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OUR FRIEND THE DOG 



be scratched and dug up and 

 which sometimes reveals surpris- 

 ing things; of casting at the 

 sky, which is uninteresting, for 

 there is nothing there to eat, one 

 glance that does away with it for 

 good and all; of discovering the 

 grass, the admirable and green 

 grass, the springy and cool grass, 

 a field for races and sports, a 

 friendly and boundless bed, ( in 

 which lies hidden the good and 

 wholesome couch-grass. ) It was 

 a question, also, of taking pro- 

 H 9 H 



