[Mary Erskine by Jacob Abbott]@TWC D-Link bookMary Erskine CHAPTER VI 10/22
They were made by the cows, in the spring of the year when the roads were wet, to avoid the swampy places.
These places were now all dry, and the bye-paths were consequently of no use, though traces of them remained. "No," said Mary Bell.
"I will not stop to rest; I am not very tired; so I will go around by this little path.
It will come into the road again very soon." Mary Bell's opinion would have been just, in respect to any other path but this one; but it so happened, very unfortunately for her, that now, although not aware of it, she was in fact very near the great pine-tree, where the road into the woods branched off, and the path which she was determining to take, though it commenced in the main road leading to Mary Erskine's, did not return to it again, but after passing, by a circuitous and devious course, through the bushes a little way, ended in the branch road which led into the woods, at a short distance beyond the pine-tree. Mary Bell was not aware of this state of things, but supposed, without doubt, that the path would come out again into the same road that it left, and that, she could pass round through it, and so avoid disturbing the butterflies.
She thought, indeed, it might possibly be that the path would not come back at all, but would lose itself in the woods; and to guard against this danger, she determined that after going on for a very short distance, if she found that it did not come out into the road again, she would come directly back.
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