Capitolo 14
Famous Grace Harding plays sweater. My worse fears are confirmed.
I will now clean my batons and I will go in bed.
ENTRANCE NO II
MAINLY ON BLACKSMITH
It has rained every day and nothing of interest is happened. The ladies
you/he/she is gathered on the side protected of the porch. Some are reading,
others are taken part in elaborate job. The principal theme of discussion is the
coming of the Hardings--or rather an unfruitful investigation as to what dressed
and how much Miss Grace that Harding will bring.
They is due to-tomorrow. I wonder me if old Harding knows anything around
N.O. & G. escort? Him probably ago--and it will hold him/it to him.
There not being no other to write around me he/she will write of me.
How Chilvers said yesterday, I was born on the farm what time it constitutes
the Woodvales play to sweater connections. When my father died him he wanted this earth and
other ownership to me. I pick him/it up that a man has the right to do as him
it arranges with his really.
The old farm ago a sporting sweater field, and I cannot say me that I have
it ever repented my action in to sign the rental lease to which it transfers his/her use
the Woodvale Golf and Baton in Country for a long term of years.
I doubt if the two hundred acrid odd they ever produced so great an income as
I seed-annually receive now from the treasurer of the baton but this
doesn't appeal to my Uncle Henry.
"It is an outrage", he told once me, with non necessary adjectives "to
you use the old excellent agricultural house, generations sacred long of Blacksmiths as a
ell to a house of baton."
He said the other things that I won't repeat. He is a banker and me
sincerely hope that Chilvers doesn't hurt him with a ball of sweater. That infernal
slice of Chilvers a legacy has already cost me.
I have traced back far my ancestry as as me I challenge, and you/he/she has had a certain
amount of reverence for sacred traditions and that whole kind of thing.
I have to admit there have been times when I have almost imagined that the
shades of three generations of more separate Blacksmiths were