Thankful's Inheritance by Joseph Crosby Lincoln
page 60 of 440 (13%)
page 60 of 440 (13%)
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Thankful looked at all these.
"So that's it," she said. "That's it," said Captain Obed. "What do you think of it?" "Humph! Well, there's enough of it, anyhow, as the little boy said about the spring medicine. What do you think, Emily?" Emily's answer was prompt and emphatic. "I like it," she declared. "It looks so different this morning. Last night it seemed lonesome and pokey and horrid, but now it is almost inviting. Think what it must be in the spring and summer. Think of opening those upper windows on a summer morning and looking out and away for miles and miles. It would be splendid!" "Um--yes. But spring and summer don't last all the time. There's December and January and February to think of. Even March ain't all joy; we've got last night to prove it by. However, it doesn't look quite so desperate as I thought it might; I'll give in to that. Last night I was about ready to sell it for the price of a return ticket to South Middleboro. Now I guess likely I ought to get a few tradin' stamps along with the ticket. Humph! This sartin isn't ALL Poverty Lane, is it? THAT place wa'n't built with tradin' stamps. Who lives there?" She was pointing to the estate adjoining the Barnes house and fronting the sea further on. "Estate" is a much abused term and is sometimes applied to rather insignificant holdings, but this one deserved the name. Great stretches of lawns and shrubbery, ornamental windmill, |
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