Democratic Sentinel, Volume 15, Number 28, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 31 July 1891 — SHE WAS HUNGRY. [ARTICLE]
SHE WAS HUNGRY.
HnM Sh« Preferred Baked Clam* M Poetic Sentiment. They were sitting on the piazza of the hotel at the beach, watching the moon as it slowly rose out of th« slumbering sea. Silence was around them, naught being heard save ocom sionaily the faint clatter of dishes in an adjacent restaurant or the musioal hum of an aristocratic mosquito that was making as vain a search for a blue-blooded person as Diogenes did for an honest man. It was the hoot for love— sweet, pure, delicious love, The youth felt it in his soul as he sat there by the side of the beautiful maiden, whose silken hair almost touched his shouldefß. Suddenly he •poke in low, but thrilling and pas. donate tones: “To the poetic temperament, to the soul that is capable of feeling the ten* derest emotions, that throbs in unison with the harmony of nature, that is susceptible to the influences of the beautiful, there is a peculiar fascination in a scene like this. The balmy air, the rising moon, the twinkling stars, the contiguity of one of thd fairest of creation's most perfect works, all unite to awaken in the heart its softest, sweetest, tenderest feeling—love. Don’t you think so, MehitableP” “I do—oh, George, don’t then baked clams sm»H nine I* J. W. Duvall has several good farms for sale, on good terms. Enquire of him for particulars.
