F. Colburn (Francis Colburn) Adams
Capitolo 58
the gossips of the city anything to speak around for a week. The Chapmans
and the Toodleburgs now both the very better of friends. Chapman could be
seen of an evening that sits in Hanz little ivy-covered portico enjoying,
a pot of clear beer. It is Hanz you/he/she had been seen smoke his/her pipe in Chapman
garden. All this agreements anything, said the gossips and anything of
great importance. Where two that such men have found together the heads and pipes
and clear beer had called in, there was sure to be anything gone deep on.
Hanz Toodleburg, they said, it never smoked his/her pipe with a man likes
Chapman but that there was anything in the wind. Then her Mrs. Chapman and
his/her jet, daughter from the blue eyes had complied to visit to
Toodleburg, and you/he/she could make rather of accord to Angeline
tea-table. And then Angeline, good, kind Angeline with his/her face still
bright with gentleness and it loves, it was always so happy When Mattie called.
There was then anything so simple, so frank and right in
The nature of Mattie. Angeline could not help loving her/it. And the affection
she tenderly took care of for Tite that was the idol of his/her thoughts it strengthened
the ties of their love.
"We have it didn't forget her, you see", Mrs. said Chapman, as she arched
her in the small house of Toodleburg an evening. "We waited for there society
to to-night of house, but it tells me my dear husband, 'you know, my darling
husband', (here her Mrs. Chapman arched to his/her dear husband that had followed
his/her,) 'we am promising so long to visit Mr. and Mrs.
Toodleburg.'"
Angeline arched and invited his/her visitors to be made to sit, while Hanz gave
Chapman a cordial shakes some hand and an insurance that any man was
more gives the welcome one his/her roof under. "You always cheer to see excavations friends", says
Hanz. "You will sit him, and so a lot it are shust in house as you it is in
His/her own house." And he drew on a great chair for Chapman and another
for her Mrs. Chapman. "Peoples always does him to house in mine
house."
"You have to excuse our small humble place", it said Angeline; "we am simple,