. Peg o' the ring, a maid of Denewood . ead them half-aloud. Je sui icien liv dami. I am afraid I cannot make it out, monsieur/I said, for though the words seemed familiarenough, they were not quite right to my thinking,and I liked not to make a mistake. In English, mademoiselle/3 he replied, itwould read like this: I am here in place of afrienV Will you not hold the ring and let thereson remin you of one who will ever be think-ing of you? I know not why I should have stuttered as Ireplied: I s-s-should 1-like to k-keep it, monsieur, ifB-Bee s-s-says I m-m-may/ Ana so we fared on to Denewood.


. Peg o' the ring, a maid of Denewood . ead them half-aloud. Je sui icien liv dami. I am afraid I cannot make it out, monsieur/I said, for though the words seemed familiarenough, they were not quite right to my thinking,and I liked not to make a mistake. In English, mademoiselle/3 he replied, itwould read like this: I am here in place of afrienV Will you not hold the ring and let thereson remin you of one who will ever be think-ing of you? I know not why I should have stuttered as Ireplied: I s-s-should 1-like to k-keep it, monsieur, ifB-Bee s-s-says I m-m-may/ Ana so we fared on to Denewood. THE END 345 Booksellers & StationersNew York. So Bee and Cousin John were married PEG O THE RING H flDat& of 2>enewoo& BY EMILIE BENSON KNIPE AND ALDEN ARTHUR KNIPE Authors of The Lucky Sixpence, Beatrice of Denewood, etc ILLUSTRATIONS BY C. M. RELYEA


Size: 1354px × 1845px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidpegoringmaid, bookyear1915