woman." "Then give her all the rights you give to Mr. Pope," cried Mrs. Tarbell. "She shall have 'em, and welcome," said Tarbell; but he did not tell his wife that he had voted for Mr.

"'Other one? I ses, 'wot other one? "Cap'n Tarbell shook his 'ead and smiled like a silly gal. "'She fell in love with me on top of a bus in the Mile End Road, he ses. 'Love at fust sight it was. She's a widder lady with a nice little 'ouse at Bow, and plenty to live on-her 'usband having been a builder. I don't know what to do.

Tarbell, resuming her former position in a great hurry, and dropping the law-journal. Tap-tap! "Come in!" said Mrs. Tarbell, picking up the law-journal. "Come in!" she said. And the door opened slowly. "Well?" said Mrs. Tarbell. "Is Mrs. Tarbell in?" said the party of the knocks. "I am Mrs. Tarbell. Come in, please. What can I do for you?" "I wanted to see you, ma'am." "Take a chair. Well?"

"A lawyer?" gasped Mrs. Tarbell. "Yes, ma'am; a lady lawyer." Mrs. Tarbell had never a word to say. In spite of having triumphed over all the arguments, both those epicene and those particularly masculine, which had been used against herself, she had not now the strength of mind to use them in her turn. In spite of being a lawyer, she had a conscience. No wonder Mrs. Tarbell was embarrassed.

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