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English pages for Kids and Children-1

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English pages for Kids and Children - 1

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Babs Bell (Bishop) Hajdusiewicz and her books

Bestselling author Babs Bell Hajdusiewicz

Bestselling author Babs Bell Hajdusiewicz, Ms.Ed. is the author of more than 100 books and 350 poems for children, including: Don’t Go Out in Your Underwear!; Phonics through Poetry: Teaching Phonemic Awareness Using Poetry; MORE Phonics through Poetry: Teaching Phonemic Awareness Using Poetry; Rhythm & Rhyme Reader Series; Questions and Answers Series; Jacks and More Jacks, Words! Words! Words!; Words and More Words. She is also author of Steppingstone Stories Series; Peaceful Me and Sometimes I Feel Happy, Sometimes I Feel Sad; three Poetry Works! collections for early childhood through intermediate grades; middle-grades biography Mary Carter Smith: African-American Storyteller; and the Dainty Dinosaur Series.

Hajdusiewicz stars in the Wright Group staff-development video Developing Oral Language and Phonemic Awareness through Rhythm and Rhyme. She has written numerous children's stories, articles for teachers and parents, and has contributed to and edited many elementary textbooks.

An educator for 40 years, Hajdusiewicz taught early childhood, elementary, and special education at all levels, served school districts in Indiana and Michigan as director of special education, and taught graduate and undergraduate education courses at Eastern Michigan and Cleveland State Universities. She founded Booking the Future: Reader to Reader™, a community-involvement literacy program that placed books in the hands and homes of more than 16,000 four, five, and six year olds, and Pee Wee Poetry™, a language development program for children aged two through nine. Hajdusiewicz is a frequent conference keynoter for educators and parents and a popular visiting author in schools across the country and abroad.

Specialties: Poetry for kids; humor; parenting for literacy; school staff development; author of numerous classroom materials; emphasis on phonemic awareness before phonics instruction; building love of learning from infancy onward

(Babs Bell Hajdusiewicz живет и работает в Атланте, штат Джорджия. Она написала более 100 книг и 350 стишков для детей. Своими книгами она предоставляет советы, консультации и материал для воспитателей, чтобы они чувствовали себя уверенно в том, что они помогают детям в период их раннего развития и становления их устной речи. Учителя английского языка могут использовать стихи для изучения языка в целом. Родители могут читать эти нехитрые стихи своим детям и помогать им изучать английский язык.)

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Reading Comprehension for Kids

Reading Comprehension is suitable for Kindergarten students or beginning readers.
This product is helping children to sharpen reading and comprehension.

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Gather around and listen well, for we have a fabled story to tell. Today is National Tell a Fairy Tale Day and a great opportunity to read to your kids. We are encouraged to explore myths, fantasy and fables, old, new or imagined by you on the spot. A fairy tale is a fictional story that may feature fairies, trolls, giants and talking animals. These stories often include enchantments and far-fetched events.

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Russian Christmas - Русское Рождество

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Сегодня мы с Вами посмотрим на одно из увлекательнейших явлений словообразования.

Речь пойдет о блендах (blends).

Бленд — это способ словообразования, получивший распространение в английском языке только в двадцатом веке, хотя, как утверждают некоторые ученые, появился он задолго до девятнадцатого века.

Этот способ заключается в слиянии двух слов в одно. Получившееся образование включает в себя лексические значения обоих слов, из которых оно возникло. Обычно новая единица речи (собственно, сам бленд) состоит из начальной части одного слова — донора и конечной части другого. Благодаря такому способу словообразования в языке появилось огромное количество новых и очень емких слов, которые теперь мы можем встретить в сфере политики, рекламы, средствах массовой информации, а так же в повседневной речи.

Когда-то слова такого рода называли portmanteau words. В наши дни такое понятие встретить почти невозможно, так как значение слова portmanteau, в котором оно выступало в данном словосочетании, сейчас отсутствует. Раньше это слово имело значение "чемодан для транспортировки одежды" (французский язык), некий аналог современного кофра. Особенность его была в том, что он крепился на петлях и мог открываться в обе стороны — именно из-за этого свойства его и ассоциировали с этими словами (блендами). Ведь они тоже при желании могут быть развернуты до исходных слов, как налево, так и направо. Правда не у всех и не всегда это получается…

Возьмем небольшой список примеров слов — блендов; попробуем догадаться об их значении:

Absotively, airtorial, brunch, cablegram, cameracature, cheeriodical, chortle, cigaroot, crocogator, dumbfound, guesstimate, infancipate, newtopia, Oxbridge, smog, twinight, windoor, wordfacturer.

Некоторые из них наверняка оказались Вам знакомы (smog, dumbfound, cablegram, Oxbridge). А остальные, возможно, вызвали трудность в понимании. Так давайте посмотрим на то, из каких слов "родились" эти бленды, давайте "откроем portmanteau":

Absotively = absolutely + positively;
airtorial = air + editorial;
brunch = breakfast + lunch;
cablegram = cable + telegram;
cameracature = camera + caricature;
cheeriodical = cheer + periodical;
chortle = chuckle + snort;
cigaroot = cigarette + cheroot;
crocogator = crocodile + alligator;
dumbfound = dumb + confound;
guesstimate = guess + estimate;
infancipate = infant + anticipate;
newtopia = new + utopia;
Oxbridge = Oxford + Cambridge;
smog = smoke + fog;
twinight = twilight + night;
windoor = window + door;
wordfacturer = word + manufacturer.

Таким образом, Вы смогли увидеть, что бленды могут быть образованы из абсолютно разных слов. Только нужно хорошо понимать, что существует разница между сложными словами и блендами. Сложные слова состоят обычно либо из двух целых слов (basketball, rainfall), либо из префикса и полного слова (megamall, hypertext); тогда, как бленд, в свою очередь, состоит из частей слов, что уже было показано выше.

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Learn to make these adorable pom pom friends.

Please share the video and follow me on social media..Let me know what awesome DIY tutorials you would like to see.

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DIY Pom Pom Animals

How to make pom pom animals for Easter!

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- Learn How To Make a String Yarn Thread Egg - Easter Eggs Craft for Kids for Spring Tutorial

Donna Wolfe from Naztazia http://naztazia.com shows you how to make an egg out of string and glue for Easter, Spring, or any time of the year. You can use regular string, twine, crochet thread, yarn, or embroidery floss to make these eggs.

This is a fun project for kids of all ages!

Be sure to use the PAUSE button, then rewind or fast forward if a part goes too fast or too slow for you.

You can also Pin photos from this tutorial while visiting the Naztazia website http://naztazia.com

Music written and performed by Donna Wolfe.

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History:Soviet Union, Navy, Saint-Petersburg

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The Russian Cruiser Aurora secured in the Neva River at St Petersburg.
It was from this ship by firing a shot into the Winter Palace
that the start of the October 1917 revolution was signalled.

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The ship's bell on board the Russian cruiser Aurora

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This year, Simon is in fourth grade and Grace is in first grade, and I find myself asking them every day after school, “So how was school today?”

And every day I get an answer like “fine” or “good,” which doesn’t tell me a whole lot.

AND I WANT TO KNOW A WHOLE LOT!!!!

Or at least get a full sentence. So the other night, I sat down and made a list of more engaging questions to ask about school. They aren’t perfect, but I do at least get complete sentences, and some have led to some interesting conversations... and hilarious answers... and some insights into how my kids think and feel about school.


25 Ways to Ask Your Kids ‘So How Was School Today?’ Without Asking Them ‘So How Was School Today?’

1. What was the best thing that happened at school today? (What was the worst thing that happened at school today?)

2. Tell me something that made you laugh today.

3. If you could choose, who would you like to sit by in class? (Who would you NOT want to sit by in class? Why?)

4. Where is the coolest place at the school?

5. Tell me a weird word that you heard today. (Or something weird that someone said.)

6. If I called your teacher tonight, what would she tell me about you?

7. How did you help somebody today?

8. How did somebody help you today?

9. Tell me one thing that you learned today.

10. When were you the happiest today?

11. When were you bored today?

12. If an alien spaceship came to your class and beamed someone up, who would you want them to take?

13. Who would you like to play with at recess that you’ve never played with before?

14. Tell me something good that happened today.

15. What word did your teacher say most today?

16. What do you think you should do/learn more of at school?

17. What do you think you should do/learn less of at school?

18. Who in your class do you think you could be nicer to?

19. Where do you play the most at recess?

20. Who is the funniest person in your class? Why is he/she so funny?

21. What was your favorite part of lunch?

22. If you got to be the teacher tomorrow, what would you do?

23. Is there anyone in your class who needs a time-out?

24. If you could switch seats with anyone in the class, who would you trade with? Why?

25. Tell me about three different times you used your pencil today at school.

*****

So far, my favorite answers have come from questions 12, 15 and 21. Questions like the “alien” one give kids a non-threatening way to say who they would rather not have in their class, and open the door for you to have a discussion to ask why, potentially uncovering issues you didn’t know about before.

And the answers we get are sometimes really surprising. When I asked question 3, I discovered that one of my children didn’t want to sit by a best friend in class anymore — not out of a desire to be mean or bully, but in the hope they’d get the chance to work with other people.

As my kids get older, I know I am going to have to work harder and harder to stay engaged with them — but I know it’s going to be worth the work.

