[is your at once dignified and affectionate; and by it you come by Alfred Lewis]@TWC D-Link bookis your at once dignified and affectionate; and by it you come CHAPTER XI 12/16
An' so they keeps on slingin' it back'ards an' for'ards for mebby two hours, an' me ha'ntin' about to chunk in a word. Then, final, they cries an' makes up; an' then they both concedes that one way an' another they're the best two people each other ever sees.
At this juncture,' concloods Nell, 'I declar's myse'f in on the play; an' we-all three sets down an' admires Enright Peets an' visits an' has a splendid afternoon.' "'An' wherever doorin' this emute is Dave ?' asks Enright. "'Oh, Dave ?' says Nell.
'Why he's lurkin' about outside som'ers in a furtive, surreptitious way; but he don't molest us none.
Which, now I remembers, Dave don't even come near us none at all.' "'I should say not!' says Texas Thompson, plenty emphatic.
'Dave ain't quite that witless.' "'Now, gents,' remarks Doc Peets, when Nell is done, an' his tones is confident like he's certain of his foothold, 'since things has gone thus far I'll sa'nter into the midst of these domestic difficulties an' adjust 'em some.
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