Page:Samantha on Children's Rights.djvu/18

 a indifferent actin' chap even in his cradle. He'd turn over in his cradle when he wuz a infant and look at the rungs in the back side on't when I would try to git his attention, and I hain't never been able to git it sence. Jest as quick as he wuz old enough to read he jest took to dime novels. His mother encouraged it, she said it nourished a love for readin', and would make him literary. He and his mother, I spoze, have read more'n twenty cords of 'em if they wuz corded up and measured with a yard stick, and most every one on 'em yeller covered and harrowin'.

I have told Tamer Ann that they wuzn't good for her or Cicero to devour so much. But good land! I couldn't move her a inch. She kep' on readin' 'em and givin' 'em to him to read, and the more blood curdliner they wuz the more they doted on 'em. Why, I should have thought their blood would have turned to ice in their veins, and their skin got thick as a elephant's hide with goose pimples caused by the horrow of 'em; why, their names wuz enough to skair anybody to death, let alone readin' 'em. Anna never took to 'em, she seemed to take after the Smiths more, so I think, and Jack of course hain't old enough, and I don't believe he'll ever love 'em anyway.

Hamen's brother lived at their house when Jack wuz born, and he's made it his home with 'em ever sence. His name is John Zebulen Smith, named after old Grandpa Smith.

And as he wuz always called John, why, they called little John Jack, when he wuz a baby, to keep him from gittin' mixed up with his uncle and bein' took for him, so he has always gone by the name of Jack. And Jack from the first on't has been a favorite of mine, a great