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28 Ways to Ask Your Teens ‘How Was School Today?’ Without Asking Them ‘How Was School Today?’

Last week, I posted 25 ways to ask your kids “So how was school today?” without asking them “So how was school today?“ — and the questions came from a list that I made to ask my own children, who are in elementary school.

But naturally, all of those questions are geared toward elementary-school-aged kids, and I started to consider... if I think it’s hard for me to get school stories from my 10-year-old boy now, what is it going to be like five years from now?!

And then I remembered that I know what it’s going to be like. I taught either junior high or high school for almost a decade, and I get that communication with that age group is an art. BUT when you get dialogue, engaged dialogue, with a teen, it’s never disappointing. It’s guaranteed to be interesting; sometimes it can be very enlightening; and it’s ALWAYS worth the work. ALWAYS.

So tonight, my husband (who also teaches high school) and I sat down and made a list of 28 ways to ask your teens “How was school today?” without asking them “How was school today?”, in an effort to get some sort of engaged, interesting dialogue... even if it only lasts in that brief time when they’re not texting friends.

28 Ways To Ask Your Teens ‘How Was School Today?’ Without Asking Them ‘How Was School Today?’

1. Where in the school do you hang out the most? (Like a particular hall, classroom, parking lot, etc.) Where in the school do you never hang out?

2. What would your school be better with? What would your school be better without?

3. If you were a teacher, what class would you teach? Which class would be the worst to teach? Why?

4. What was the coolest (saddest, funniest, scariest) thing that you saw today?

5. Tell me one thing that you learned today.

6. If your day at school today was a movie, what movie would it be?

7. Besides walking to their next classes, what else do people do in the halls in between classes?

8. Who do you think you could be nicer to?

9. Which is your easiest class? Which is your hardest class? OR Which class are you learning the most in? Which class are you learning the least in?

10. If they played music in the halls at school, what would everyone want them to play over the loudspeaker?

11. If you could read minds, which teacher’s mind would you read? Which classmate’s mind would you read? Whose mind would you NOT want to read?

12. If today had a theme song, what would it be?

13. Which class has your favorite group of students in it? Which class has the worst group of students?

14. What do you think you should do more of at school? What do you think you should do less of?

15. What are the top three (or five) things that you hear people say in the halls?

16. What do you think the most important part of school is?

17. Tell me one question that you had today, even if it wasn’t answered... actually, especially if it wasn’t answered...

18. Which class has the most cute boys/girls in it?

19. If an alien spaceship landed at your school, who would you like them to beam aboard and take back to their home planet?

20. Who did you help today? Who helped you today?

21. If you could be invisible for the day at school, what would you do?

22. What part of the day do you look forward to? What part of the day do you dread?

23. What would you change about school lunch?

24. Which classmate is most likely to be arrested, made president, become a millionaire, be in movies, let loose a flock of wild chickens in the library, etc.?

25. If you had to go to only one class every day, which class would it be?

26. Tell me one thing you read at school today.

27. If your day at school was an emoticon, which one would it be?

28. What do you think your teachers talked about in the faculty room today after school?

*****

NOTE: I don’t have teenagers of my own, but I’ve worked with my fair share of them — and one thing that I’ve found is that when you want them to open up, just sitting them down and asking questions isn’t really effective. BUT, if you, say, trap them in the car... and talk to them while you are driving... and they don’t have to make eye contact... they are more willing to offer up more information or ask more questions.

This also happens while you are working with them on things like making dinner, folding laundry, rearranging furniture, etc. You can casually talk and ask questions without making them feel like you are grilling them.

When I taught school, sometimes I would make up work project jobs to do with students who I was worried about, just so that we could have some heart-to-hearts while scrubbing desks or cleaning out closets. It sounds lame, but I’m telling you, it works.

Good luck with those teens, and happy conversing!

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Ray Bradbury


The April Witch

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   Into the air, over the valleys, under the stars, above a river, a pond, a road, flew Cecy. Invisible as new spring winds, fresh as the breath of clover rising from twilight fields, she flew. She soared in doves as soft as white ermine, stopped in trees and lived in blossoms, showering away in petals when the breeze blew. She perched in a limegreen frog, cool as mint by a shining pool. She trotted in a brambly dog and barked to hear echoes from the sides of distant barns. She lived in new April grasses, in sweet clear liquids rising from the musky earth.
   It's spring, thought Cecy. I'll be in every living thing in the world tonight.
   Now she inhabited neat crickets on the tar-pool roads, now prickled in dew on an iron gate. Hers was an adapt-ably quick mind flowing unseen upon Illinois winds on this one evening of her life when she was just seventeen.
   «I want to be in love,» she said.
   She had said it at supper. And her parents had widened their eyes and stiffened back in their chairs. «Patience,» had been their advice. «Remember, you're remarkable. Our whole family is odd and remarkable. We can't mix or marry with ordinary folk. We'd lose our magical powers if we did. You wouldn't want to lose your ability to 'travel' by magic, would you? Then be careful. Be careful!»
   But in her high bedroom, Cecy had touched perfume to her throat and stretched out, trembling and apprehensive, on her four-poster, as a moon the colour of milk rose over Illinois country, turning rivers to cream and roads to platinum.
   «Yes,» she sighed. «I'm one of an odd family. We sleep days and fly nights like black kites on the wind. If we want, we can sleep in moles through the winter, in the warm earth. I can live in anything at all — a pebble, a crocus, or a praying mantis. I can leave my plain, bony body behind and send my mind far out for adventure. Now!»
   The wind whipped her away over fields and meadows.
   She saw the warm spring lights of cottages and farms glowing with twilight colours.
   If I can't be in love, myself, because I'm plain and odd, then I'll be in love through someone else, she thought.
   Outside a farmhouse in the spring night a dark-haired girl, no more than nineteen, drew up water from a deep stone well. She was singing.
   Cecy fell — a green leaf- into the well. She lay in the tender moss of the well, gazing up through dark coolness. Now she quickened in a fluttering, invisible amoeba. Now in a water droplet! At last, within a cold cup, she felt herself lifted to the girl's warm lips. There was a soft night sound of drinking.
   Ceсy looked out from the girl's eyes.
   She entered into the dark head and gazed from the shining eyes at the hands pulling the rough rope. She listened through the shell ears to this girl's world. She smelled a particular universe through these delicate nostrils, felt this special heart beating, beating. Felt this strange tongue move with singing.
   Does she know I'm here? thought Cecy.
   The girl gasped. She stared into the night meadows.
   «Who's there?»
   No answer.
   «Only the wind,» whispered Cecy.
   «Only the wind.» The girl laughed at herself, but shivered.
   It was a good body, this girl's body. It held bones of finest slender ivory hidden and roundly fleshed. This brain was like a pink tea rose, hung in darkness, and there was cider-wine in this mouth. The lips lay firm on the white, white teeth and the brows arched neatly at the world, and the hair blew soft and fine on her milky neck. The pores knit small and close. The nose tilted at the moon and the cheeks glowed like small fires. The body drifted with feather-balances from one motion to another and seemed always singing to itself. Being in this body, this head, was like basking in a hearth fire, living in the purr of a sleeping cat, stirring in warm creek waters that flowed by night to the sea.
   I'll like it here, thought Cecy.
   «What?» asked the girl, as if she'd heard a voice.
   «What's your name?» asked Cecy carefully.
   «Ann Leary.» The girl twitched. «Now why should I say that out loud?»
   «Ann, Ann,» whispered Cecy. «Ann, you're going to be in love.»
   As if to answer this, a great roar sprang from the road, a clatter and a ring of wheels on gravel. A tall man drove up in a rig, holding the reins high with his monstrous arms, his smile glowing across the yard.
   «Is that you, Tom?»
   «Who else?» Leaping from the rig, he tied the reins to the fence.
   «I'm not speaking to you!» Ann whirled, the bucket in her hands slopping.
   «No!» cried Cecy.
   Ann froze. She looked at the hills and the first spring stars. She stared at the man named Tom. Cecy made her drop the bucket.
   «Look what you've done!»
   Tom ran up.
   «Look what you made me do!»
   He wiped her shoes with a kerchief, laughing.
   «Get away!» She kicked at his hands, but he laughed again, and gazing down on him from miles away, Cecy saw the turn of his head, the size of his skull, the flare of his nose, the shine of his eye, the girth of his shoulder, and the hard strength of his hands doing this delicate thing with the handkerchief. Peering down from the secret attic of this lovely head, Cecy yanked a hidden copper ventriloquist's wire and the pretty mouth popped wide: «Thank you!»
   «Oh, so you have manners?» The smell of leather on his hands, the smell of the horse rose from his clothes into the tender nostrils, and Cecy, far, far away over night meadows and flowered fields, stirred as with some dream in her bed.
   «Not for you, no!» said Ann.
   «Hush, speak gently,» said Cecy. She moved Ann's fingers out toward Tom's head. Ann snatched them back.
   «I've gone mad!»
   «You have.» He nodded, smiling but bewildered. «Were you going to touch me then?»
   «I don't know. Oh, go away!» Her cheeks glowed with pink charcoals.
   «Why don't you run? I'm not stopping you.» Tom got up. «Have you changed your mind? Will you go to the dance with me tonight? It's special. Tell you why later.»
   «No,» said Ann.
   «Yes!» cried Cecy. «I've never danced. I want to dance. I've never worn a long gown, all rustly. I want that. I want to dance all night. I've never known what it's like to be in a woman, dancing; Father and Mother would never permit it. Dogs, cats, locusts, leaves, everything else in the world at one time or another I've known, but never a woman in the spring, never on a night like this. Oh, please — we must go to that dance!»
   She spread her thought like the fingers of a hand within a new glove.
   «Yes,» said Ann Leary, «I'll go. I don't know why, but I'll go to the dance with you tonight, Tom.»
   «Now inside, quick!» cried Cecy. «You must wash, tell your folks, get your gown ready, out with the iron, into your room!»
   «Mother,» said Ann, «I've changed my mind!»

