id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 7119 Hawthorne, Nathaniel The Dolliver Romance .txt text/plain 16964 654 67 forlorn old age, the Doctor expected soon to stretch out his weary but be anxious about the child, knowing that little Pansie would be far my feeble old heart, Pansie, though it might do little to mend a broken Dolliver, who often awoke from an old man's fitful sleep with a sense which old Grandsir Dolliver had so strangely crept away. "Ay," said the old man, as the well-remembered figure of his ancient joke upon the old man, had never come back; and now, for seven years, this," said Dr. Dolliver, "he might fancy it his nostrum of long life, he had eschewed strong spirits: "But after seventy," quoth old Dr. Dolliver, "a man is all the better in head and stomach for a little 'The old man's cordial?' That promises too little. "Come, Doctor, I know a thing or two," said the Colonel, with a bitter ./cache/7119.txt ./txt/7119.txt