"Well, Mr. Atwood," said the minister, "you must have had pretty hard work on that load; that 's no ordinary oak; it took strong hands to roll those logs, and yet I don't see but two of your boys. Where are they all now?"
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"Scattered, scattered!" said Heber, as he sat with a great block of cake in one hand, and sipped his mug of flip, looking, with his grizzly beard and shaggy hair and his iron features, like a cross between a polar bear and a man,a very shrewd, thoughtful, reflective polar bear, however, quite up to any sort of argument with a man.
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"Yes, they 're scattered," he said. "We 're putty lonesome now 't our house. Nobody there but Pars, Dass, Dill, Noah, and 'Liakim. I ses to Noah and 'Liakim this mornin', 'Ef we had all our boys to hum, we sh'd haf to take up two loads to the minister, sartin, to make it fair on the wood-spell cake.'"
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"Where are your boys now?" said Mr. Avery. "I have n't seen them at meeting now for a good while."
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"Wal, Sol and Tim 's gone up to Umbagog, lumberin'; and Tite, he 's sailed to Archangel; and Jeduth, he 's gone to th' West Injies for molasses; and Pete, he 's gone to the West. Folks begins to talk now 'bout that 'ere Western kentry, and so Pete, he must go to Buffalo, and see the great West. He 's writ back about Niagry Falls. His letters is most amazin'. The old woman, she can't feel easy 'bout him no way. She insists 'pon it them Injuns 'll scalp him. The old woman is just as choice of her boys as ef she had n't got just es many es she has."
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"How many sons have you?" said Harry, with a countenance of innocent wonder.
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"Wal," said Heber, "I 've seen the time when I had fourteen good, straight boys,all on 'em a turnin' over a log together."
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"Dear me!" said Tina. "Had n't you any daughters?"
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"Gals?" said Heber, reflectively. "Bless you, yis. There 's been a gal or two 'long, in between, here an' there,don't jest remember where they come; but, any way, there 's plenty of women-folks 't our house."
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"Why!" said Tina, with a toss of her pretty head, "you don't seem to think much of women."
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"Good in their way," said Heber, shaking his head; "but
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