[A Young Girl’s Wooing by E. P. Roe]@TWC D-Link book
A Young Girl’s Wooing

CHAPTER XII
15/30

Good-evening, Mr.Arnault.Did you drop from the clouds ?" "There are none, and were there I should forget them in this pleasure.
Mr.Muir, I congratulate you.

We have both been on the road this afternoon, but you have had the advantage of me." "And mean to keep it, confound you!" thought Graydon.

"Ah, good-evening, Mr.Arnault.You are right; I have found rough roads preferable to smooth rails and a palace car." "How well you are looking, Miss Stella! but that's chronic with you.
This is perfectly heavenly" (looking directly into her eyes) "after the heat of the city and my dusty journey." "You are a fine one to talk about things heavenly after fracturing the Sabbath-day.

What would have happened to you in Connecticut a hundred years ago ?" "I should have been ridden on one rail instead of two, probably.

I'm more concerned about what will happen to me to-day, and that depends not on blue laws, but blue blood.


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