Capitolo 39
The reason for George and George, although he said that the reason was a good person
one--that it was a serious difficulty in the way of a-fishing that it goes that
day that had only come to his/her knowledge since they left house, firmly
persisted in the decline to explain that up to that which was the difficulty the
evening, and it slowly started to walk again I pour the house.
_Egbert becomes Sullen_.
Egbert declared then in every case, that he would not have gone home. If he was able
go not a-fishing him it would be there in the wood. George quickly fell in
with this idea. "Here is a beautiful place for me to take a seat on this flat stone
under the trees", it said him, "and I have a book in pocket. You are able
you play around in the wood until you please. You will perhaps see a
squirrel; if you do, tells me, and I will come and I will help Him to pick him/it up." Then
saying, he taken his/her book and him sat under the trees and it started to
reading. Egbert, after having gruffly lingered around some minutes it started to walk
on the run, and says that he was going home.
George succeeded however soon, in to put again it in good-humor from
talking to him in a friendly way, and without manifesting some signals of
sorrow, and also playing with him on the way. Him taken desires to hold
on friendly terms with him the whole afternoon, helping him/it in his various
enterprises, and contributing as to his/her fun in every as way him
it was able, while he didn't make complaint and not express dissatisfaction with
him in some way anything.
The Disposition of _Final of the Case_.
After Egbert had gone in bed, and before he went to sleep, George did him/it
a visit to his/her side of the bed, and, after the joy a few happy with him, to put
he in special good-humor, says him it would make his/her explanation.
"The reason because I had to abdicate the consignment" of fishing, he said, "it was, me
it founded that I could not depend to the the Your I have self-respect me."
Egbert, after the break of a moment, says that he didn't disobey him/it; and when