ing down her neck, and deep, melancholy black eyes, that seemed to fix themselves reproachfully on us.
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"O dear me, Harry, what shall we do?" said Tina. "How she looks at us! This certainly is the very same one that we saw in the old house."
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"You ought not to have done it, Tina," said Harry, in a rather low and frightened voice; "but I'll go in and turn it back again."
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Just at this moment we heard what was still more appalling,the footsteps of Polly on the garret stairs.
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"Well! now I should like to know if there's any mischief you wouldn't be up to, Tina Percival," she said, coming forward, reproachfully. "When I give you the run of the whole garret, and wear my life out a pickin' up and puttin' up after you, I sh'd think you might let this 'ere corner alone!"
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"Oh! but, Polly, you've no idea how I wanted to see it, and do pray tell me who it is, and how came it here? Is it anybody that's dead?" said Tina, hanging upon Polly caressingly.
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"Somebody that's dead to us, I'm afraid," said Polly, solemnly.
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"Do tell us, Polly, do! who was she?"
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"Well, child, you must n't never tell nobody, nor let a word about it come out of your lips; but it's Parson Rossiter's daughter Emily, and where she's gone to, the Lord only knows. I took that 'ere pictur' down myself, and put it up here with Mr. Theodore's, so 't Miss Mehitable need n't see 'em, 'cause they always give her the hypos."
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"And don't anybody know where she is," said Tina, "or if she's alive or dead?"
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"Nobody," said Polly, shaking her head solemnly. "All I hope is, she may never come back here again. You see, children, what comes o' follerin' the nateral heart; it's deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked. She followed her nateral heart, and nobody knows where she's gone to."
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Polly spoke with such sepulchral earnestness that, what with gloomy weather and the consciousness of having been accessory to an unlawful action, we all felt, to say the least, extremely sober.
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