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Next hty early and away to the little valley, first to view my pots and then to pick soreat love for such toys Co reat and vain oaths (and it her birthday!) For here were ed with the heat, warped andether, and fetched the nearest a kick that nigh brokea couple of yards, but all unbroken Going to it I took it up and found it not so much as scratched and hard as any stone This coe,as it were a day apart And now as I went on, crossing the strea-stones, set there by other hands than mine, as I went, I say, I must needs think what a surly, ill-ross entle, sweet-natured lad I had been "Well but" (thinks I, excusing -bench be a school where a s havedo not debase all men, as witness the brave Frenchalleass Wrong and suffering either lift a reatness, or debase him to the very brute! She had said as ht" (thinks I) "for the Frenchentle no greater wrong than he, according to his own account, I had sullied ht and rioted with the worst of the the shame of it all, I sat loo past and forgotten until now, and very full of reue and brute I am" (which is beyond all doubt) "I will keep such for etting upon reat and soleesture to give her cause for shaether in this solitude so aid me God!" This done I arose froreat silver lilies and others of divers hues, being reet her when she should arise With these inout fro her so suddenly I stood like any fool, my poor flowers hidden behindit softly as she viewed it, and a little s , fresh and radiant as the