From Life In The Hamptons To A Life Of Poverty In Arkansas

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FROM LIFE IN THE HAMPTONS TO A LIFE OF POVERTY IN ARKANSAS

FROM LIFE IN THE HAMPTONS TO A LIFE OF POVERTY IN ARKANSAS
Author :
Publisher : Xlibris Corporation
Total Pages : 157
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781456887001
ISBN-13 : 1456887009
Rating : 4/5 (009 Downloads)

Book Synopsis FROM LIFE IN THE HAMPTONS TO A LIFE OF POVERTY IN ARKANSAS by : William D. Hedges

Download or read book FROM LIFE IN THE HAMPTONS TO A LIFE OF POVERTY IN ARKANSAS written by William D. Hedges and published by Xlibris Corporation. This book was released on 2011-03-21 with total page 157 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This book consists of 148 significant events in the author’s life.. Perhaps the best way to explain this is to include one event here. It is termed: Sex Education Soon, however, we moved again. When I was about thirteen, we lived on a small farm in south central Arkansas. The farm consisted of about 80 acres of land, 40 of which were in woodland and the other 40 in worn out rocky soil on which cotton had been raised for a number of years One day, my dad asked me to go to a neighbor’s house and get a dozen to fifteen eggs to put under a setting hen. I complied, brought the eggs home and per his instructions put them carefully under the hen that was sitting in a box with straw in it. She did not like it as she pecked at me whenever I tried to put an egg under her. I guess she thought I was trying to steal her eggs. I finally succeeded although she could peck hard and it hurt. About three weeks later, those eggs began to explode. Boom! Then another boom. They were all rotten. Something was wrong. Since it was one of my chores to take care of the chickens, I went to my father and told him those eggs I bought were no good. None of them had hatched! He paused a moment and then said. “Did you ask Mr. Keisler if he had a rooster before you bought those eggs?” Puzzled, I replied, “No, why should I? You said you wanted some eggs, not a rooster.” “Son,” he said, “Come sit down. I think it is time you and I had a little talk.”


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