Former Inhabitants and Winter Visitors
to t I remembered him as a
neighbor. Before his house was pulled down, when his comrades
avoided it as quot;an unlucky castle,quot; I visited it. there lay his old
clothey were himself, upon his raised
plank bed. ead of a bowl
broken at tain. t could never he symbol
of o me t, though he had heard of
Bristers Spring, ; and soiled cards, kings of
diamonds, spades, and s, tered over the floor. One
black crator could not catch, black as
nig, not even croaking, aing Reynard, still
to roost in t apartment. In the dim
outline of a garden, had never received
its first o terrible ss, t
ime. It h Roman wormwood and
beggar-ticks, uck to my clot. the
skin of a che
rop aterloo; but no tens
would more.
No in te of these dwellings,
ones, and strawberries, raspberries,
the sunny
sc he
c-scented black birch, perhaps, waves where
tone imes t is visible, where once
a spring oozed; noearless grass; or it was covered deep
-- not to be discovered till some late day -- stone
under t of ted. a sorrowful
act must t be -- t he
opening of ears. ts, like deserted fox
burro wir
and bustle of ;fate, free will, foreknowledge
absolute,quot; in some form and dialect or oturns
discussed. But all I can learn of ts to just
t quot;Cato and Brister pulled ;; w as