Miles Wallingford - Sequel to "Afloat and Ashore" by James Fenimore Cooper
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page 10 of 533 (01%)
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"Of course the ceremony was performed by our excellent rector, good Mr.
Hardinge?" "Sartain, sah--no Clawbonny nigger t'ink he marry at all, 'less Masser Hardinge bless him and say Amen. Ebberybody say 'e marriage is as good as ole Masser and Missusses. Dis make two time Dido got married; and both time good, lawful ceremunny, as ebber was. Oh! yes, sah!" "And I hope your change of condition has proved to your mind, Dido, now the thing is done. Old Cupid is no great matter in the way of beauty, certainly; but he is an honest, sober fellow enough." "Yes, sah, he _dat_, no one _can_ deny. Ah! Masser Mile, em 'ere step-husband, after all, nebber jest like a body own husband! Cupid _berry_ honest, and _berry_ sober; but he only step-husband; and _dat_ I tell him twenty time already, I do t'ink, if trut' was said." "Perhaps you have now said it often enough--twenty times are quite sufficient to tell a man such a fact." "Yes, sah," dropping another curtsey, "if Masser Mile please." "I do please, and think you have told him _that_ often enough. If a man won't learn a thing in twenty lessons, he is not worth the trouble of teaching. So tell him he's a step-husband no more, but try something else. I hope he makes Chloe a good father?" "Lor', sah, he no Chloe's fadder, at all--_her_ fadder dead and gone, and nebber come back. I want to say a word to young Masser, 'bout Chloe and dat 'ere fellow, Neb--yes, sah." |
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