Elinor Wyllys, Volume 2 by Susan Fenimore Cooper
page 14 of 451 (03%)
page 14 of 451 (03%)
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"Yes; he is in very good business, I believe; you saw Catherine, you say?" "Yes, for a minute only. I ran in to kiss Kate and the children, while they were harnessing a horse for me at the tavern. Kate looks very well herself. The children didn't remember much of Uncle Charlie; but they are pretty, healthy little things, nevertheless." The grandmother assented to the commendation of her daughter's family; she thought them remarkably fine children. "Catherine was a very fortunate woman," she said; "Mr. Clapp was a very superior man, so very clever that he must do well; and the children were all healthy--they had gone through the measles wonderfully, that spring." Charlie had not quite as elevated an opinion of his brother-in-law as the females of the family; he allowed his mother's remark to pass unnoticed, however. "And so Mr. Taylor has given up Colonnade Manor," he continued. "Yes; he has just sold it to Mr. de Vaux, a friend of Mr. Wyllys," replied Miss Patsey. "Why did he sell it, pray?" "Well, the young ladies liked better to live about at hotels and boarding-houses in the summer, I believe; they thought it was too |
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