The Under Dog by Francis Hopkinson Smith
page 4 of 265 (01%)
page 4 of 265 (01%)
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Marny's studio is over the Art Club. He was at work on a picture of a canon with some Sioux Indians in the foreground, while I sat beside him, watching the play of his masterly brush. Dear old Aunt Chloe, in white apron and red bandanna, her round black face dimpled with smiles, was busying herself about the room, straightening the rugs, puffing up the cushions of the divan, pushing back the easels to get at the burnt ends of abandoned cigarettes, doing her best, indeed, to bring some kind of domestic order out of Marny's Bohemian chaos. Now and then she interpolated her efforts with such remarks as: "No, doan' move. De Colonel"--her sobriquet for Marny--"doan' keer whar he drap his seegars. But doan' you move, honey"--sobriquet for me. "I kin git 'em." Or "Clar to goodness, you pillows look like a passel o' hogs done tromple ye, yo're dat mussed." Critical remarks like these last were given in a low tone, and, although addressed to the offending articles themselves, accompanied by sundry cuffs of her big hand, were really intended to convey Aunt Chloe's private opinion of the habits of her master and his friends. The talk had drifted from men of the old frontier to border scouts, and then to the Kentucky mountaineers, whom Marny knows as thoroughly as he does the red men. "They are a great race, these mountaineers," he said to me, as he tossed |
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