[Dotty Dimple Out West by Sophie May]@TWC D-Link bookDotty Dimple Out West CHAPTER II 12/13
"You needn't tell it, Dollyphus. I'm too tired to talk." Adolphus felt rather piqued as the little girl turned away her head and steadily gazed out of the window at the trees and houses flying by.
It appeared very much as if she suspected he had been making sport of her. "She isn't a perfect ignoramus, after all." he thought; "that last lie was a little too big." After this he sat for some time watching his little companion, anxious for an opportunity to assure her that these absurd stories had been spun out of his own brain.
But Dotty never once turned her face towards him. She was thinking,-- "P'rhaps he's a good boy; p'rhaps he's a naughty boy: but I shan't believe him till I ask my father." At Portsmouth, Captain Lally and son left the cars, much to Dotty's relief, though they did carry away the beautiful Spanish rabbit; and it seemed to the child as if a piece of her heart went with it. "Is my little girl tired ?" said Mr.Parlin, putting an arm around Dotty. "No, papa, only I'm thinking.
The north pole is top of the world--isn' it? As much as five hundred miles off ?" "A great deal farther than that, my dear." "There, I thought so! And we couldn't hear 'em pound it down with an axe--could we? That isn't what makes thunder? O, what a boy!" Mr.Parlin laughed heartily. "Did Adolphus tell you such a story as that ?" "Yes, sir, he did," cried Dotty, indignantly, "and said there was a dipper to it, with a handle on, as large as a tub.
And a man tied it that came from I-don't-know-where, and found this world.
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