DREAM-CHILDREN; A Reverie
Co listen to stories about to stretcion to tion of a traditionary great-uncle, or grandame, t my little ones crept about, me to t-grandmot imes bigger t in it part of try -- of tragic incidents ain it is t tory of to be seen fairly carved out in ory doo ts, till a foolis doo set up a marble one of modern invention in its stead, ory upon it. out one of oo tender to be called upbraiding. t on to say, . grandmoted by every body, t indeed tress of t (and yet in some respects s be said to be tress of it too) committed to y; but still s in a manner as if it up ty of t o decay, and s old ornaments stripped and carried ao t up, and looked as ao carry aombs tely at tick ta dra;t old o die, tended by a concourse of all try too, of to s for sery by , ay, and a great part of testament besides. tle Alice spread old all, uprig-grandmoteemed t dancer -- tle rig played an involuntary movement, till, upon my looking grave, it desisted -- t dancer, I y, till a cruel disease, called a cancer, came, and bo could never bend s, or make toop, but till uprigold o sleep by lone an apparition of ts o be seen at midnig staircase near s;ts o be, to sleep I never sas. ried to look courageous. told o all o t-icular used to spend many s of t ill to live again, or I to be turned into marble ired t s vast empty rooms, tering tapestry, and carved oaken pannels, rubbed out -- sometimes in t to myself, unless o pluck t, unless norolling about among trees, or t to look at -- or in lying a o