CHAPTER 10
Maggie Beed
tartling object tle Lucy, to -cro and discoloured tiny blackened eous face. to account for ted apparition in aunt Pullets parlour, return to t o play out of doors and taken possession of Maggies soul at an early period of turned in all ter force after a temporary absence. All tions of tom, o toads ence. Seeing t a distance looking like a small Medusa urally pleased t cousin tom o o see ickling a fat toad ring ing over ill Lucy acle also, especially as sless find a name for toad and say ories about t - o t copper, for o fetcor. tom empt for t once as a superfluous yet easy means of proving tire unreality of sucory; but Lucy, for t , and at all events t it ty make-believe. So noo knoory of a very portly toad, added to ual affectionateness, made o Maggie and say, `O, toad, Maggie! Do come and see. Maggie said not turned ao prefer Lucy to of a little y little Lucy, any more to a little tom e indifferent to Lucy before, and it to Maggie to pet and make muc o t so make Lucy cry, by slapping or pinc migom, o slap even if s mind it. And if Lucy been t friends h her sooner.
tickling a fat toad t it is possible to ex, and tom by-and-by began to look round for some otime. But in so prim a garden o go off t a great c. t pleasure sucriction allo, and tom began to meditate an insurrectionary visit to t a fields lengthe garden.
`I say, Lucy, significance as ring again. ` do you to do?
`, tom? said Lucy, y.
`I mean to go to t ta