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pool. My sister and I on one side to get undressed in the bushes and Charles on the other side. Suddenly a frantic shriek of, " Betty, come here!" Horrors, he had stood on a very active ant hill to undress and was covered with the creatures and they really do bite. They were quickly washed off in the water but somehow our swimming adventure had a sour note. The spring he was five he wandered away once more briefly in the pasture. We could hear him calling, giggling and making quite a racket and rushed out to investigate. He had found a batch of wild baby ducks in the grass and had picked them up in his hat to come and show us. They were the cutest, softest, squirmiest little creatures and had got down inside his shirt and were scrambling round his waist tickling and scratching him as he struggled along. What a sight and what a shot for a movie camera, which didn't even exist then, of course. We quickly rescued the ducklings and put them back in the grass where he thought they had been. Another scolding but he maintained they were so cute and cuddly and he wanted to keep them. Charles was alone quite a lot while we were at school and invented an imaginary little friend, Torgy', Dad made a small play house in the tree border in the house yard and he and Porgy spent hours together in the wonderful world of make- believe, he would come to get cookies from Mother for them both- somehow they all disappeared. He started school in the little country school 1.5 miles from home. Long before school busses and my sister and I were finished public school and were taking our high school by correspondence at home. He seemed so little trudging off by himself and we would go part way with him, or go to meet him at day's end. Two other little boys lived either side of our farm and the three had great fun together and were affectionately called the " Three Musketeers." Mother suffered a heart attack the following fall and was gone, We were all devastated to say the least Charles seemed so young and lost and depended on me more than ever. I stopped correspondence and agreed to manage the house as best a teenager could. My sister continued on with lessons. The winter seemed long and dreary and I felt sorry for my father. Being a widower with three children to support was quite a task. Charles really missed Mother and in the spring Dad got a tiny fox terrier puppy from a breeder in town. Badger was his name and he was cute, all white except black spots over his eyes. What a pair those two were plus what mischief they managed to indulge in. Now Badger
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Write On! |
Language | en |
Date | 2003 |
Description
Title | Page 49 |
Language | en |
Transcript | pool. My sister and I on one side to get undressed in the bushes and Charles on the other side. Suddenly a frantic shriek of, " Betty, come here!" Horrors, he had stood on a very active ant hill to undress and was covered with the creatures and they really do bite. They were quickly washed off in the water but somehow our swimming adventure had a sour note. The spring he was five he wandered away once more briefly in the pasture. We could hear him calling, giggling and making quite a racket and rushed out to investigate. He had found a batch of wild baby ducks in the grass and had picked them up in his hat to come and show us. They were the cutest, softest, squirmiest little creatures and had got down inside his shirt and were scrambling round his waist tickling and scratching him as he struggled along. What a sight and what a shot for a movie camera, which didn't even exist then, of course. We quickly rescued the ducklings and put them back in the grass where he thought they had been. Another scolding but he maintained they were so cute and cuddly and he wanted to keep them. Charles was alone quite a lot while we were at school and invented an imaginary little friend, Torgy', Dad made a small play house in the tree border in the house yard and he and Porgy spent hours together in the wonderful world of make- believe, he would come to get cookies from Mother for them both- somehow they all disappeared. He started school in the little country school 1.5 miles from home. Long before school busses and my sister and I were finished public school and were taking our high school by correspondence at home. He seemed so little trudging off by himself and we would go part way with him, or go to meet him at day's end. Two other little boys lived either side of our farm and the three had great fun together and were affectionately called the " Three Musketeers." Mother suffered a heart attack the following fall and was gone, We were all devastated to say the least Charles seemed so young and lost and depended on me more than ever. I stopped correspondence and agreed to manage the house as best a teenager could. My sister continued on with lessons. The winter seemed long and dreary and I felt sorry for my father. Being a widower with three children to support was quite a task. Charles really missed Mother and in the spring Dad got a tiny fox terrier puppy from a breeder in town. Badger was his name and he was cute, all white except black spots over his eyes. What a pair those two were plus what mischief they managed to indulge in. Now Badger |
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