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Updated: June 23, 2025
"You know him, Charlie Bragg!" she burst out angrily. "Can you believe Tom Cameron would do such a wicked thing as this they accuse him of?" "We-ell. I don't want to believe it," he agreed. "But, look here!" and in desperation he pulled something from his pocket. "You know that, don't you?" "Why!
Mother and daughter looked at each other rather ruefully. "Oh, dear me!" whispered Nan. "I never do open my mouth but I put my foot in it!" "Goodness!" returned her mother, much amused. "That is an acrobatic feat that I never believed you capable of, honey." "We-ell! I reminded Papa Sherwood of our hard luck instead of being bright and cheerful like you."
A spark might at any time start a serious fire. "We-ell," gasped Frances, at last. "I can't stop you from coming!" "Of course not!" laughed Pratt, and quickly turned his grey pony to ride beside the pinto. The wagon was now a long way ahead. They set off on a gallop to overtake it.
"A-a-a..." said Crutch, wondering as he listened to Lipa. "A-a!... We-ell! "I am very fond of jam, Ilya Makaritch," said Lipa. "I sit down in my little corner and drink tea and eat jam. Or I drink it with Varvara Nikolaevna, and she tells some story full of feeling. We have a lot of jam four jars. 'Have some, Lipa; eat as much as you like." "A-a-a, four jars!" "They live very well.
"He is pretty good, I think," declared Mun Bun. "But next time I go down to that goose place I am going to have a big stick." "The next time," advised Russ, "don't you go there at all unless Daddy Bunker is with you. I'd be afraid of that old gander myself." "Oh, would you?" cried the little boy, greatly relieved. "We-ell, I was a teeny bit scared myself."
His boy's eyes hung on hers, pleading. All the happiness of his life, he felt, waited for this girl's answer, this little yellow-haired girl whom he had never seen until a quarter of an hour before. "We-ell," she hesitated, "I I don't like to have you think I'd pick up like this with any fellow that come along " "I don't think so!" he broke in fiercely. "If I thought so I'd never've asked you."
Besides," Nan added, "I don't like their looks." "Looks of what the taxis?" "The chauffeurs," responded Nan, promptly. "We-ell, we've got to go somehow and trust to somebody," Bess said reflectively. "I wonder should we go to that hotel where we stayed that week with mother? They would take us in I suppose." "But goodness! why should we be so helpless?" demanded Nan.
"Search me!" "I told him the truth." "We-ell?" "And I'm going to marry him!" Mrs. Slawson sat down hard upon the nearest chair, as if the happy shock had deprived her of strength to support her own weight. "No!" she fairly shouted. "Yes!" cried Claire. "And, O, Martha! I'm so happy! And did you ever dream such a thing could possibly happen?" "Well, you certaintly have give me a start.
"We-ell, if I do, I calc'late I got some idee uh how a shurf had oughta ack," Applehead informed him with a boastful note in his voice, and pulled himself up straighter in his chair. "I was 'lected shurf uh this county four different terms right hand runnin', and if I do say it, they wasn't nobody ever said I didn't do my duty.
"We-ell," Miss Earle admitted reluctantly, "nothing ever came out on any of the others, but it looked mighty funny to me when Janet Raymond's mother took her out of school right in the middle of a term and hauled her off to Europe for a whole year!... I guess," she suggested, with raised eyebrows, "you know what it usually means when a girl has to spend a whole year abroad, and her mother says she's taking her away for her health and Janet looking as healthy as any other girl in the school, except that she was crying half the time, and smuggling special delivery letters in and out by one of the maids "
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