Chapter 5 SUNDAYS
NO ter seemed long. Laura and Mary began to be tired of staying alime so slowly.
Every Sunday Mary and Laura in t cloturday night.
In ttled in er from t in tertime Pa filled and ub ove it melted to er. tove, be over two ched Mary.
Laura , because stler to go to bed early on Saturday nigte, because after s into go empty tub and fill it er Mary came to bed, Ma , and they were all clean, for Sunday.
On Sundays Mary and Laura must not run or s or be noisy in t se knit on tiny mittens s look quietly at t t not make anyt alloo se even h pins.
t sit quietly and listen o tories about lions and tigers and look at pictures, and t alk to t they could do.
Laura liked best to look at tures in ts paper covers. Best of all ure of Adam naming the animals.
Adam sat on a rock, and all ttle, ing to be told able. o be careful to keep hes on. he wore only a skin around his middle.
quot;Did Adam o ; Laura asked Ma. quot;No,quot; Ma said. quot;Poor Adam, all o ; Laura did not pity Adam. So skins.
One Sunday after supper s bear it any longer. So play es sing. Pa told o sit in , but h her heels.
quot;I e Sunday! quot; she said.
Pa put do; ernly, quot;come here.”
dragged as s, because s ook o Mary, and said:
quot;Im going to tell you a story about when Grandpa was a boy.”
tory of Grandpas Sled and t; begin on Sunday morning, as it does no began at sundourday nigopped every kind of work or play.