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Tempest and Sunshine by Mary Jane Holmes
page 8 of 364 (02%)
thought it a shame not to be a good rider and when they saw the awkward
manner in which Mr. Wilmot finally mounted the horse and the ludicrous
face of Jim Crow as he sprang up behind him, they were, as they afterward
told Aunt Esther, "dreffully tickled and would have larfed, sartin, if
they hadn’t knowed marster would have slapped their jaws."

"And sarved you right," was the rejoinder of Aunt Esther.

But to return to Mr. Edson. As soon as Mr. Wilmot, Jim and Prince had
disappeared, he felt a return of his fears concerning the "confounded
Abolitionist." Thought he, "What a fool I was to let Prince and Jim Crow,
too, go off with that ar’ chap! Thar’s Prince, worth a hundred and fifty,
and Jim, at the least calculation, ’ll fetch eight hundred. Well, anyway,
they can’t get far on that dirt road, so if Jim isn’t home by nine, I’ll
go after ’em, that’s so." Having settled the matter thus satisfactorily in
his own mind, he called for his horse and started for home.

Meantime Mr. Wilmot was slowly wending his way toward Mr. Middleton’s. It
took but a short time for him to ascertain that the road was fully equal
to the description given of it by Mr. Edson. At times he could scarcely
keep his head, and he felt conscious, too, that the black machine behind
him was inwardly convulsed with laughter at his awkward attempts to guide
the horse in the best part of the road. At length he ventured a remark:

"Jim, is this animal ugly?"

"Ugly! Lor’ bless you, marster, is you blind? As handsome a creetur as
thar is in the country!"

Mr. Wilmot understood that he had used the word ugly in its wrong sense,
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