The String of Pearls (1850), p. 153
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3 revisions | nesvetr at Dec 22, 2015 06:52 AM | |
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The String of Pearls (1850), p. 153something rather than that, and our cook, although he was about as desperate a cook as the world ever saw, did not like yet to say die. Now, in that curious combination of passions, impulses, and prejudices in the mind of this man, it would be a hard case if some scheme of action did not present itself, even in cir-
cumstances of the greatest possible seeming depression, and so, after a time, the cook did think of something to do.
| rdtrof,J iKteesois ST?* f«l> THE STRING OF PEARLS. 158 something rather than that, and our cook, although he was about as desperate a THE FLIGHT OF TOBIAS FROM PECKHAM MAD-HOUSE. cumsfcmces of the greatest possible seeming depression, and so, after a time, the " Many of these pies," he said to himself, " are not eaten in" the shop, ergv M@i 20* |