Alex St. Clair Abrams
Capitolo 18
Now we will leave them for the present, and in the next chapter
you introduce the reader twos other characters.
I CAPITULATE SIXTH
The Spectator and Usurer.
The Mr. Jacob Swartz is sat in the room of back of his/her shop on Principal
road that counts a gold heap and silver coins that placed on a table
in front of him. He was a small, thin-bodied man, with the small grey eyes,
light hair and aquiline nose. He was generally of that nationality
known in this country as the "Dutch; " but having been above there for
twenty years, you/he/she had been naturalized him, and now it was a citizen of the
Is chivalrous of Mississippi, a fact of what him prided him
notably.
The Mr. Swartz was busy busily calculation his/her money, when a small boy,
who seemed, from a similarity of characteristics, to be his/her child appeared to
the door, and it mentioned that the Mr. Elder desired to see him/it.
"Is Vot able him the vant?" says the Mr. Swartz. Then as if remembering, him
continued: "I suppose that it is apout that the small shtore him vants to rent
me. Tell him/it to enter."
The boy withdrew, and some second after a tall and meticulously
dressed gentleman, with his/her coat been buttoned to the throat and
bringing a hat with edge and breadth, it entered the room. This was the Mr. James
More old man, a citizen of Jackson, but not a native of the State. He came
from Kentucky many years before, and it was a man with "Southern
principles." We will say to do him/it the justice, that he was really true
I befriend to the South that not only done you/he/she is been able to be from principle,
but from his/her being a great slaveholder. He was also the holder of a
considerable amounts of landed properties and real estate among that
it was many buildings Jackson.. He was bewared above also of the
_world_ as very benevolent man that it is money that it always picks up busy
people give in help of some benevolent object, and every now and then his
name would appear in the newspapers, accompanied an adulating
you compliment to his/her generosity as the donor of a liberal amount of