. The natvral man : a romance of the golden age . CHAPTER II. T was the office of the Ripple-ford Record. Such places are all unbeau-tlful and they are all the editor washed his inky fingersand set out his two chairs, for he had ladyvisitors- his cousin Edith, with the flaxenhair, and her dark friend, Theodora , indeed. Cousin Sax is very am-bitious, Edith was saying, he aspires tohave the best country paper in the contributors, you know, ^ that sortof thing Saxon Ward laughed. Yes, Cousin 24 The Natural Man Edith writes me stories sometimes. O my stories are nothi
. The natvral man : a romance of the golden age . CHAPTER II. T was the office of the Ripple-ford Record. Such places are all unbeau-tlful and they are all the editor washed his inky fingersand set out his two chairs, for he had ladyvisitors- his cousin Edith, with the flaxenhair, and her dark friend, Theodora , indeed. Cousin Sax is very am-bitious, Edith was saying, he aspires tohave the best country paper in the contributors, you know, ^ that sortof thing Saxon Ward laughed. Yes, Cousin 24 The Natural Man Edith writes me stories sometimes. O my stories are nothing. But youreally have one great contributor. Forrest Westwood, you mean. Yes,he is a genius in his way. I must show youthe little poem he brought me in he had just composed it. Came tear-ing up here on a gallop, as usual, i^ awayagain in a cloud of dust. What a happy,healthy vision he is, a living pi6lure. AndBlackbird looks just as happy, as she car-ries him, and almost as intelligent. Oh Cousin Sax, let me see the poem,please, right away!
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookidnatvralmanro, bookyear1902