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Once Aboard the Lugger-- The History of George and his Mary
Author: A. S. M. Hutchinson Genre: LiteratureOnce Aboard the Lugger-- The History of George and his Mary
Wyvern In
hat had terminated in the cab adventure nearly three months before. Of all his student friends who would give him a bed, Mr. Franklyn, because in a way associated with his Mary,
the July exam, when we went
ad over the recollection. "That waitress you left m
ded with some account of the love between him and his Mary; skipped all details relating to the cat; ca
s a rum thing you should be placed like that, G
y-in love, youth warms
early. I've got myself into a brute of a fix over a
at. "Who cares a damn about your lager-beer
d a letter in reply to one received from the lager
I
righter trim-apologised for his over-night abruptness; apologised for
time, old chap," he said. "I shall dash in to fix up with the De
slice of bacon. "You can't, old c
: "Filled! Wha
. Simpson's got
oss of Runnygate everything had depended upon this appo
"What the blazes does Simmy mean by
fter you'd qualified. If Simmy hadn't taken i
At length, "I suppose there are se
said Mr. Franklyn. "I was
pital; made for the Dean's office. Here disaster was confirmed. Simpson had already taken the Yorkshire place; the Dean had no oth
e speech. Runnygate and all that Runnygate meant-the dear little home, the tight little practice, the tremendous
ok his
nce, the man who's leaving it, is coming to see me at five th
I
for that hideous cat enterprise. Had he never undertaken it, had he continued instead to entreat and implore,
m a home where she might comfortably have stayed till he was in position to marry her; further, he had just missed the assistantship w
ment of her overnight. Arrived at Meath Street, admitted by Mrs.
indow. With dim eyes she had been gazing for her George
the door b
alled, arms
she flun
desperate as only love
ands. He told his gloomy tale; she patted the more lovingly-assured him th
t's all that infernal cat, Mary," he gr
ere's that other brute?-the b
"I've just fed
cat which had wrought the fearful dis
rge growled; s
cat again t
, dear," Mary told him
eated. "Done no harm!" he cried. He took a step to the window. "Done
saw Bill Wyvern disappear be
in the passage; foo
tten all about old
ill en
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