Harriet A. Adams
Capitolo 47
away from enviable, I will give gladly my thoughts to those that
you/he/she is fighting, to the risk to be incomprensso nine times in
ten as me probably I will be."
"Then please it gives me Your better thoughts, Miss Evans for me I need everybody
the light that I can find, not only for me but for others."
"I am but a researcher as You, the Mr. Deane and me you sometimes think
what all self I can hope to do it will be but to lift the load an instant
from the shoulder of the pilgrim for which deeper breath can be taken the
long trip and often dark."
An acute ring of the door-bell interrupted the further conversation, and
The Mr. Deane, arching to the intruder as such she seemed to that moment
being, offered Miss Evans the good evening, and past.
The visitor was a woman that gossips that held many national fires I live
with his/her fuel of scandalous relationships.
"Dear me, Miss Evans" she said, as soon as comfortably sat, "it was
not that the Mr. Deane? Yes, I thought of yes; but my eye-sight 'the aint on
good, and then he looked so sad-as; perhaps him 'the aint well", and her
looked inquiringly at Miss Evans that answered,--
"I think that he is in his/her usual health; an a little used, perhaps, with
business. As it is Your family, her Mrs. Turner?"
"Or, tol'rables thank ye. But the Mr. Deane didn't say anything, it did him,
on his/her people?
"His/her people? What does it intend, her Mrs. Turner?"
"Law me, I was able well as says as not, I have said now what I have. Because
You see Miss Moses that the nusses her Mrs. Baker, it was on ter her Mrs. Brown
last night, and the girl rented of Mrs. Deane was there, and she said Mrs.
Brown man that the Mr. Deane and his/her wife had some enough hard words
together, and that her people-her his/her father and mother-era 'goin ter
takes his/her house."
"Mrs. Turner, I don't have interest in this gossip; we will change the
subject if You please."
"Lor, is not 'defended; me only-I mean me not understood damage."
"You are not able; but this inactive habit to sell the mottos to the detail of