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"
It
do
n't
make
no
difference
what
you
want
it
for
--
you
just
shell
it
out
.
"
He
took
it
and
bit
it
to
see
if
it
was
good
,
and
then
he
said
he
was
going
down
town
to
get
some
whisky
;
said
he
had
n't
had
a
drink
all
day
.
When
he
had
got
out
on
the
shed
he
put
his
head
in
again
,
and
cussed
me
for
putting
on
frills
and
trying
to
be
better
than
him
;
and
when
I
reckoned
he
was
gone
he
come
back
and
put
his
head
in
again
,
and
told
me
to
mind
about
that
school
,
because
he
was
going
to
lay
for
me
and
lick
me
if
I
did
n't
drop
that
.
Next
day
he
was
drunk
,
and
he
went
to
Judge
Thatcher
's
and
bullyragged
him
,
and
tried
to
make
him
give
up
the
money
;
but
he
could
n't
,
and
then
he
swore
he
'd
make
the
law
force
him
.
The
judge
and
the
widow
went
to
law
to
get
the
court
to
take
me
away
from
him
and
let
one
of
them
be
my
guardian
;
but
it
was
a
new
judge
that
had
just
come
,
and
he
did
n't
know
the
old
man
;
so
he
said
courts
must
n't
interfere
and
separate
families
if
they
could
help
it
;
said
he
'd
druther
not
take
a
child
away
from
its
father
.
So
Judge
Thatcher
and
the
widow
had
to
quit
on
the
business
.
That
pleased
the
old
man
till
he
could
n't
rest
.
He
said
he
'd
cowhide
me
till
I
was
black
and
blue
if
I
did
n't
raise
some
money
for
him
.
I
borrowed
three
dollars
from
Judge
Thatcher
,
and
pap
took
it
and
got
drunk
,
and
went
a-blowing
around
and
cussing
and
whooping
and
carrying
on
;
and
he
kept
it
up
all
over
town
,
with
a
tin
pan
,
till
most
midnight
;
then
they
jailed
him
,
and
next
day
they
had
him
before
court
,
and
jailed
him
again
for
a
week
.
But
he
said
HE
was
satisfied
;
said
he
was
boss
of
his
son
,
and
he
'd
make
it
warm
for
HIM
.
When
he
got
out
the
new
judge
said
he
was
a-going
to
make
a
man
of
him
.
So
he
took
him
to
his
own
house
,
and
dressed
him
up
clean
and
nice
,
and
had
him
to
breakfast
and
dinner
and
supper
with
the
family
,
and
was
just
old
pie
to
him
,
so
to
speak
.
And
after
supper
he
talked
to
him
about
temperance
and
such
things
till
the
old
man
cried
,
and
said
he
'd
been
a
fool
,
and
fooled
away
his
life
;
but
now
he
was
a-going
to
turn
over
a
new
leaf
and
be
a
man
nobody
would
n't
be
ashamed
of
,
and
he
hoped
the
judge
would
help
him
and
not
look
down
on
him
.
The
judge
said
he
could
hug
him
for
them
words
;
so
he
cried
,
and
his
wife
she
cried
again
;
pap
said
he
'd
been
a
man
that
had
always
been
misunderstood
before
,
and
the
judge
said
he
believed
it
.
The
old
man
said
that
what
a
man
wanted
that
was
down
was
sympathy
,
and
the
judge
said
it
was
so
;
so
they
cried
again
.
And
when
it
was
bedtime
the
old
man
rose
up
and
held
out
his
hand
,
and
says
:
"
Look
at
it
,
gentlemen
and
ladies
all
;
take
a-hold
of
it
;
shake
it
.
There
's
a
hand
that
was
the
hand
of
a
hog
;
but
it
ai
n't
so
no
more
;
it
's
the
hand
of
a
man
that
's
started
in
on
a
new
life
,
and
'll
die
before
he
'll
go
back
.
You
mark
them
words
--
do
n't
forget
I
said
them
.
It
's
a
clean
hand
now
;
shake
it
--
do
n't
be
afeard
.
"
So
they
shook
it
,
one
after
the
other
,
all
around
,
and
cried
.
The
judge
's
wife
she
kissed
it
.
Then
the
old
man
he
signed
a
pledge
--
made
his
mark
.
The
judge
said
it
was
the
holiest
time
on
record
,
or
something
like
that
.
Then
they
tucked
the
old
man
into
a
beautiful
room
,
which
was
the
spare
room
,
and
in
the
night
some
time
he
got
powerful
thirsty
and
clumb
out
on
to
the
porch-roof
and
slid
down
a
stanchion
and
traded
his
new
coat
for
a
jug
of
forty-rod
,
and
clumb
back
again
and
had
a
good
old
time
;
and
towards
daylight
he
crawled
out
again
,
drunk
as
a
fiddler
,
and
rolled
off
the
porch
and
broke
his
left
arm
in
two
places
,
and
was
most
froze
to
death
when
somebody
found
him
after
sun-up
.
And
when
they
come
to
look
at
that
spare
room
they
had
to
take
soundings
before
they
could
navigate
it
.
The
judge
he
felt
kind
of
sore
.
He
said
he
reckoned
a
body
could
reform
the
old
man
with
a
shotgun
,
maybe
,
but
he
did
n't
know
no
other
way
.