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Updated: May 16, 2025


"Well, I don't mind if I do. After supper's a good time. Father goes up the town to play billiards. After eight." "When?" "What about to-morrow evening?" "All right. Where?" "Up to the Mill. Five minutes up from here." "I'll be there," he said. "Don't let father catch 'ee that's all," she smiled down at him. "You'm a fule, Mr.

"Nary a blink, Mart'n why?" "I'm wondering what came of that same bundle " "Hove overboard belike, pal there's many a strange thing goes a-floating out to sea from hereabouts, Mart'n drownd me!" "Belike you're right!" says I. "Mart'n, Sir Rupert's ashore to meet her ladyship, so you'm free to come 'bove deck if so minded?" "Nay, I'll bide where I am, Godby."

And as Mr Blackshaw went down the hill into the town his heart was as black as the street itself with rage and disappointment. He had made his child cry! Someone stopped him. 'Eh, Mester Blackshaw! said a voice, and under the voice a hand struck a match to light a pipe. 'What's th' maning o' this eclipse as you'm treating us to?

Tregenza's troubles to last some time, and turned with pleasure to Joan as she entered. So hearty indeed was the greeting and a kiss which accompanied it that his niece felt the displeasure which her uncle had recorded by post upon the occasion of her engagement to Mary Chirgwin's former sweetheart existed no more. "My ivers! a braave, bowerly maid you'm grawin', sure 'nough!

"'T'other chap's a handsome chap," she said, with her eyes on her work. "Handsome is as handsome does," squeaked Uncle Issy. "If you wasn' such an aged man, Uncle, I' call 'ee a very tame talker." Uncle Issy collapsed. "I reckon you'm all afeard o' this man," continued Prudy, looking round on the company, "else I'd have heard some mention of a shal-lal afore this."

I seem you'd do wise to take the whole kit; an' you'm that well-to-do that 'twouldn' be worth thinkin' 'bout. 'Twould be cheaper'n a shop; an' theer's everything a royal duke's cheel could want; an' a butivul robe wi' lacework cut 'pon it, an' lil bits o' ribbon to tie in the armholes Sundays. They'm vitty clothes."

Arrived at Chagford, familiar forms greeted Will in the market-place, and again he bawled his information without dismounting. "A son 'tis, Chapple comed an hour ago a brave li'l bwoy, so they tell!" "Gude luck to it, then! An' now you'm a parent, you must " But Will was out of earshot, and Mr. Chapple wasted no more breath.

"You'm right, captain," sang out a tall gaunt fellow who stood close to him; "one westcountry-man can fight two easterlings, and an easterling can beat three Dons any day. Eh! my lads of Devon? "For O! it's the herrings and the good brown beef, And the cider and the cream so white; O! they are the making of the jolly Devon lads, For to play, and eke to fight." "Come," said Oxenham, "come along!

I thought 'twas all 'long o' you and Reuben May that the Lottery's landin' got blowed about?" Eve shook her head. "Be sure," she said, "'twas never in me to do Adam any harm." "And you'm goin' to stick to un now through thick and thin? 'Twill niver do for un, ye knaw, to set his foot on Cornish ground agen."

"You'm a gude man, Martin the husband for a gude lass. Best to find one if you can. Wish I could help'e." "Oh, Chris, there's only one woman in the world for me. Could you even now? Could you let me stand between you and the world? Could you, Chris? If you only knew what I cannot put into words. I'd try so hard to make you happy." "I knaw, I knaw.

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