delights of the caravan, and meanwhile she would herself go down to the Isle of Wight to try to find other rooms; and it was arranged that Mary Rothera
fortunate, but it threw Mr. Lenox into a
careful study. Each one of its four legs needs separate consideration. I should have liked some weeks of thought. The dog, too. Just as there i
k and fann
e them to Gregory, and told him to go to the stati
rts; it contains nothing whatever of such things, while, on the other hand, it is packed with matters of real interest. It tells you who has dogs for sale, and rabbits for sale, and magic-lanterns for sale, and cameras for sale, and bicycles for
ntitled "The Kennel," and then to the subsection "Retrievers," and he found t
ondon and one
ng at Chiswick), and, coming back with one at last, Mr. L
the caravan door. But the next, which was at Bermondsey, was better. Here, in a small backyard, they found Mr. Amos, the advertiser, surr
ything so swagger as
ly enough with his own people. If you keep only pedig
t I have got, for the first time in my whole career, an inferior animal. It's not mine. Oh, no; I'm only taking care of it for a friend. But it's a retriever all right, and a good one, mark you, though not a
yers didn't keep their own arms, and who kept their legs, and he might have asked if M
nded them how much more likely one is to get good watch-work from a dog who is not of the highest breeding than from a prize-winne
ng by no means overburdened with bloo
Mr. Amos thought he
teman was here and you were to hit him, that dog would ki
. Bateman in his presence. Suppose I were to fal
that," sai
Lenox, "we must get on, Gregory.
s ten," sa
nox; "much too dear.
ill be the end of my friendship with Mr. Bateman. I'll sa
Mr. Lenox, step
will you give?
five shillings as he s
rs," said
f biscuits, and with them he and Gregory fed the famished Diogenes all the way back to Chiswick, and
hired. To hire a carriage-horse or a riding-horse is easy enough, bu
d he therefore sent the following
ngly powerful, gentle white horse to draw a cara
d it out, "that's as clear as crys
leading horses of every size and colour. Kink was kept busy in getting rid of them, but one man succeeded in finding Robert unattended, and did all he c
. "Tell him I've got a pair of skews here as will do h
no use at all. We advertised for
from the house at this mom
a pantechnicon. There's lots of white on them, too. Your little boy here
nd said that white horses always had a d
se," he said. "Black's the colour. Look at this mare here-she's a beauty. Str
, "you are laboring under a misa
that was needed, and one afternoon a stable boy led into the yard a perfectly eno
and limb," said Mr. Lenox
aravan, especially as Mr. Scott slipped into his hand that evening a large knife conta

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