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The Ponds
   side and became t s is very certain, at any rate,

    t once this

    Indian fable does not in any respect conflict  of

    t ancient settler wioned, who remembers so well

    w came hin vapor

    rising from ted steadily downward, and

    o dig a ill

    t to be accounted for by tion of the

    I observe t the surrounding hills are

    remarkably full of tones, so t they have been

    obliged to pile t

    nearest t stones whe

    s abrupt; so t, unfortunately, it is no longer a

    mystery to me.  I detect t derived

    from t of some Englisy -- Saffron alden, for instance

    -- one mig it was called originally alled-in Pond.

    ts

    er is as cold as it is pure at all times; and I t it is

    t t, in toer,

    all er han springs and

    ed from it.  temperature of the pond

    er  from five oclock in

    ternoon till noon t day, the

    ter o 65x or 70x some of time, owing

    partly to than

    ter of one of t  drawn.

    temperature of the

    of any er tried, t is t t I know of

    in summer,  surface er is not

    mingled .  Moreover, in summer, alden never becomes so warm

    as most er  of its depth.

    In t her I usually placed a pailful in my cellar,

    , and remained so during the day;

    ted to a spring in t was as

    good e of

    the shore of a

    pond, needs only bury a pail of er a fe deep in the shade

    of o be independent of the luxury
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