   The rig was galloping off down the pike, the rooms of the farmhouse jumped to life, water was boiling for a bath, the coal stove was heating an iron to press the gown, the mother was rushing about with a fringe of hairpins in her mouth. «What's come over you, Ann? You don't like Tom!»
   «That's true.» Ann stopped amidst the great fever.
   But it's spring! thought Cecy.
   «It's spring,» said Ann.
   And it's a fine night for dancing, thought Cecy.
   «… for dancing,» murmured Ann, Leary.
   Then she was in the tub and the soap creaming on her white seal shoulders, small nests of soap beneath her arms, and the flesh of her warm breasts moving in her hands and Cecy moving the mouth, making the smile, keeping the actions going. There must be no pause, no hesitation, or the entire pantomime might fall in ruins! Ann Leary must be kept moving, doing, acting, wash here, soap there, now out! Rub with a towel! Now perfume and powder!
   «You!» Ann caught herself in the mirror, all whiteness and pinkness like lilies and carnations. «Who are you tonight?»
   «I'm a girl seventeen.» Cecy gazed from her violet eyes. «You can't see me. Do you know I'm here?»
   Ann Leary shook her head. «I've rented my body to an April witch, for sure.»
   «Close, very close!» laughed Cecy. «Now, on with your dressing.»
   The luxury of feeling good clothes move over an ample body! And then the halloo outside.
   «Ann, Tom's back!»
   «Tell him to wait.» Ann sat down suddenly. «Tell him I'm not going to that dance.»
   «What?» said her mother, in the door.
   Cecy snapped back into attention. It had been a fatal relaxing, a fatal moment of leaving Ann's body for only an instant. She had heard the distant sound of horses' hoofs and the rig rambling through moonlit spring country. For a second she thought, I'll go find Tom and sit in his head and see what it's like to be in a man of twenty-two on a night like this. And so she had started quickly across a heather field, but now, like a bird to a cage, flew back and rustled and beat about in Ann Leary's head.
   «Tell him to go away!»
   «Ann!» Cecy settled down and spread her thoughts.
   But Ann had the bit in her mouth now. «No, no, I hate him!»
   I shouldn't have left — even for a moment. Cecy poured her mind into the hands of the young girl, into the heart, into the head, softly, softly. Stand up, she thought.
   Ann stood.
   Put on your coat!
   Ann put on her coat.
   Now, march!
   No! thought Ann Leary.
   March!
   «Ann,» said her mother, «don't keep Tom waiting another minute. You get on out there now and no nonsense. What's come over you?»
   «Nothing, Mother. Good night. We'll be home late.»
   Ann and Cecy ran together into the spring evening.

   A room full of softly dancing pigeons ruffling their quiet, trailing feathers, a room full of peacocks, a room full of rainbow eyes and lights. And in the center of it, around, around, around, danced Ann Leary.
   «Oh, it is a fine evening,» said Cecy.
   «Oh, it's a fine evening,» said Ann.
   «You're odd,» said Tom.
   The music whirled them in dimness, in rivers of song, they floated, they bobbed, they sank down, they arose for air, they gasped, they clutched each other like drowning people and whirled on again, in fan motions, in whispers and sighs, to «Beautiful Ohio.»
   Cecy hummed. Ann's lips parted and the music came out.
   «Yes, I'm odd,» said Cecy.
   «You're not the same,» said Tom.
   «No, not tonight.»
   «You're not the Ann Leary I knew.»
   «No, not at all, at all,» whispered Cecy, miles and miles away. «No, not at all,» said the moved lips.
   «I've the funniest feeling,» said Tom.
   «About what?»
   «About you.» He held her back and danced her and looked into her glowing face, watching for something. «Your eyes,» he said, «I can't figure it.»
   «Do you see me?» asked Cecy.
   «Part of you's here, Ann, and part of you's not.» Tom turned her carefully, his face uneasy.
   «Yes.»
   «Why did you come with me?»
   «I didn't want to come,» said Ann.
   «Why, then?»
   «Something made me.»
   «What?»
   «I don't know.» Ann's voice was faintly hysterical.
   «Now, now, hush, hush,» whispered Cecy. «Hush, that's it. Around, around.»
   They whispered and rustled and rose and fell away in the dark room, with the music moving and turning them.
   «But you did come to the dance,» said Tom.
   «I did,» said Cecy.
   «Here.» And he danced her lightly out an open door and walked her quietly away from the hall and the music and the people.
   They climbed up and sat together in the rig.
   «Ann,» he said, taking her hands, trembling. «Ann.» But the way he said the name it was as if it wasn't her name. He kept glancing into her pale face, and now her eyes were open again. «I used to love you, you know that,» he said.
   «I know.»
   «But you've always been fickle and I didn't want to be hurt.»
   «It's just as well, we're very young,» said Ann.
   «No, I mean to say, I'm sorry,» said Cecy.
   «What do you mean?» Tom dropped her hands and stiffened.
   The night was warm and the smell of the earth shimmered up all about them where they sat, and the fresh trees breathed one leaf against another in a shaking and rustling.
   «I don't know,» said Ann.
   «Oh, but I know,» said Cecy. «You're tall and you're the finest-looking man in all the world. This is a good evening; this is an evening I'll always remember, being with you.» She put out the alien cold hand to find his reluctant hand again and bring it back, and warm it and hold it very tight.
   «But,» said Tom, blinking, «tonight you're here, you're there. One minute one way, the next minute another. I wanted to take you to the dance tonight for old times' sake. I meant nothing by it when I first asked you. And then, when we were standing at the well, I knew something had changed, really changed, about you. You were different. There was something new and soft, something…» He groped for a word. «I don't know, I can't say. The way you looked. Something about your voice. And I know I'm in love with you again.»
   «No,» said Cecy. «With me, with we.»
   «And I'm afraid of being in love with you,» he said. «You'll hurt me again.»
   «I might,» said Ann.
   No, no, I'd love you with all my heart! thought Cecy. Ann, say it to him, say it for me. Say you'd love him with all your heart.
   Ann said nothing.
   Tom moved quietly closer and put his hand up to hold her chin. «I'm going away. I've got a job a hundred miles from here. Will you miss me?»
   «Yes,» said Ann and Cecy.
   «May I kiss you good-bye, then?»
   «Yes,» said Cecy before anyone else could speak.
   He placed his lips to the strange mouth. He kissed the strange mouth and he was trembling.
   Ann sat like a white statue.
   «Ann!» said Cecy. «Move your arms, hold him!»
   She sat like a carved wooden doll in the moonlight.
   Again he kissed her lips.
   «I do love you,» whispered Cecy. «I'm here, it's me you saw in her eyes it's me, and I love you if she never will.»
   He moved away and seemed like a man who had run a long distance. He sat beside her. «I don't know what's happening. For a moment there…»
   «Yes?» asked Cecy.
   «For a moment I thought―» He put his hands to his eyes. «Never mind. Shall I take you home now?»
   «Please,» said Ann Leary.
   He clucked to the horse, snapped the reins tiredly, and drove the rig away. They rode in the rustle and slap and motion of the moonlit rig in the still early, only eleven o'clock spring night, with the shining meadows and sweet fields of clover gliding by.
   And Cecy, looking at the fields and meadows, thought, 'It would be worth it, it would be worth everything to be with him from this night on.' And she heard her parents' voices again, faintly, «Be careful. You wouldn't want to lose your magical powers, would you — married to a mere mortal? Be careful. You wouldn't want that.»
   Yes, yes, thought Cecy, even that I'd give up, here and now, if he would have me. I wouldn't need to roam the spring nights then, I wouldn't need to live in birds and dogs and cats and foxes, I'd need only to be with him. Only him. Only him.
   The road passed under, whispering.
   «Tom,» said Ann at last.
   «What?» He stared coldly at the road, the horse, the trees, the sky, the stars.
   «If you're ever, in years to come, at any time, in Green Town, Illinois, a few miles from here, will you do me a favour?»
   «Perhaps.»
   «Will you do me the favour of stopping and seeing a friend of mine?» Ann Leary said this haltingly, awkwardly.
   «Why?»
   «She's a good friend. I've told her of you. I'll give you her address. Just a moment.» When the rig stopped at her farm she drew forth a pencil and paper from her small purse and wrote in the moonlight, pressing the paper to her knee. «There it is. Can you read it?»
   He glanced at the paper and nodded bewilderedly.
   «Cecy Elliott, 12 Willow Street, Green Town, Illinois,» he said.
   «Will you visit her someday?» asked Ann.
   «Someday,» he said.
   «Promise?»
   «What has this to do with us?» he cried savagely. «What do I want with names and papers?» He crumpled the paper into a tight ball and shoved it in his coat.
   «Oh, please promise!» begged Cecy.
   «… promise…» said Ann.
   «All right, all right, now let me be!» he shouted.
   I'm tired, thought Cecy. I can't stay I have to go home. I'm weakening. I've only the power to stay a few hours out like this in the night, travelling, travelling. But before I go…
   «… before I go,» said Ann.
   She kissed Tom on the lips.
   «This is me kissing you,» said Cecy.
   Tom held her off and looked at Ann Leary and looked deep, deep inside. He said nothing, but his face began to relax slowly, very slowly, and the lines vanished away, and his mouth softened from its hardness, and he looked deep again into the moonlit face held here before him.
   Then he put her off the rig and without so much as a good night was driving swiftly down the road.
   Cecy let go.
   Ann Leary, crying out, released from prison, it seemed, raced up the moonlit path to her house and slammed the door.
   Cecy lingered for only a little while. In the eyes of a cricket she saw the spring night world. In the eyes of a frog she sat for a lonely moment by a pool. In the eyes of a night bird she looked down from a tall, moon-haunted elm and saw the light go out in two farmhouses, one here, one a mile away. She thought of herself and her family, and her strange power, and the fact that no one in the family could ever marry any one of the people in this vast world out here beyond the hills.
   «Tom?» Her weakening mind flew in a night bird under the trees and over deep fields of wild mustard. «Have you still got the paper, Tom? Will you come by someday, some year, sometime, to see me? Will you know me then? Will you look in my face and remember then where it was you saw me last and know that you love me as I love you, with all my heart for all time?»
   She paused in the cool night air, a million miles from towns and people, above farms and continents and rivers and hills. «Tom?» Softly.
   Tom was asleep. It was deep night; his clothes were hung on chairs or folded neatly over the end of the bed. And in one silent, carefully upflung hand upon the white pillow, by his head, was a small piece of paper with writing on it. Slowly, slowly, a fraction of an inch at a time, his fingers closed down upon and held it tightly. And he did not even stir or notice when a blackbird, faintly, wondrously, beat softly for a moment against the clear moon crystals of the windowpane, then, fluttering quietly, stopped and flew away toward the east, over the sleeping earth.

