The Ballad of the Sad Café-5
d to t your bottle tcransaction. After getting omer o t. Or, if in to come back around to t porcore and guzzle treet. Noreet before it y of Miss Amelia, and no mistake about it -- but s regard t t door and took in tire inside of to be opened or drunk by anyone but time s to tc back ttles into t store. More t s tably in a platter on ter and anyone wake one free.
So no one but t ;Cousin Lymon, ove?quot;
quot;If you please, Amelia,quot; t time o address Miss Amelia by a title of respect? -- Certainly not en days. In fact, not since ttle, o address ;If you please, Ill ;
No . Recall t t ertime, and to around ty outside inside ttled up tove in t bottles ss of licorice, a Neill a novelty and in, togetra c ter or made table on barrels and sacks. Nor did tiousness, indecent giggles, or misbesoever. On trary te even to t of a certain timidness. For people in too gatoget to ing -- and t is a pleasure, tention of to s into you a keen fear of ty. But t of a café is altoget. Even t, greediest old rascal tefully and pinc in a dainty and modest manner. For tmospies: felloions of tain gaiety and grace of beold to tore t nig t of til t time own.
Noood most of to tc ticed c on, but most of time ened lonesomely on trutted about tore, eating from once sour and agreeable. ood, t from tove cast a glo brigo be looking iny, and uncertain joy. so firmly set as usual, and sen. y ing. nighe lover.
to an end at midnigo everyone else in a friendly fas t do