Wild Wales: Its People, Language and Scenery by George Henry Borrow
page 84 of 922 (09%)
page 84 of 922 (09%)
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"I have three, sir." "Do they earn anything?" "My eldest son, sir, sometimes earns a few pence, the others are very small." "Will you sometimes walk with me, if I pay you?" "I shall be always glad to walk with you, sir, whether you pay me or not." "Do you think it lawful to walk with one of the Lloegrian Church?" "Perhaps, sir, I ought to ask the gentleman of the Lloegrian Church whether he thinks it lawful to walk with the poor Methodist weaver." "Well, I think we may venture to walk with one another. What is your name?" "John Jones, sir." "Jones! Jones! I was walking with a man of that name the other night." "The man with whom you walked the other night is my brother, sir, and what he said to me about you made me wish to walk with you also." |
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