0

191

A Piece of Soap

Norman Gortsby was sitting on a bench hidden behind the bushes in Hyde Park. It was a warm May evening. The sun had already set and it was rather dark, but he could still make out the faces of the people who were walking past him and hear the sound of their voices. He was a philosopher, and liked sitting in the Park watching people whom he didn’t know. While he was wondering who they were and where they were going, a young man came up to the bench, gave a quick look at him and threw himself down by his side. The newcomer was well-dressed and looked like a gentleman. His face was sad and he sighed deeply.
«You don’t seem to be in a very good mood,» said Norman. The young man was silent. He only looked at Norman again and there was an expression in his eyes that Norman didn’t like.
«I really don’t know how it all happened.» he began at last, «but I’ve done the silliest thing that I’ve ever done in my life.» He spoke in a low voice, almost in a whisper.
«Yes» said Norman coldly.
«I came to London this afternoon,» the young man went on. «I had a meal at the hotel, sent a letter to my people, giving them the address and then went out to buy a piece of soap. They are supposed to give you soap at the hotel but it’s always so bad that I decided to buy some for myself. I bought it, had a drink at a bar, and looked at the shops. When I wanted to go back to the hotel, I suddenly realized that I didn’t remember its name or even what street it was in. Of course I can write to my people for the address, but they won’t get my letter till tomorrow. The only shilling I had on me when I came out was spent on the soap and the drink and here I am with two pence in my pocket and nowhere to go for the night.»
There was a pause after he told the story.
«I’m afraid you don’t believe me,» he added.
«Why not?» said Norman. «I did the same thing once in a foreign capital. So I can understand you very well.»
«I’m glad you do,» the young man said with a pleasant smile. «And now I must go. I hope by the time it gets quite dark I’ll have found a man who’ll believe me like you did, and will agree to lend me some money.»
«Of course,» said Norman slowly. «The weak point of your story is that you can’t produce the soap.»
The young man put his hand into his pocket and suddenly got up.
«I’ve lost it,» he said angrily.
«It’s too much to lose a hotel and a piece of soap on the same day,» said Norman.
But the young man did not hear him. He was running away.
«It was a good idea to ask him about the soap, and so simple,» Norman thought as he rose to go. But at that moment he noticed a small packet lying by the side of the bench. It could be nothing but a piece of soap, and it had evidently fallen out of the young man’s coat pocket when he threw himself down on the bench. Turning red, Norman picked it up.
«I just can’t allow him to go away like this,» he thought, and started running after the young man.
«Stop!» cried Norman when he saw him at the Park gate. The young man obeyed.
«Here’s your piece of soap,» Norman said. «I found it under the bench. Don’t lose it again, it’s been a good friend to you. And here’s a pound, if it can help you».
«Thanks,» said the young man, and quickly put the money into his pocket.
«Here’s my card with my address,» continued Norman. «You can return the money any day this week.»
The young man thanked him again and quickly went away.
«It’s a good lesson to me,» Norman thought, and went back to the Park. When he was passing the bench where the little drama had taken place, he saw an old gentleman looking for something.
«Have you lost anything, sir?» Norman asked.
«Yes, sir, a piece of soap».

0

192

What’s the Miracle’s Cost?

Tess was eight years old. One day she heard that her Mom and Dad were talking about her little brother, Andrew. All she knew was that he was very ill and they were completely out of money. They were moving to an apartment complex the following month because Daddy didn’t have the money for the doctor bills and the house. Only a very costly surgery could save him now and there was no-one to loan them the money. She heard Daddy say to her tearful Mother, “Only a miracle can save him now.”

Tess went to her bedroom and pulled a glass jar from the closet. She poured all the change out on the floor and counted it carefully. Three times, even. The total had to be exactly perfect. No chance here for mistakes. She carefully put the coins back in the jar and she slipped out the back door and made her way to Rexall’s Drug Store.

She waited patiently for the pharmacist to give her some attention but he was talking to another man. Tess twisted her feet to make a noise. Nothing. She cleared her throat with a disgusting sound. No good. Finally she took a quarter from her jar and banged it on the glass counter. That did it!

“And what do you want?” the pharmacist asked in an annoyed tone of voice. “I’m talking to my brother from Chicago.  I haven’t seen him in ages,” he said without waiting for a reply to his question.

“Well, I want to talk to you about my brother,” Tess answered back in the same annoyed tone. “He’s really, really sick … and I want to buy a miracle.”

“I beg your pardon?” said the pharmacist.

“His name is Andrew and he has something bad growing inside his head and my Daddy says only a miracle can save him now. So how much does a miracle cost?”

“We don’t sell miracles here, little girl. I’m sorry but I can’t help you,” the pharmacist said.

“Listen, I have the money to pay for it. If it isn’t enough, I will get the rest. Just tell me how much it costs.”

The pharmacist’s brother was a well dressed man. He stooped down and asked the little girl, “What kind of a miracle does you brother need?”

“I don’t know,” Tess replied. There were tears in her eyes. “I just know he’s really sick and Mommy says he needs an operation. But my Daddy can’t pay for it, so I want to use my money.

“How much do you have?” asked the man from Chicago.

“One dollar and eleven cents,” Tess answered. “And it’s all the money I have, but I can get some more if I need to.”

“Well, what a coincidence,” smiled the man. “A dollar and eleven cents — the exact price of a miracle for little brothers.” He took her money in one hand and with the other hand he took her hand and said, “Take me to where you live. I want to see your brother and meet your parents. Let’s see if I have the kind of miracle you need.”

That well dressed man was Dr. Carlton Armstrong, a surgeon, specializing in neuro-surgery. The operation was completed without charge and it wasn’t long until Andrew was home again and doing well. Mom and Dad were happily talking about this event. “That surgery,” her mom whispered, “was a real miracle. I wonder how much it would have cost.”

Tess smiled. She knew exactly how much a miracle cost… one dollar and eleven cents… plus the faith of a little child.

