Barnes Colhard did not say he would
not do it but he did not do it. He did it and
then he did not do it, he did not ever think about
it. He just thought some time he might do something.
His father Mr. Abram Colhard spoke
about it to every one and very many of them spoke
to Barnes Colhard about it and he always listened to
them.
Then Barnes fell in love with a very
nice girl and she would not marry him. He cried
then, his father Mr. Abram Colhard comforted him and
they took a trip and Barnes promised he would do what
his father wanted him to be doing. He did not
do the thing, he thought he would do another thing,
he did not do the other thing, his father Mr. Colhard
did not want him to do the other thing. He really
did not do anything then. When he was a good
deal older he married a very rich girl. He had
thought perhaps he would not propose to her but his
sister wrote to him that it would be a good thing.
He married the rich girl and she thought he was the
most wonderful man and one who knew everything.
Barnes never spent more than the income of the fortune
he and his wife had then, that is to say they did
not spend more than the income and this was a surprise
to very many who knew about him and about his marrying
the girl who had such a large fortune. He had
a happy life while he was living and after he was
dead his wife and children remembered him.
He had a sister who also was successful
enough in being one being living. His sister
was one who came to be happier than most people come
to be in living. She came to be a completely happy
one. She was twice as old as her brother.
She had been a very good daughter to her mother.
She and her mother had always told very pretty stories
to each other. Many old men loved to hear her
tell these stories to her mother. Every one who
ever knew her mother liked her mother. Many were
sorry later that not every one liked the daughter.
Many did like the daughter but not every one as every
one had liked the mother. The daughter was charming
inside in her, it did not show outside in her to every
one, it certainly did to some. She did sometimes
think her mother would be pleased with a story that
did not please her mother, when her mother later was
sicker the daughter knew that there were some stories
she could tell her that would not please her mother.
Her mother died and really mostly altogether the mother
and the daughter had told each other stories very
happily together.
The daughter then kept house for her
father and took care of her brother. There were
many relations who lived with them. The daughter
did not like them to live with them and she did not
like them to die with them. The daughter, Ada
they had called her after her grandmother who had
delightful ways of smelling flowers and eating dates
and sugar, did not like it at all then as she did
not like so much dying and she did not like any of
the living she was doing then. Every now and then
some old gentlemen told delightful stories to her.
Mostly then there were not nice stories told by any
one then in her living. She told her father Mr.
Abram Colhard that she did not like it at all being
one being living then. He never said anything.
She was afraid then, she was one needing charming
stories and happy telling of them and not having that
thing she was always trembling. Then every one
who could live with them were dead and there were
then the father and the son a young man then and the
daughter coming to be that one then. Her grandfather
had left some money to them each one of them.
Ada said she was going to use it to go away from them.
The father said nothing then, then he said something
and she said nothing then, then they both said nothing
and then it was that she went away from them.
The father was quite tender then, she was his daughter
then. He wrote her tender letters then, she wrote
him tender letters then, she never went back to live
with him. He wanted her to come and she wrote
him tender letters then. He liked the tender letters
she wrote to him. He wanted her to live with him.
She answered him by writing tender letters to him
and telling very nice stories indeed in them.
He wrote nothing and then he wrote again and there
was some waiting and then he wrote tender letters
again and again.
She came to be happier than anybody
else who was living then. It is easy to believe
this thing. She was telling some one, who was
loving every story that was charming. Some one
who was living was almost always listening. Some
one who was loving was almost always listening.
That one who was loving was almost always listening.
That one who was loving was telling about being one
then listening. That one being loving was then
telling stories having a beginning and a middle and
an ending. That one was then one always completely
listening. Ada was then one and all her living
then one completely telling stories that were charming,
completely listening to stories having a beginning
and a middle and an ending. Trembling was all
living, living was all loving, some one was then the
other one. Certainly this one was loving this
Ada then. And certainly Ada all her living then
was happier in living than any one else who ever could,
who was, who is, who ever will be living.