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"
You
're
just
tired
,
Anne
.
Come
,
forget
it
all
and
take
a
walk
with
me
--
a
ramble
back
through
the
woods
beyond
the
marsh
.
There
should
be
something
there
I
want
to
show
you
.
"
"
Should
be
!
Do
n't
you
know
if
it
is
there
?
"
"
No
.
I
only
know
it
should
be
,
from
something
I
saw
there
in
spring
.
Come
on
.
We
'll
pretend
we
are
two
children
again
and
we
'll
go
the
way
of
the
wind
.
"
They
started
gaily
off
.
Anne
,
remembering
the
unpleasantness
of
the
preceding
evening
,
was
very
nice
to
Gilbert
;
and
Gilbert
,
who
was
learning
wisdom
,
took
care
to
be
nothing
save
the
schoolboy
comrade
again
.
Mrs.
Lynde
and
Marilla
watched
them
from
the
kitchen
window
.
"
That
'll
be
a
match
some
day
,
"
Mrs.
Lynde
said
approvingly
.
Marilla
winced
slightly
.
In
her
heart
she
hoped
it
would
,
but
it
went
against
her
grain
to
hear
the
matter
spoken
of
in
Mrs.
Lynde
's
gossipy
matter-of-fact
way
.
"
They
're
only
children
yet
,
"
she
said
shortly
.
Mrs.
Lynde
laughed
good-naturedly
.
"
Anne
is
eighteen
;
I
was
married
when
I
was
that
age
.
We
old
folks
,
Marilla
,
are
too
much
given
to
thinking
children
never
grow
up
,
that
's
what
.
Anne
is
a
young
woman
and
Gilbert
's
a
man
,
and
he
worships
the
ground
she
walks
on
,
as
any
one
can
see
.
He
's
a
fine
fellow
,
and
Anne
ca
n't
do
better
.
I
hope
she
wo
n't
get
any
romantic
nonsense
into
her
head
at
Redmond
.
I
do
n't
approve
of
them
coeducational
places
and
never
did
,
that
's
what
.
I
do
n't
believe
,
"
concluded
Mrs.
Lynde
solemnly
,
"
that
the
students
at
such
colleges
ever
do
much
else
than
flirt
.
"