0

193

Mistaken Identity

by Mark Twain

Years ago I arrived one day at Salamanca, New York, where I was to change trains and take the sleeper. There were crowds of people on the platform, and they were all trying to get into the long sleeper train which was already packed. I asked the young man in the booking-office if I could have a sleeping-berth and he answered: «No.» I went off and asked another local official if I could have some poor little corner somewhere in a sleeping-car, but he interrupted me angrily saying, «No, you can’t, every corner is full. Now, don’t bother me any more,» and he turned his back and walked off. I felt so hurt that I said to my companion, «If these people knew who I was, they…»1 But my companion stopped me there,— «Don’t talk such nonsense, we’ll have to put up with this,» he said, «If they knew who you were, do you think it would help you to get a vacant seat1 in a train which has no vacant seats in it?»
This did not improve my condition at all, but just then I noticed that the porter of a sleeping-car had his eye on me. I saw the expression of his face suddenly change. He whispered to the uniformed conductor, pointing to me, and I realized I was being talked about. Then the conductor came forward, his face all politeness.
«Can I be of any service to you?» he asked. «Do you want a place in a sleeping-car?»
«Yes,» I said, «I’ll be grateful to you if you can give me a place, anything will do.»
«We have nothing left except the big family compartment,» he continued, «with two berths and a couple of armchairs in it, but it is entirely at your disposal. Here, Tom, take these suitcases aboard!»
Then he touched his hat, and we moved along.3 I was eager to say a few words to my companion, but I changed my mind. The porter made us comfortable in the compartment, and then said, with many bows and smiles:
«Now, is there anything you want, sir? Because you can have just anything you want.»
«Can I have some hot water?» I asked.
«Yes, sir, I’ll get it myself.»
«Good! Now, that lamp is hung too high above the berth. Can I have a better lamp fixed just at the head of my bed below the luggage rack, so that I can read comfortably?»
«Yes, sir. The lamp you want is just being fixed in the next compartment. I’ll get it from there and fix it here. It’ll burn all night. Yes, sir, you can ask for anything you want, the whole railroad will be turned inside out to please you.» And he disappeared.
I smiled at my companion, and said:
«Well, what do you say now? Didn’t their attitude change the moment they understood I was Mark Twain? You see the result, don’t you?» My companion did not answer. So I added, «Don’t you like the way you are being served? And all for the same fare.»
As I was saying this, the porter’s smiling face appeared in the doorway and this speech followed:
«Oh, sir, I recognized you the minute I set my eyes on you. I told the conductor so.»
«Is that so, my boy?» I said handing him a good tip. «Who am I?»
«Mr McCleilan, Mayor of New York», he said and disappeared again.

0

194

Little White Dog

There was an old woman who had no family still living. Her only friend was a little white dog who went everywhere with her — with one exception. The dog loved the fireplace in winter, and after the old woman went to bed he would sometimes go and lie in front of the warm coals. Usually though, the dog slept at the very edge of the bed on a throw rug.

The woman wouldn’t allow the dog on the bed with her, but if she became frightened or had a nightmare, she would put her hand down to the little white dog and he would lick it reassuringly.

One night the woman was reading her newspaper just before going to sleep. She shivered and pulled the comforter up around her as she read that a mental patient had wandered off from a nearby hospital. No one knew if the patient was dangerous of not; he was a suspect in the murders of several women who had lived alone.

The woman turned out the lights and tried to sleep, but she was frightened, and tossed and turned fitfully. Finally, she reached down to where the little white dog slept. Sure enough, a warm, wet tongue began to lick her hand. The woman felt reassured and safe, and left her hand dangling off the bed as she turned and settled in comfortably. She opened her eyes for a moment and looked through the open door into the living room.

There in front of the fireplace, sat her little white dog, gazing at the coals and wagging his tail.

Down beside the bed, something was still licking her hand.

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195

A Service of Love

by O. Henry

Joe Larrabee dreamed of becoming a great artist. Even when he was six, people in the little western town where he lived used to say, «Joe has great talent, he will become a famous artist.» At twenty, he left his home town and went to New York. He had his dreams — but very little money.

Delia had her dreams too. She played the piano so well in the little southern village where she lived that her family said, «She must finish her musical training in New York.» With great difficulty they collected enough money to send her north «to finish».

Joe and Delia got acquainted at a friend’s house where some art and music students had gathered to discuss art, music and the newest plays. They fell in love with each other, and in a short time they married.

Mr. and Mrs. Larrabee began their married life in a little room. But they were happy, for they had their Art, and they had each other. Joe was painting in, he class of the great Magister. Mr. Magister got a lot of money for his pictures — and he took a lot of money for his lessons. Delia was taking piano lessons from the great Rosenstock, and he was taking a lot of money from Delia.

The two young dreamers were very, very happy while their money lasted. But it didn’t last very long. Soon, they didn’t have enough to pay for their lessons and eat three times a day. When one loves one’s Art, no service seems too hard. So Delia decided she must stop taking lessons and give lessons herself. She began to look for pupils. One evening, she came home very excited, with shining eyes.

«Joe, dear,» she announced happily, «I’ve got a pupil. General Pinkney — I mean — his daughter, Clementina. He’s very rich, and they have a wonderful house. She’s so beautiful — she dresses in white; and she’s so nice and pleasant! I’m going to give her three lessons a week; and just think, Joe! Five dollars a lesson. Now, dear, don’t look so worried, and let’s have supper. I’ve bought some very nice fish.»

But Joe refused to listen to her. «That’s all right for you, Dellie, but all wrong for me,» he protested. «Do you suppose I’m going to let you work while I continue to study Art? No! Never! I can get a job as a mechanic or clean windows. I’ll get some kind of work.»

Delia threw her arms around him. «Joe, dear, you mustn’t think of leaving Mr. Magister and your Art. I am not giving up music. The lessons won’t interfere with my music. While I teach, I learn, and I can go back to Rosenstock when I get a few more pupils.»

«All right,» said Joe. «But giving lessons isn’t Art.»

«When one loves one’s Art, no service seems too hard,» said Delia.

During the next week, Mr. and Mrs. Larrabee had breakfast very early. Joe was painting some pictures in Central Park, and he needed the morning light especially, he said. Time flies when you love Art, and it was usually seven o’clock in the evening when Joe returned home. At the end of the week, Delia, very proud but a little tired, put fifteen dollars on the table. «Sometimes,» she said, «Clementina is a very dif f icult pupil. And she always wears white. I’m tired of seeing the same colour.»

And then Joe, with the manner of Monte Cristo, pulled eighteen dollars out of his pocket and put it on the table too. «I sold one of my pictures to a man from Washington,» he said. «And now, he wants a picture of the East River to take with him to Washington.»

«I’m so glad you haven’t given up your Art, dear,» Delia said. «You are sure to win! Thirty-three dollars! We have never had so much money to spend.»

The next Saturday evening, Joe came home first. He put his money on the table and then washed what seemed to look like a lot of paint from his hands. Half an hour later, Delia arrived. There was a big bandage on her right hand. «Dellie, dear, what has happened? What is the matter with your hand?» Joe asked.

Delia laughed, but not very happily. «Clementina,» she explained, «asked me to have lunch with her and the General af ter our lesson. She’s not very strong, you know, and when she was giving me some tea, her hand shook and she spilled a lot of very hot water over my hand. But General Pinkney bandaged my hand himself. They were both so sorry. Oh, Joe, did you sell another picture?» She had seen the money on the table.

«Yes,» said Joe. «To the man from Washington. What time this afternoon did you burn your hand, Dellie?»

«Five o’clock, I think,» said Delia. «The iron — the water was very hot. And Clementina cried, and General Pinkney…»

Joe put his arms round Delia. «Where are you working, Dellie? Tell me,» he asked in a serious voice.

Delia was about to say something, but-suddenly tears appeared in her eyes and she began to cry. «I couldn’t get any pupils,» she said. «And I didn’t want you to stop taking lessons, so I got a job ironing shirts in the big laundry on Twenty-Fourth Street. This afternoon, I burned my hand with a hot iron. Don’t be angry with me, Joe. I did it for your Art. And now, you have painted those pictures for the rrian from Washington…»

«He isn’t from Washington,» said Joe slowly.

«It makes no difference where he is from,» said Delia. «How clever you are, Joe! How did you guess that I wasn’t giving music lessons?»

“I guessed”, Joe said, «because about five o’clock this afternoon, I sent some oil up to the ironing-room. They said a girl had burned her hand. You see, dear, I work as a mechanic in that same laundry on Twenty-Fourth Street.»

“And the man from Washington…?”

“Yes, dear”, Joe said. “The man from Washington and General Pinkney are both creations of the same art, but you cannot call it painting or music”. And they both began to laugh.

“You know, dear”, Joe said. “When one loves one’s Art, no service seems…”

But Delia stopped him with her hand on his mouth. “No”, she said, “just — “when one loves”.”

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196

Neighbours

by Chris Rose

Alberto took one look at his new neighbours and knew that his life was going to get more difficult. He watched them arrive in their big, noisy car and watched them get out.  There they were, two of them, as big and as noisy as their car, and smelly and stupid as well.

‘Terrible!’ he thought. ‘How am I going to put up with them?’ He went to tell Mimi. Mimi was the friend he lived with.
‘Have you seen the new neighbours?’ he asked her.
‘No’ she said. ‘Who are they?’
‘Two of them. The ones we don’t like. Big and noisy and stupid and smelly. Just like they always are.’
‘Oh, no’ said Mimi. ‘How awful! Still, I suppose we can just ignore them.’
‘I suppose you’re right’ agreed Alberto. ‘We’ll just have to ignore them.’

For a few days, then, Alberto and Mimi tried to ignore their new neighbours. When the neighbours went out for a walk, Alberto and Mimi didn’t say hello to them. When the neighbours were in their garden, Alberto and Mimi went inside. This was ok for a few days, but, perhaps inevitably, things didn’t stay this way …

One day Alberto woke up from his sleep to find one of the neighbours in his garden.  “Mimi!” he shouted.  ‘Have you seen this!? He’s in our garden!!!! Look!’
‘How terrible” said Mimi. ‘Let’s call our staff and make sure they get rid of him immediately!’

