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361
No
,
thank
you
.
I
must
be
off
to
my
crossing
.
It
s
morning
now
.
362
I
m
very
sorry
for
you
,
said
Diamond
.
363
Well
,
it
is
a
life
to
be
tired
of
what
with
old
Sal
,
and
so
many
holes
in
my
shoes
.
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364
I
wonder
you
re
so
good
.
I
should
kill
myself
.
365
Oh
,
no
,
you
wouldn
t
!
When
I
think
of
it
,
I
always
want
to
see
what
s
coming
next
,
and
so
I
always
wait
till
next
is
over
366
Well
!
I
suppose
there
s
somebody
happy
somewheres
.
But
it
ain
t
in
them
carriages
.
Oh
my
!
how
they
do
look
sometimes
fit
to
bite
your
head
off
!
Good
-
bye
!
367
She
ran
up
the
hill
and
disappeared
behind
it
.
Then
Diamond
shut
the
door
as
he
best
could
,
and
ran
through
the
kitchen
-
garden
to
the
stable
.
And
wasn
t
he
glad
to
get
into
his
own
blessed
bed
again
!
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368
DIAMOND
said
nothing
to
his
mother
about
his
adventures
.
He
had
half
a
notion
that
North
Wind
was
a
friend
of
his
mother
,
and
that
,
if
she
did
not
know
all
about
it
,
at
least
she
did
not
mind
his
going
anywhere
with
the
lady
of
the
wind
.
At
the
same
time
he
doubted
whether
he
might
not
appear
to
be
telling
stories
if
he
told
all
,
especially
as
he
could
hardly
believe
it
himself
when
he
thought
about
it
in
the
middle
of
the
day
,
although
when
the
twilight
was
once
half
-
way
on
to
night
he
had
no
doubt
about
it
,
at
least
for
the
first
few
days
after
he
had
been
with
her
.
The
girl
that
swept
the
crossing
had
certainly
refused
to
believe
him
.
Besides
,
he
felt
sure
that
North
Wind
would
tell
him
if
he
ought
to
speak
.
369
It
was
some
time
before
he
saw
the
lady
of
the
wind
again
.
Indeed
nothing
remarkable
took
place
in
Diamond
s
history
until
the
following
week
.
This
was
what
happened
then
.
Diamond
the
horse
wanted
new
shoes
,
and
Diamond
s
father
took
him
out
of
the
stable
,
and
was
just
getting
on
his
back
to
ride
him
to
the
forge
,
when
he
saw
his
little
boy
standing
by
the
pump
,
and
looking
at
him
wistfully
.
Then
the
coachman
took
his
foot
out
of
the
stirrup
,
left
his
hold
of
the
mane
and
bridle
,
came
across
to
his
boy
,
lifted
him
up
,
and
setting
him
on
the
horse
s
back
,
told
him
to
sit
up
like
a
man
.
He
then
led
away
both
Diamonds
together
.
370
The
boy
atop
felt
not
a
little
tremulous
as
the
great
muscles
that
lifted
the
legs
of
the
horse
knotted
and
relaxed
against
his
legs
,
and
he
cowered
towards
the
withers
,
grasping
with
his
hands
the
bit
of
mane
worn
short
by
the
collar
;
but
when
his
father
looked
back
at
him
,
saying
once
more
,
Sit
up
,
Diamond
,
he
let
the
mane
go
and
sat
up
,
notwithstanding
that
the
horse
,
thinking
,
I
suppose
,
that
his
master
had
said
to
him
,
Come
up
,
Diamond
,
stepped
out
faster
.
For
both
the
Diamonds
were
just
grandly
obedient
.
And
Diamond
soon
found
that
,
as
he
was
obedient
to
his
father
,
so
the
horse
was
obedient
to
him
.
For
he
had
not
ridden
far
before
he
found
courage
to
reach
forward
and
catch
hold
of
the
bridle
,
and
when
his
father
,
whose
hand
was
upon
it
,
felt
the
boy
pull
it
towards
him
,
he
looked
up
and
smiled
,
and
,
well
pleased
,
let
go
his
hold
,
and
left
Diamond
to
guide
Diamond
;
and
the
boy
soon
found
that
he
could
do
so
perfectly
.
It
was
a
grand
thing
to
be
able
to
guide
a
great
beast
like
that
.
And
another
discovery
he
made
was
that
,
in
order
to
guide
the
horse
,
he
had
in
a
measure
to
obey
the
horse
first
.
If
he
did
not
yield
his
body
to
the
motions
of
the
horse
s
body
,
he
could
not
guide
him
;
he
must
fall
off
.