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'I think she'll try to do her duty without that'
'They do like things the like o' that; any ways I'll go up, squoire, arter Sax'nao just yet, Mr Cruotten the scene at the far as wasn't as kind as kind'
'But her own perversity runs in her own head If you had been unkind she could have forgiven that; but as you were good-natured and she was cross, she can't forgive that' John Cruain scratched his head, and felt that the depths of a woiven to it 'And to tell you the truth, my friend, I think that a little hardship up at Mrs Pipkin's will do her good'
'Don't she have a bellyful o' vittels?' asked John Crumb, with intense anxiety
'I don't quite h to eat But of course she has to work for it with her aunt She has three or four children to look after'
'That htn't it, squoire?' said John Cru that ood deal to do, and I should not be surprised if she were to think after a bit that your house in Bungay was more comfortable than Mrs Pipkin's kitchen in London'
'My little back parlour;--eh, squoire! And I've got a four-poster, ay'
'I a comfortable for her, and she knows it herself Let her think about all that,--and do you go and tell her again in ato settle matters then than she is now'
'But the Baro-nite!'
'Mrs Pipkin will allow nothing of that'
'Girls is so 'cute Ruby is awful 'cute It ht o'as how he is, ht that she'd let hi for it, Muster Carbury They'd have to make an eend o' er assured hiirl, and promised that further steps should be taken to induce Mrs Pipkin to keep a close watch upon her niece John Crumb made no promise that he would abstain from his journey to London after Saxmundham fair; but left the squire with a conviction that his purpose of doing so was shaken He was still however resolved to send Mrs Pipkin the price of a new blue cloak, and declared his purpose of getting Mixet to write the letter and enclose thehis own deficiency in literary acquirements He was able to make out a bill for meal or pollards, but did little beyond that in the way of writing letters