Wanderings in Mexico; the spirited chronicle of adventure in Mexican highways and byways . it to Felipa, partly fromexcitement, but more from cold and exhaustion. Felipawas as excited as he was. She told him to lie down,while she went to get the breakfast. When she cameback, she found him hot with fever, tossing and mut-tering about La Providencia and his dead boy sent Juan to the mine for more metal and sheand Tonia set about doctoring Don Modesto, who grewsteadily worse. When Juan came home at night, shetold him to saddle the little mule and go at once to callthe other children
Wanderings in Mexico; the spirited chronicle of adventure in Mexican highways and byways . it to Felipa, partly fromexcitement, but more from cold and exhaustion. Felipawas as excited as he was. She told him to lie down,while she went to get the breakfast. When she cameback, she found him hot with fever, tossing and mut-tering about La Providencia and his dead boy sent Juan to the mine for more metal and sheand Tonia set about doctoring Don Modesto, who grewsteadily worse. When Juan came home at night, shetold him to saddle the little mule and go at once to callthe other children; to tell them La Providencia wasfound and that Don Modesto was very ill. They came fast enough, and inquired for their fatherand the mine in the same breath. Was he very ill —was the mine really found? Yes, he was very ill,—?dying in fact, and perhaps it was just as well. Themine was not found at all. It was only a little Jiilo(thread) Don Modesto had run into, and there was nomore of it. The compadres had worked the secondburro-load in the furnace but it gave little or The funeral procession
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectmexicod, bookyear1912