[Rudder Grange by Frank R. Stockton]@TWC D-Link book
Rudder Grange

CHAPTER I
11/28

There was a kitchen, a living-room, a parlor and bedrooms.

There were all sorts of conveniences--carpets on the floors, pictures, and everything, at least so it seemed to us, to make a home comfortable.

This was not all done at once, the oyster-man told me.

They had lived there for years and had gradually added this and that until the place was as we saw it.

He had an oyster-bed out in the river and he made cider in the winter, but where he got the apples I don't know.
There was really no reason why he should not get rich in time.
Well, we went all over that house and we praised everything so much that the oyster-man's wife was delighted, and when we had some stewed oysters afterward,--eating them at a little table under a tree near by,--I believe that she picked out the very largest oysters she had, to stew for us.


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