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nding these awful skeeters. I can't bear 'em any longer, now, certainly." There was a look of utter despair on Prudy's disfigured face. Bitter tears were trickling from the two white puff-balls which had been her eyes; her forehead and cheeks were of a flaming pink, broken into little snow-drifts full of stings: she looked as if she had just been rescued from an angry beehive. Altogether, her appearance was exceedingly droll; yet Grace would not allow herself to smile at her afflicted little cousin. "Strange," said she, "what makes our mosquitoes so impolite to strangers! It's a downright shame, isn't it, ma, to have little Prudy so imposed upon? If I could only amuse her, and make her forget it!" "Oh, mamma," Grace broke forth again suddenly, "I have an idea, a very brilliant idea! Please listen, and pay particular attention; for I shall speak _in a figure_, as Robin says. There's a certain small individual who is not to understand." "I wouldn't risk that style of talking," said Mrs. Clifford, smiling; "or, if you do, your figures of speech must be _very_ obscure, remember." "Well, ma," continued Grace with a significant glance at Prudy, "what I was going to say is this: We wish to treat certain young relatives of ours very kindly; don't we, now?--certain afflicted and abused young relatives, you know. "Now, I've thought of an entertainment. Ahem! Yesterday I entered a certain Englishman's house,"--here Grace pointed through the window towards Mr. Sherwood's cottage, lest her mother should, by chance, lose her meaning,--"I entered a certain Englishman's house just as the family were sitting down to the table,--_festal board_, I mean. "They were talking about mistle-toe boughs, and all sorts of old-country customs; and then they said what a funny time they had one Christmas, with the youngest, about the _mizzle_, as he called it: do you remember, ma? do you understand?" "You mean little Harvey? Oh, yes." "Pray do be careful, ma! Then Mr. Sherwood said to his--I mean, the _hat_ said to the _bonnet_, that there were some wonderful--ahem--legends, about genii and sprites and--and so forth; not printed, but _written_, which the boy liked to hear when he was 'overgetting' the measles. A certain lady, not three inches from your chair, ma, was the one who wrote them; and now"-- Prudy had turned about, and the only remnants of her face which looked at all natural--that is, the irises and pupils of her swoll
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