Page:Jean Webster--Much ado about Peter.djvu/70

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MUCH ADO ABOUT PETER
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did n't mean to be cruel to the poor dumb brute. They 're spirited la-ads,' she says, 'an' their imaginations run away wid them. What they needs is intilligent direction. Ye should try,' she says, 'to enter into the spirit o' their innocint divarsions; an' when ye see them doin' somethin' dangerous, gintly turn their thoughts into another channel. Their grattytood,' she says, 'will pay ye for yer trouble.'

"'Wery well, ma'am,' says I, not too enthusiastic, 'I 'll do the best I can,' and I bows meself out. I 've been superintendin' their innocint divarsions ever since, and if there's any one as wants the job, I 'll turn it over to him quick."

Peter paused to back his horses farther into the shade; then having climbed down and taken a drink at a near-by hydrant, he resumed his seat and the conversation.

"But ye should have seen them this mornin' when I drove off! They was a sight if there ever was one. Joe's away with Mr. Carter