speed to open before us all in the old mansion that her own rummaging and investigating talents had brought to light, chattering meanwhile with the spirit of a bobolink.
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''You don't know," she said to Sam Lawson, "what a curious little closet there is in here, with book-cases and drawers, and a looking-glass in the door, with a curtain over it."
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"Want to know?" said Sam. "Wal, that 'ere does beat all. It's some of them old English folks's grander, I s'pose."
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"And here's a picture of such a beautiful lady, that always looks at you, whichever way you go,just see."
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"Lordy massy, so't does. Wal, now, them drawers, mebbe, have got curous things in 'em," suggested Sam.
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"O yes, but Harry never would let me look in them. I tried, though, once, when Harry was gone; but, if you'll believe me, they're all locked."
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"Want to know?" said Sam. "That 'ere's a kind o' pity, now."
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"Would you open them? You would n't, would you?" said the little one, turning suddenly round and opening her great wide eyes full on him. "Harry said the place was n't ours, and it would n't be proper."
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"Wal, he's a nice boy; quite right in him. Little folks must n't touch things that ain't theirn," said Sam, who was strong on the moralities; though, after all, when all the rest had left the apartment, I looked back and saw him giving a sly tweak to the drawers of the cabinet on his own individual account.
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"I was just a makin' sure, you know, that't was all safe," he said, as he caught my eye, and saw that he was discovered.
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Sam revelled and expatiated, however, in the information that lay before him in the exploration of the house. No tourist with Murray's guide-book in hand, and with travels to prepare for publication, ever went more patiently through the doing of a place. Not a door was left closed that could be opened; not a passage unexplored. Sam's head came out dusty and cobwebby between the beams of the ghostly old garret, where mouldy relics of antique furniture were reposing, and disappeared into the gloom of the spacious cellars, where the light was as darkness. He found none of the marks of the traditional haunted room; but he prolonged the search
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