Mimi went off to call their staff. Two minutes later Alberto and Mimi’s head of staff was out in the garden trying to get rid of the unwelcome neighbour. ‘Go on!’ he shouted. ‘Get out of here!  Go home!’ The neighbour didn’t say anything, but gave Alberto and Mimi’s head of staff a dirty look, then he went back into his garden. Alberto and Mimi felt better, and then asked their head of staff to prepare their lunch for them.

However, it wasn’t enough. Over the next few days Alberto and Mimi often found one or other or both of their new neighbours walking around their own garden. It was terrible. To show how they felt, Alberto and Mimi went into their neighbours’ garden, at night, when the neighbours were inside, and broke all the flowers.

The next morning one of the neighbours came to talk to Alberto.

‘Hey!’ he said. ‘Hey you!’ Alberto ignored him, but he continued talking. ‘You came into our garden last night and broke all the flowers!’ Alberto didn’t say anything, but gave his neighbour a dirty look. ‘Now I’m in trouble! continued his neighbour. They think I did it!’
‘Who are ‘they’?’ asked Alberto.
‘My owners, of course … ‘replied the neighbour.
‘Owners !!???’ said Alberto. ‘You have ‘owners’?’
‘Course we do’ said his neighbour. ‘Don’t you?’
‘Oh no’ replied Alberto. ‘We have staff.’

Alberto went to tell Mimi that the neighbours didn’t have staff, but they had owners.

‘That’s not a surprise’ said Mimi. ‘That explains everything. That’s why they’re so noisy and smelly and stupid. We need to make their «owners» become «staff.

The next day, Alberto and Mimi were actually very friendly with their new neighbours.  They tried to explain how to make their owners become «staff.»

‘Listen’ said Alberto to them. ‘It’s very easy. First, understand that the house is your house, not theirs … ‘
‘And second’ said Mimi, ‘make sure that you are always clean.’
‘Make sure they give you food whenever you want!’
‘Sit on the newspaper while they are reading it!’
‘Sleep as much as possible – on their beds!’
‘And finally, try not to bark, but to miaow instead.’

But it was no good. The neighbours just didn’t understand. After a week, they gave up.

‘It’s no good’ said Mimi. ‘They’ll never understand – dogs have owners, cats have staff.’

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197

All Summer in a Day

by Ray Bradbury

«Ready?»

«Ready.»

«Now?»

«Soon.»

«Do the scientists really know? Will it happen today, will it?»

«Look, look; see for yourself!»

The children pressed to each other like so many roses, so many weeds, intermixed, peering out for a look at the hidden sun.

It rained.

It had been raining for seven years; thousands upon thousands of days compounded and filled from one end to the other with rain, with the drum and gush of water, with the sweet crystal fall of showers and the concussion of storms so heavy they were tidal waves come over the islands. A thousand forests had been crushed under the rain and grown up a thousand times to be crushed again. And this was the way life was forever on the planet Venus, and this was the school room of the children of the rocket men and women who had come to a raining world to set up civilization and live out their lives.

«It’s stopping, it’s stopping!»

«Yes, yes!»

Margot stood apart from them, from these children who could ever remember a time when there wasn’t rain and rain and rain. They were all nine years old, and if there had been a day, seven years ago, when the sun came out for an hour and showed its face to the stunned world, they could not recall. Sometimes, at night, she heard them stir, in remembrance, and she knew they were dreaming and remembering gold or a yellow crayon or a coin large enough to buy the world with. She knew they thought they remembered a warmness, like a blushing in the face, in the body, in the arms and legs and trembling hands. But then they always awoke to the tatting drum, the endless shaking down of clear bead necklaces upon the roof, the walk, the gardens, the forests, and their dreams were gone.

All day yesterday they had read in class about the sun. About how like a lemon it was, and how hot. And they had written small stories or essays or poems about it:

I think the sun is a flower,
That blooms for just one hour.

That was Margot’s poem, read in a quiet voice in the still classroom while the rain was falling outside.

«Aw, you didn’t write that!» protested one of the boys.

«I did,» said Margot. «I did.»

«William!» said the teacher.

But that was yesterday. Now the rain was slackening, and the children were crushed in the great thick windows.

Where’s teacher?»

«She’ll be back.»

«She’d better hurry, we’ll miss it!»

They turned on themselves, like a feverish wheel, all tumbling spokes. Margot stood alone. She was a very frail girl who looked as if she had been lost in the rain for years and the rain had washed out the blue from her eyes and the red from her mouth and the yellow from her hair. She was an old photograph dusted from an album, whitened away, and if she spoke at all her voice would be a ghost. Now she stood, separate, staring at the rain and the loud wet world beyond the huge glass.

«What’re you looking at?» said William.

Margot said nothing.

«Speak when you’re spoken to.»

He gave her a shove. But she did not move; rather she let herself be moved only by him and nothing else. They edged away from her, they would not look at her. She felt them go away. And this was because she would play no games with them in the echoing tunnels of the underground city. If they tagged her and ran, she stood blinking after them and did not follow. When the class sang songs about happiness and life and games her lips barely moved. Only when they sang about the sun and the summer did her lips move as she watched the drenched windows. And then, of course, the biggest crime of all was that she had come here only five years ago from Earth, and she remembered the sun and the way the sun was and the sky was when she was four in Ohio. And they, they had been on Venus all their lives, and they had been only two years old when last the sun came out and had long since forgotten the color and heat of it and the way it really was.

But Margot remembered.

«It’s like a penny,» she said once, eyes closed.

«No it’s not!» the children cried.

«It’s like a fire,» she said, «in the stove.»

«You’re lying, you don’t remember!» cried the children.

But she remembered and stood quietly apart from all of them and watched the patterning windows. And once, a month ago, she had refused to shower in the school shower rooms, had clutched her hands to her ears and over her head, screaming the water mustn’t touch her head. So after that, dimly, dimly, she sensed it, she was different and they knew her difference and kept away. There was talk that her father and mother were taking her back to Earth next year; it seemed vital to her that they do so, though it would mean the loss of thousands of dollars to her family. And so, the children hated her for all these reasons of big and little consequence. They hated her pale snow face, her waiting silence, her thinness, and her possible future.

«Get away!» The boy gave her another push. «What’re you waiting for?»

Then, for the first time, she turned and looked at him. And what she was waiting for was in her eyes.

«Well, don’t wait around here!» cried the boy savagely. «You won’t see nothing!»

Her lips moved.

«Nothing!» he cried. «It was all a joke, wasn’t it?» He turned to the other children. «Nothing’s happening today. Is it?»

They all blinked at him and then, understanding, laughed and shook their heads.

«Nothing, nothing!»

«Oh, but,» Margot whispered, her eyes helpless. «But this is the day, the scientists predict, they say, they know, the sun…»

«All a joke!» said the boy, and seized her roughly. «Hey, everyone, let’s put her in a closet before the teacher comes!»

«No,» said Margot, falling back.

They surged about her, caught her up and bore her, protesting, and then pleading, and then crying, back into a tunnel, a room, a closet, where they slammed and locked the door. They stood looking at the door and saw it tremble from her beating and throwing herself against it. They heard her muffled cries. Then, smiling, the turned and went out and back down the tunnel, just as the teacher arrived.

«Ready, children?» She glanced at her watch.

«Yes!» said everyone.

«Are we all here?»

«Yes!»

The rain slacked still more.

They crowded to the huge door.

The rain stopped.

It was as if, in the midst of a film concerning an avalanche, a tornado, a hurricane, a volcanic eruption, something had, first, gone wrong with the sound apparatus, thus muffling and finally cutting off all noise, all of the blasts and repercussions and thunders, and then, second, ripped the film from the projector and inserted in its place a beautiful tropical slide which did not move or tremor. The world ground to a standstill. The silence was so immense and unbelievable that you felt your ears had been stuffed or you had lost your hearing altogether. The children put their hands to their ears. They stood apart. The door slid back and the smell of the silent, waiting world came in to them.

The sun came out.

It was the color of flaming bronze and it was very large. And the sky around it was a blazing blue tile color. And the jungle burned with sunlight as the children, released from their spell, rushed out, yelling into the springtime.

«Now, don’t go too far,» called the teacher after them. «You’ve only two hours, you know. You wouldn’t want to get caught out!»

But they were running and turning their faces up to the sky and feeling the sun on their cheeks like a warm iron; they were taking off their jackets and letting the sun burn their arms.

«Oh, it’s better than the sun lamps, isn’t it?»

«Much, much better!»

They stopped running and stood in the great jungle that covered Venus, that grew and never stopped growing, tumultuously, even as you watched it. It was a nest of octopi, clustering up great arms of fleshlike weed, wavering, flowering in this brief spring. It was the color of rubber and ash, this jungle, from the many years without sun. It was the color of stones and white cheeses and ink, and it was the color of the moon.

The children lay out, laughing, on the jungle mattress, and heard it sigh and squeak under them resilient and alive. They ran among the trees, they slipped and fell, they pushed each other, they played hide-and-seek and tag, but most of all they squinted at the sun until the tears ran down their faces; they put their hands up to that yellowness and that amazing blueness and they breathed of the fresh, fresh air and listened and listened to the silence which suspended them in a blessed sea of no sound and no motion. They looked at everything and savored everything. Then, wildly, like animals escaped from their caves, they ran and ran in shouting circles. They ran for an hour and did not stop running.

And then -

In the midst of their running one of the girls wailed.

Everyone stopped.

