Page:Samantha on Children's Rights.djvu/48

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of her babies, and her home improved every year, so that now, when she wuz nineteen, I told Josiah that Marion Martin wuz jest as perfect as human bein's can be. You know folks can't be quite perfect, or else they would flop their wings and fly upwards. And oh, how Marion loved her baby girls, two plump, curly haired little cherubs, and how they loved her, and how her Pa and the boys leaned on her! And I could see, if nobody else could, how her heart wuz sot on Dr. Laurence Marsh, and I didn't blame her, for he wuz as fine a young chap as there wuz in the country. He wuzn't dependent on his profession, he had plenty of money of his own, that fell onto him from his Ma. And he'd paid her so much attention that I spozed he would offer her his heart and hand, though I thought mebby he wuz held back by the thought of how necessary she wuz in her own home. But it had come to me, and come straight—Elam Parson's widder told it to Deacon Bissel's aunt, and she told it to Betsy Bobbett's stepdaughter, and she told Tirzah Ann, and she told me; it come straight—that Marion's Pa had been seen over to Loontown three different times to the Widder Lummises, and I said to myself the Lord had planned to lead Marion out of the kinder stuny path of Duty into the rosy, love-lit path of Happiness, and I felt well over it.

But who can know anything for certain in this oncertain world? One day, when I had just been congratulatin' myself while I washed my breakfast dishes about the apparently happy future waitin' my favorite (Miss Bobbett had been in to borry some tea and told me she see the Widder Lummis in the store the day before buyin' a hull piece of Lonsdale cambric. And I can put two and two together as well as the best. So I wuz