[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 7/16
He's the whole check-rack--the one bet that wins on the layout of the possible--an' Jennie proceeds to conduct herse'f accordin'.
It's a good thing mebby for Enright Peets; I won't set camped yere an' say it ain't; but it's mighty hard on Dave. "Jennie not only neglects Dave, she turns herse'f loose frequent an' assails him.
If he shows up in his wigwam walkin' some emphatic, Jennie'll be down on him like a fallin' star an' accoose him of wakin' Enright Peets. "'An' if you-all wakes him,' says Jennie to Dave, sort o' domineerin' at him with her forefinger, 'he'll be sick; an' if he gets sick, he'll die; an' if he dies, you'll be a murderer--the heartless deestroyer of your own he'pless offspring,--which awful deed I sometimes thinks you're p'intin' out to pull off.' An' then Jennie would put her apron over her head an' shed tears a heap; while Dave--all harrowed up an' onstrung--would come stampedin' down to the Red Light an' get consolation from Black Jack by the quart. "That's the idee, son; it's impossible to go into painful details, 'cause I ain't in Dave's or Jennie's confidence enough to round 'em up; but you onderstands what I means.
Jennie's forever hectorin' an' pesterin' Dave about Enright Peets; an' beyond that she don't pay no more heed, an' don't have him no more on her mind, than if he's one of these yere little jimcrow ground-owls you-all sees inhabitin' about dissoloote an' permiscus with prairie-dogs.
What's the result? Dave's sperits begins to sink; he takes to droopin' about listless an' onregyardful; an' he's that low an' onhappy his nosepaint don't bring him no more of comfort than if he's a graven image.
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