The Adventures of Tom Sawyer


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as the day was long, and so she was an easy victim. She gathered  
together her quack periodicals and her quack medicines, and thus armed  
with death, went about on her pale horse, metaphorically speaking, with  
"hell following after." But she never suspected that she was not an  
angel of healing and the balm of Gilead in disguise, to the suffering  
neighbors.  
The water treatment was new, now, and Tom's low condition was a  
windfall to her. She had him out at daylight every morning, stood him  
up in the woodshed and drowned him with a deluge of cold water; then  
she scrubbed him down with a towel like a file, and so brought him to;  
then she rolled him up in a wet sheet and put him away under blankets  
till she sweated his soul clean and "the yellow stains of it came  
through his pores"--as Tom said.  
Yet notwithstanding all this, the boy grew more and more melancholy  
and pale and dejected. She added hot baths, sitz baths, shower baths,  
and plunges. The boy remained as dismal as a hearse. She began to  
assist the water with a slim oatmeal diet and blister-plasters. She  
calculated his capacity as she would a jug's, and filled him up every  
day with quack cure-alls.  
Tom had become indifferent to persecution by this time. This phase  
filled the old lady's heart with consternation. This indifference must  
be broken up at any cost. Now she heard of Pain-killer for the first  
time. She ordered a lot at once. She tasted it and was filled with  
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Quick Jump
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