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    Chapter 20 - Page 2

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    preparing for the festivities to come, and as soon as dinner was over every one scrambled into his or her best clothes as fast as possible, because, although invited to come at two, impatient boys and girls were seen hovering about the avenue as early as one.

    The first to arrive, however, was an uninvited guest, for just as Bab and Betty sat down on the porch steps, in their stiff pink calico frocks and white ruffled aprons, to repose a moment before the party came in, a rustling was heard among the lilacs, and out stepped Alfred Tennyson Barlow, looking like a small Robin Hood, in a green blouse with a silver buckle on his broad belt, a feather in his little cap and a bow in his hand.

    "I have come to shoot. I heard about it. My papa told me what arching meant. Will there be any little cakes? I like them."

    With these opening remarks the poet took a seat and calmly awaited a response. The young ladies, I regret to say, giggled, then remembering their manners, hastened to inform him that there would be heaps of cakes, also that Miss Celia would not mind his coming without an invitation, they were quite sure.

    "She asked me to come that day. I have been very busy. I had measles. Do you have them here?" asked the guest, as if anxious to compare notes on the sad subject.

    "We had ours ever so long ago. What have you been doing besides having measles?" said Betty, showing a polite interest.

    "I had a fight with a bumble-bee."

    "Who beat?" demanded Bab.

    "I did. I ran away and he couldn't catch me."

    "Can you shoot nicely?"

    "I hit a cow. She did not mind at all. I guess she thought it was a fly."

    "Did your mother know you were coming?" asked Bab, feeling an interest in runaways.

    "No; she is gone to drive, so I could not ask her."

    "It is very wrong to disobey. My Sunday-school book says that children who are naughty that way never go to heaven," observed virtuous Betty, in a warning tone.

    "I do not wish to go," was the startling reply.

    "Why not?" asked Betty, severely.

    "They don't have any dirt there. My mamma says so. I am fond of dirt. I shall stay here where there is plenty of it," and the candid youth began to grub in the mould with the satisfaction of a genuine boy.

    "I am afraid you're a very bad child."

    "Oh yes, I am. My papa often says so and he knows all about it," replied Alfred with an involuntary wriggle suggestive of painful memories. Then, as if anxious to change the conversation from its somewhat personal channel, he asked, pointing to a row of grinning heads above the wall, "Do you shoot at those?"

    Bab and Betty looked up quickly and recognized the familiar faces of their
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