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| "An old gentleman from Rondout-on-the-Hudson" |
70 |
| "Young gentlemen sitting in a pot-house at high noon" |
72 |
| "A gentleman permanently in temporary difficulties" |
74 |
| "A jackal is a man generally of good address" |
81 |
| "The Bowery is the most marvellous thoroughfare in the world" |
85 |
| "More and stranger wares than uptown people ever heard of" |
89 |
| "Probably the edibles are in the majority" |
91 |
| "The Polish Jews with their back-yards full of chickens" |
93 |
| "The Anarchist Russians" |
94 |
| "The Scandinavians of all sorts who come up from the wharfs" |
96 |
| "Through the rich man's country" |
108 |
| "A convenient way through the woods" |
112 |
| "The lonely old trapper who had dwelt on that mountain" |
114 |
| "Malvina Dodd * * * took the winding track that her husband had laid out" |
118 |
| "Here the old man would sit down and wait" |
120 |
| "He did a little grading with a mattock" |
121 |
| "The laborers found it and took it" |
125 |
| "The tinkers * * * and the rest of the old-time gentry of the road" |
128 |
| "I used to go down that path on the dead run" |
131 |
| "'I'm Latimer,' said the man on the horse" |
139 |
| "That boy of Penrhyn's—the little one with the yellow hair" |
143 |
| "Lanterns and hand lamps dimly lit up faces" |
149 |
| "The river, the river,—oh, my boy!" |
152 |
| "The father leaned forward and clutched the arms of his chair" |
155 |
| "They had just met after a long beat" |
164 |
| "Half a dozen men naked to the waist scrubbing themselves" |
167 |
| "The mother knew that her lost child was found" |
173 |
| "The desperate young men of the bachelor apartments" |
180 |
| "The hot, lifeless days of summer in your town house" |
183 |
| "'That's no Johnny-jumper!'" |
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