El Arte Perdido De Discipular Pdf
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A new generation, the children of Laura Malinda Wise, is introducedin the story beginning with this chapter. The text then continues withanother dramatic chapter and a climactic conversation between Pa andSue-Ellen, with Laura in the background. Sue-Ellen is appalled by the content of the story and had asked the author'sabout it, and he had refused to do anything about the matter. "Laura had done it again," Sue-Ellen said, "and she was going to do it again. She was going to put down Bil-Bow Dugway and her family. She was going to put them in the story. Pa!"
Laura was not surprised that Sue-Ellen should take such a stand. Laura had already realized that she was special to Pa, and that was why she was not real to him. He looked at her through the eyelashes of the little girl with her blue eyes and soft golden curls.
Laura was always going to be different on the farm and in the story, but what she was most different about was her relationship to her sister. Though they had separated, still they had remained close. Like all sisters, they were best friends. Yet when she was born, Laura's fingers barely touched Mary's because Mary was afraid of hurting her sister. Although they were both awkward and clumsy (Mary tripped on the ice on the way to the river and fell through the ice, frightening them both, while Laura smashed her toes) they had amazing imagination and ability to enjoy life. Mary could take a cow or horse apart and put it back together again in her head. Now, they fought for Pa's attention. d2c66b5586