[We and the World, Part I by Juliana Horatia Ewing]@TWC D-Link book
We and the World, Part I

CHAPTER III
9/21

Do you think Mrs.Wood's will be loaded ?" "It may be," said I, "and of course she might load it if she thought she heard robbers." "I heard father say that if you shoot a burglar outside it's murder," said Jem, who seemed rather troubled by the thought of the blunderbuss; "but if you shoot him inside it's self-defence." "Well, you may spring a rattle outside, anyway," said I; "and if hers makes as much noise as ours, it'll be heard all the way here.

So mind, if she begins, you must jump down and cut home like mad." Armed with these instructions and our thick sticks, Jem and I crept out of the house before the sun was up or a bird awake.

The air seemed cold after our warm beds, and the dew was so drenching in the hedge bottoms, and on the wayside weeds of our favourite lane, that we were soaked to the knees before we began to force the hedge.

I did not think that grass and wild-flowers could have held so much wet.

By the time that we had crossed the orchard, and I was preparing to grip the grandly scored trunk of the nearest walnut-tree with my chilly legs, the heavy peeling, the hard cracking, and the tedious picking of a green walnut was as little pleasurable a notion as I had in my brain.
All the same, I said (as firmly as my chattering teeth would allow) that I was very glad we had come when we did, for that there certainly were fewer walnuts on the tree than there had been the day before.
"She's been at them," said I, almost indignantly.
"Pickling," responded Jem with gloomy conciseness; and spurred by this discovery to fresh enthusiasm for our exploit, we promptly planned operations.
"I'll go up the tree," said I, "and beat, and you can pick them as they fall." Jem was, I fear, only too well accustomed to my arrogating the first place in our joint undertakings, and after giving me "a leg up" to an available bit of foothold, and handing up my stick, he waited patiently below to gather what I beat down.
The walnuts were few and far between, to say nothing of leaves between, which in walnut-trees are large.


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