The girl, standing in the open, held out her hand.

«Oh, look, look,» she said, trembling.

They came slowly to look at her opened palm.

In the center of it, cupped and huge, was a single raindrop. She began to cry, looking at it. They glanced quietly at the sun.

«Oh. Oh.»

A few cold drops fell on their noses and their cheeks and their mouths. The sun faded behind a stir of mist. A wind blew cold around them. They turned and started to walk back toward the underground house, their hands at their sides, their smiles vanishing away.

A boom of thunder startled them and like leaves before a new hurricane, they tumbled upon each other and ran. Lightning struck ten miles away, five miles away, a mile, a half mile. The sky darkened into midnight in a flash.

They stood in the doorway of the underground for a moment until it was raining hard. Then they closed the door and heard the gigantic sound of the rain falling in tons and avalanches, everywhere and forever.

«Will it be seven more years?»

«Yes. Seven.»

Then one of them gave a little cry.

«Margot!»

«What?»

«She’s still in the closet where we locked her.»

«Margot.»

They stood as if someone had driven them, like so many stakes, into the floor. They looked at each other and then looked away. They glanced out at the world that was raining now and raining and raining steadily. They could not meet each other’s glances. Their faces were solemn and pale. They looked at their hands and feet, their faces down.

«Margot.»

One of the girls said, «Well…?»

No one moved.

«Go on,» whispered the girl.

They walked slowly down the hall in the sound of cold rain. They turned through the doorway to the room in the sound of the storm and thunder, lightning on their faces, blue and terrible. They walked over to the closet door slowly and stood by it.

Behind the closet door was only silence.

They unlocked the door, even more slowly, and let Margot out.

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198

A Pair of Silk Stockings

by Kate Chopin

Little Missus Sommers one day found herself the unexpected owner of fifteen dollars. It seemed to her a very large amount of money. The way it filled up her worn money holder gave her a feeling of importance that she had not enjoyed for years.

The question of investment was one she considered carefully. For a day or two she walked around in a dreamy state as she thought about her choices. She did not wish to act quickly and do anything she might regret. During the quiet hours of the night she lay awake considering ideas.

A dollar or two could be added to the price she usually paid for her daughter Janie’s shoes. This would guarantee they would last a great deal longer than usual. She would buy cloth for new shirts for the boys. Her daughter Mag should have another dress. And still there would be enough left for new stockings — two pairs per child. What time that would save her in always repairing old stockings! The idea of her little family looking fresh and new for once in their lives made her restless with excitement.

The neighbors sometimes talked of the «better days» that little Missus Sommers had known before she had ever thought of being Missus Sommers. She herself never looked back to her younger days. She had no time to think about the past. The needs of the present took all her energy.

Missus Sommers knew the value of finding things for sale at reduced prices. She could stand for hours making her way little by little toward the desired object that was selling below cost. She could push her way if need be.

But that day she was tired and a little bit weak. She had eaten a light meal—no! She thought about her day. Between getting the children fed and the house cleaned, and preparing herself to go shopping, she had forgotten to eat at all!

When she arrived at the large department store, she sat in front of an empty counter. She was trying to gather strength and courage to push through a mass of busy shoppers. She rested her hand upon the counter.

She wore no gloves. She slowly grew aware that her hand had felt something very pleasant to touch. She looked down to see that her hand lay upon a pile of silk stockings. A sign nearby announced that they had been reduced in price. A young girl who stood behind the counter asked her if she wished to examine the silky leg coverings.

She smiled as if she had been asked to inspect diamond jewelry with the aim of purchasing it. But she went on feeling the soft, costly items. Now she used both hands, holding the stockings up to see the light shine through them.

Two red marks suddenly showed on her pale face. She looked up at the shop girl.

«Do you think there are any size eights-and-a-half among these?»

There were a great number of stockings in her size. Missus Sommers chose a black pair and looked at them closely.

«A dollar and ninety-eight cents,» she said aloud. «Well, I will buy this pair.»

She handed the girl a five dollar bill and waited for her change and the wrapped box with the stockings. What a very small box it was! It seemed lost in her worn old shopping bag.

Missus Sommers then took the elevator which carried her to an upper floor into the ladies’ rest area. In an empty corner, she replaced her cotton stockings for the new silk ones.
For the first time she seemed to be taking a rest from the tiring act of thought. She had let herself be controlled by some machine-like force that directed her actions and freed her of responsibility.

How good was the touch of the silk on her skin! She felt like lying back in the soft chair and enjoying the richness of it. She did for a little while. Then she put her shoes back on and put her old stockings into her bag. Next, she went to the shoe department, sat down and waited to be fitted.

The young shoe salesman was unable to guess about her background. He could not resolve her worn, old shoes with her beautiful, new stockings. She tried on a pair of new boots.

She held back her skirts and turned her feet one way and her head another way as she looked down at the shiny, pointed boots. Her foot and ankle looked very lovely. She could not believe that they were a part of herself. She told the young salesman that she wanted an excellent and stylish fit. She said she did not mind paying extra as long as she got what she desired.

After buying the new boots, she went to the glove department. It was a long time since Missus Sommers had been fitted with gloves. When she had bought a pair they were always «bargains,» so cheap that it would have been unreasonable to have expected them to be fitted to her hand.

Now she rested her arm on the counter where gloves were for sale. A young shop girl drew a soft, leather glove over Missus Sommers’s hand. She smoothed it down over the wrist and buttoned it neatly. Both women lost themselves for a second or two as they quietly praised the little gloved hand.

There were other places where money might be spent. A store down the street sold books and magazines. Missus Sommers bought two costly magazines that she used to read back when she had been able to enjoy other pleasant things.

She lifted her skirts as she crossed the street. Her new stockings and boots and gloves had worked wonders for her appearance. They had given her a feeling of satisfaction, a sense of belonging to the well-dressed crowds.

She was very hungry. Another time she would have ignored the desire for food until reaching her own home. But the force that was guiding her would not permit her to act on such a thought.

There was a restaurant at the corner. She had never entered its doors. She had sometimes looked through the windows. She had noted the white table cloths, shining glasses and waiters serving wealthy people.

When she entered, her appearance created no surprise or concern, as she had half feared it might.

She seated herself at a small table. A waiter came at once to take her order. She ordered six oysters, a chop, something sweet, a glass of wine and a cup of coffee. While waiting to be served she removed her gloves very slowly and set them beside her. Then she picked up her magazine and looked through it.

It was all very agreeable. The table cloths were even more clean and white than they had seemed through the window. And the crystal drinking glasses shined even more brightly. There were ladies and gentlemen, who did not notice her, lunching at the small tables like her own.

A pleasing piece of music could be heard, and a gentle wind was blowing through the window. She tasted a bite, and she read a word or two and she slowly drank the wine. She moved her toes around in the silk stockings. The price of it all made no difference.

When she was finished, she counted the money out to the waiter and left an extra coin on his tray. He bowed to her as if she were a princess of royal blood.

There was still money in her purse, and her next gift to herself presented itself as a theater advertisement. When she entered the theater, the play had already begun. She sat between richly dressed women who were there to spend the day eating sweets and showing off their costly clothing. There were many others who were there only to watch the play.

It is safe to say there was no one there who had the same respect that Missus Sommers did for her surroundings. She gathered in everything — stage and players and people — in one wide sensation. She laughed and cried at the play. She even talked a little with the women. One woman wiped her eyes with a small square of lace and passed Missus Sommers her box of candy.

The play was over, the music stopped, the crowd flowed outside. It was like a dream ended. Missus Sommers went to wait for the cable car.

A man with sharp eyes sat opposite her. It was hard for him to fully understand what he saw in her expression. In truth, he saw nothing — unless he was a magician. Then he would sense her heartbreaking wish that the cable car would never stop anywhere, but go on and on with her forever.

The End

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199

One thousand dollars

by O. Henry

«One thousand dollars,» said the lawyer Tolman, in a severe and serious voice. «And here is the money.”

Young Gillian touched the thin package of fifty-dollar bills and laughed.

«It’s such an unusual amount,» he explained, kindly, to the lawyer. “If it had been ten thousand a man might celebrate with a lot of fireworks. Even fifty dollars would have been less trouble.»

«You heard the reading of your uncle’s will after he died,» continued the lawyer Tolman. «I do not know if you paid much attention to its details. I must remind you of one. You are required to provide us with a report of how you used this one thousand dollars as soon as you have spent it. I trust that you will obey the wishes of your late uncle.»

«You may depend on it,» said the young man respectfully.

Gillian went to his club. He searched for a man he called Old Bryson.

Old Bryson was a calm, anti-social man, about forty years old. He was in a corner reading a book. When he saw Gillian coming near he took a noisy, deep breath, laid down his book and took off his glasses.

«I have a funny story to tell you,” said Gillian.

«I wish you would tell it to someone in the billiard room,» said Old Bryson. «You know how I hate your stories.»

«This is a better one than usual,» said Gillian, rolling a cigarette, and I’m glad to tell it to you. It’s too sad and funny to go with the rattling of billiard balls.

I’ve just come from a meeting with my late uncle’s lawyers. He leaves me an even thousand dollars. Now, what can a man possibly do with a thousand dollars?»

Old Bryson showed very little interest. «I thought the late Septimus Gillian was worth something like half a million.»

