Capitolo 25
but he/she remains to a fixed distance as a bird in which Your will be
puts in enclosure, but you don't enter Your house. It is not really the shadiness, for her it is not
timid, but as of I strive him/it of wild nature in her that it refuses
to be made home. The faith of one is tense to accept Sylvia
he/she esteems how Georgian it is deep--she is so light, so airy, this way
happy. Sylvia is a small reserved dove that is thrown on
the skin of an owl, and it is a lot of prouder of his bad old pens that
of his/her innocent heart; but Georgian--thing is? Secretly a
owl with the buoyancy of a humming-bird? However it is not anything to,
me. You hover him around his/her mother and Sylvia with a tenderness that
it is rather beautiful. I didn't mention the subject of Audubon and
his/her father, for him to leave a sister older to know that is not well never
a more youth is speaking of her. I gave a lot only her
the opportunities to speak of birds, but she ignored them. As for me and
_my_ loves of birds, such trifles are under of his/her notice. I don't do
as her, and it won't be worth whether to call soon again, nevertheless
it would be pleasant to see those sketches.
This morning as me I was accidentally passing under his/her window I saw
his/her to him and it lifted my hat. You tilted above him with his/her cheek in
his/her palm, and says, smiling,
"You don't have to spoil Sylvia!"
"Which is my offense defined in that respect?"
"Too much pergola, also many flowers too much treatment of fine."
"Doesn't excellent treatment ever damage anybody? It is no evil it treatment
does that spoil people?"
"The good treatment can never spoil people that are old enough to know
his/her rarity and value. But you say you it is a student of nature;
Has ever observed not him that nature he/she lets the sugar reach things
until them they are mature? Children have to be kept acids."
"The neighbor turns that Miss Sylvia comes on, then I am to give
his/her an awful scolding and a great basket of green apples."
"Or, what is worse, supposes that you encourage him to study the Greatest