NO ter seemed long. Laura and Mary began to be tired of staying alime so slowly.
Every Sunday Mary and Laura in t cloturday night.
In ttled in er from t iime Pa filled and ub ove it melted to er. tove, be over two ched Mary.
Laura , because stler to go to bed early on Saturday nigte, because after s into go empty tub and fill it er Mary came to bed, Ma , and they were all , for Sunday.
On Sundays Mary and Laura must not run or s or be noisy in t se knit on tiny mittens s look quietly at t t not make anyt alloo se even h pins.
t sit quietly and listen o tories about lions and tigers and look at pictures, and t alk to t they could do.
Laura liked best to look at tures in ts paper covers. Best of all ure of Adam naming the animals.
Adam sat on a rock, and all ttle, ing to be told able. o be careful to keep hes on. he wore only a skin around his middle.
"Did Adam o ; Laura asked Ma. "No," Ma said. "Poor Adam, all o ; Laura did not pity Adam. So skins.
One Sunday after supper s bear it any longer. So play es sing. Pa told o sit in , but h her heels.
"I e Sunday! " she said.
Pa put do; ernly, "e here.”
dragged as s, because s ook o Mary, and said:
"Im going to tell you a story about when Grandpa was a boy.”
tory of Grandpas Sled and t; begin on Sunday m, as it does no began at sundourday nigopped every kind of work or play.
"Supper er supper, Grandpas fater of t straigill in do up from took a dle and to bed. t go bed, alking.
"Sunday, m te a cold breakfast, because not cloto cche horses was work, and no work could be done on Sunday.
"t raig not joke or laughem.
"In c sit perfectly still for to t fidget on t s. t turn to look at t sit perfectly motionless, and never for or one instant take the preacher.
" talk on t t not talk loudly and t never laug e a cold dinner
sit in a roecil at last t down and Sunday was over.
Noop of to t door, and i place for sliding down you possibly imagine.
"O every minute of time. It sled t all t on it, one beo finis in time to slide doernoon. For every Saturday afternoon to play.
"But t ting dorees in t tern-lig ill dark, and to do, and after supper to go to bed so t up early in the m.
"time to il Saturday afternoon. t it just as fast as t t get it finisill just as t dourday night.
"After t do slide do to until Sunday was over.
"All t still and t t e di ter di doo read t as still as mi tec t the sled.
"tly and ttering on t t day for sliding doec about t seemed t Sunday would never end.
"After a long time t t t asleep.
"t Gee, and James got up from tiptoed out of t Grandpa and Gee tiptoed after James. And Grandpa looked fearfully at t on tiptoe ther sn.
"took t up to top of t to slide do o to techer woke up.
James sat in front on ttlest. tarted, at first sloer and faster. It eep t s. t slide silently past t her.
"t ttle w.
"t as toepped out of to tood there.
"t it couldopped. t time to turn it. t rig doing in front, tanding in t t stop, t ime to say anyt, tting on James and squealing all the way.
"At ttom of topped. to till squealing.
"t to tly to t t saying a word.
"t on reading, and tudied tec;But ook t to tas, first James, then Grandpa.
"So you see, Laura and Mary," Pa said, you may find it o be good, but you s it isnt as o be good no was when Grandpa was a boy.”
"Did little girls o be as good as t?" Laura asked, and Ma said: "It le girls. Because to betle ladies all time, not only on Sundays. Little girls could never slide dole girls o sit in tit samplers.”
"No Ma put you to bed," said Pa, and ook of its box.
Laura and Mary lay in trundle bed and listeo t not sing the week-day songs on Sundays.
"Rock of Ages, cleft for me Pa sang, hen he sang:
"So t th bloody seas”
Laura began to float atering noise, and tove, getting breakfast. It e again for a whole week.
t m Laura and said give her a spanking.
First today year unless sly and carefully t it did not a bit.
"O; ed and spanked, slo one big spank to grotle led out of a stick, to be pany for Cte. Ma gave tle cakes, one for eac Laura te. Mary sc.
And t , Pa played "Pop Goes t; for her.
;Noc; ;atc time." then he sang:
"A penny for a spool of ts t close, cime.
"Pop! (said Pas finger )
Goes the fiddle, plain as plain.)”
But Laura and Mary seen Pas finger make tring pop.
"O again. t on while he sang:
"All around the cobblers bench,
the weasel!”
t seen Pas fi time, either.
c laugo bed and lay listening to Pa and the fiddle singing:
"there was an old darkey, And his name was Uned, And he died long ago, long ago.
top of to grow.
"eeto eat to let the hoe-cake be.
"So he good darkeys go.”
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