«He was,» agreed Gillian, happily. «And that’s where the joke comes in. He has left a lot of his money to an organism. That is, part of it goes to the man who invents a new bacillus and the rest to establish a hospital for doing away with it again. There are one or two small, unimportant gifts on the side. The butler and the housekeeper get a seal ring and ten dollars each. His nephew gets one thousand dollars.»

«Were there any others mentioned in your uncle’s will?» asked Old Bryson.

«None.» said Gillian. “There is a Miss Hayden. My uncle was responsible for her. She lived in his house. She’s a quiet thing…musical… the daughter of somebody who was unlucky enough to be his friend. I forgot to say that she was in on the ring and ten dollar joke, too. I wish I had been. Then I could have had two bottles of wine, given the ring to the waiter and had the whole business off my hands. Now tell me what a man can do with a thousand dollars.»

Old Bryson rubbed his glasses and smiled. And when Old Bryson smiled, Gillian knew that he intended to be more offensive than ever.

There are many good things a man could do with a thousand dollars,” said Bryson. «You?» he said with a gentle laugh. «Why, Bobby Gillian, there’s only one reasonable thing you could do. You can go and buy Miss Lotta Lauriere a diamond necklace with the money and then take yourself off to Idaho and inflict your presence upon a ranch. I advise a sheep ranch, as I have a particular dislike for sheep.”

«Thanks,» said Gillian as he rose from his chair. «I knew I could depend on you, Old Bryson. You’ve hit on the very idea. I wanted to spend the money on one thing, because I have to turn in a report for it, and I hate itemizing.”

Gillian phoned for a cab and said to the driver: «The stage entrance of the Columbine Theatre.»

The theater was crowded. Miss Lotta Lauriere was preparing for her performance when her assistant spoke the name of Mr. Gillian.

«Let it in,» said Miss Lauriere. «Now, what is it, Bobby? I’m going on stage in two minutes.»

“It won’t take two minutes for me. What do you say to a little thing in the jewelry line? I can spend one thousand dollars.»

“Say, Bobby,” said Miss Lauriere, “Did you see that necklace Della Stacey had on the other night? It cost two thousand two hundred dollars at Tiffany’s.”

Miss Lauriere was called to the stage for her performance.

Gillian slowly walked out to where his cab was waiting. «What would you do with a thousand dollars if you had it?» he asked the driver.

«Open a drinking place,» said the driver, quickly. «I know a place I could take money in with both hands. I’ve got it worked out—if you were thinking of putting up the money.”

«Oh, no,» said Gillian. “I was just wondering.”

Eight blocks down Broadway, Gillian got out of the cab. A blind man sat on the sidewalk selling pencils. Gillian went out and stood in front of him.

«Excuse me, but would you mind telling me what you would do if you had a thousand dollars?” asked Gillian.

The blind man took a small book from his coat pocket and held it out. Gillian opened it and saw that it was a bank deposit book.

It showed that the blind man had a balance of one thousand seven hundred eighty-five dollars in his bank account. Gillian returned the bank book and got back into the cab.

«I forgot something,» he said. «You may drive to the law offices of Tolman & Sharp.”

Lawyer Tolman looked at Gillian in a hostile and questioning way.

«I beg your pardon,» said Gillian, cheerfully. «But was Miss Hayden left anything by my uncle’s will in addition to the ring and the ten dollars?»

«Nothing,» said Mr. Tolman.

“I thank you very much, Sir,» said Gillian, and went to his cab. He gave the driver the address of his late uncle’s home.

Miss Hayden was writing letters in the library. The small, thin woman wore black clothes. But you would have noticed her eyes. Gillian entered the room as if the world were unimportant.

“I have just come from old Tolman’s,» he explained. “They have been going over the papers down there. They found a…” Gillian searched his memory for a legal term. “They found an amendment or a post-script or something to the will. It seemed that my uncle had second thoughts and willed you a thousand dollars. Tolman asked me to bring you the money. Here it is.”

Gillian laid the money beside her hand on the desk. Miss Hayden turned white. «Oh!» she said. And again, «Oh!»

Gillian half turned and looked out the window. In a low voice he said, «I suppose, of course, that you know I love you.»

«I am sorry,» said Miss Hayden, as she picked up her money.

«There is no use?» asked Gillian, almost light-heartedly.

«I am sorry,» she said again.

«May I write a note?» asked Gillian, with a smile. Miss Hayden supplied him with paper and pen, and then went back to her writing table.

Gillian wrote a report of how he spent the thousand dollars: “Paid by Robert Gillian, one thousand dollars on account of the eternal happiness, owed by Heaven to the best and dearest woman on earth.»

Gillian put the note into an envelope. He bowed to Miss Hayden and left.

His cab stopped again at the offices of Tolman & Sharp.

“I have spent the one thousand dollars,» he said cheerfully, to Tolman. «And I have come to present a report of it, as I agreed.” He threw a white envelope on the lawyer’s table.

Without touching the envelope, Mr. Tolman went to a door and called his partner, Sharp. Together they searched for something in a large safe. They brought out a big envelope sealed with wax. As they opened the envelope, they shook their heads together over its contents. Then Tolman became the spokesman.

«Mr. Gillian,» he said, “there was an addition to your uncle’s will. It was given to us privately, with instructions that it not be opened until you had provided us with a full report of your handling of the one thousand dollars received in the will.

“As you have satisfied the conditions, my partner and I have read the addition. I will explain to you the spirit of its contents.

“In the event that your use of the one thousand dollars shows that you possess any of the qualifications that deserve reward, you stand to gain much more. If your disposal of the money in question has been sensible, wise, or unselfish, it is in our power to give you bonds to the value of fifty thousand dollars. But if you have used this money in a wasteful, foolish way as you have in the past, the fifty thousand dollars is to be paid to Miriam Hayden, ward of the late Mr. Gillian, without delay.

“Now, Mr. Gillian, Mr. Sharp and I will examine your report of the one thousand dollars.”

Mr. Tolman reached for the envelope. Gillian was a little quicker in taking it up. He calmly tore the report and its cover into pieces and dropped them into his pocket.

«It’s all right,» he said, smilingly. «There isn’t a bit of need to bother you with this. I don’t suppose you would understand these itemized bets, anyway. I lost the thousand dollars on the races. Good-day to you, gentlemen.»

Tolman and Sharp shook their heads mournfully at each other when Gillian left. They heard him whistling happily in the hallway as he waited for the elevator.

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200

My Financial Career

after Stephen Leacock

My salary had been raised to fifty dollars a month and I felt that the bank was the only place for it. So I walked in and looked round at the clerks. I had an idea that a person who was about to open an account must necessarily speak to the manager.
«Can I see the manager?» I asked the clerk and added «alone.» I don’t know why I said «alone».
«Certainly,» said the clerk, and brought him.
The manager was a calm, serious man. While talking to him I held my fifty-six dollars in my pocket.
«Are you the manager?» I said. God knows I didn’t doubt it.
«Yes,» he said.
«Can I see you,» I asked, «alone?» I didn’t want to say «alone» again, but without this word the question seemed useless.
«Come in here,» he said, and led the way to a private room.
«We’re safe from interruption here,» he said. «Sit down.»
We both sat down and looked at each other. I found no voice to speak.
«You’re one of Pinkerton’s detectives, I suppose,» he said.
The expression in my eyes had made him think that I was a detective, and he looked worried.
«To speak the truth,» I began. «I’m not a detective at all. I’ve come to open an account. I intend to keep all my money in this bank.»
The manager looked serious, he felt sure now that I was a very rich man, probably a son of Baron Rothschild.
«A large account, I suppose,» he said. «Rather a large one,» I whispered. «I intend to place in this bank the sum of fifty-six dollars now, and fifty dollars a month regularly.»
The manager got up and opened the door. He called out to the clerk.
«Mr Montgomery,» he said loudly, «this gentleman is opening an account. He will place fifty-six dollars in it. Good morning.»
«Good morning,» I said, standing up, and walked through a big door into a safe.
«Come out,» said the manager coldly and showed me the other way.
I went up to the clerk and pushed the money to him. My face was terribly pale.
«Here,» I said, «put it on my account.» The sound of my voice seemed to mean, «Let’s do this painful thing while we feel that we want to do it.»
When the operation had been performed, I remembered that I hadn’t left any money for present use. My idea was to draw out six dollars. Someone gave me a chequebook and someone else began telling me how to write it out. The people in the bank seemed to think that I was a man who owned millions of dollars, but was not feeling very well. I wrote something on the cheque and pushed it towards the clerk. He looked at it.
«What, are you drawing it all out again?» he asked in surprise.
Then I realized that I had written fifty-six dollars instead of six. I was too upset to think clearly now. I had a feeling that it was impossible to explain the thing. All the clerks stopped writing to look at me. One of them prepared to pay the money.
«How will you have it?» he said.
«What?»
«How will you have it?»
«Oh,» I caught his meaning and answered without even trying to think,— «in fifty-dollar notes.» He gave me a fifty-dollar note.
«And the six?» he asked coldly.
«In six-dollar notes», I said.
He gave me six dollars, and I ran out. As the big door closed behind me, I heard a sound of laughter that went up to the roof of the bank. Since then I use a bank no more. I keep my money in my pocket and my savings in silver dollars in a sock.

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