Pebbles on the shore [by] Alpha of the plough by A. G. (Alfred George) Gardiner
page 72 of 190 (37%)
page 72 of 190 (37%)
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"Yes, but in the silence and the darkness there doesn't seem any answer to him." "Madame," I said, "if you will look up at the stars you will find a very complete answer." I confess that I find the owl not only tolerable but stimulating. I like to hear the pessimist really let himself go. It is the nameless and unformed fears of the mind that paralyse, but when my owl comes along and states the position at its blackest I begin to cheer up and feel defiant and combative. Is this the worst that can be said? Then let us see what the best is, and set about accomplishing it. "The thing is impossible," said the pessimist to Cobden. "Indeed," said that great man. "Then the sooner we set about doing it the better." Oh, oh, say I to my owl, all is lost, is it? You wait till the dawn comes, and hear what that little chap in the red waistcoat has to say about it. He's got quite another tale to tell, and it's a much more likely tale than yours. I shall go to bed and leave you to Gummidge in the trees until the sun comes up and tells you what a dismal fraud you are. "Tu-whit, tu-whoo," hoots the owl back at me. Yes, my dear sir, but you said that last night, and you have been saying it every night I have known you, and always the sun comes up and the spring comes round again and the flowers bloom, and the fields are golden with harvest. "Tu-whit, tu-whoo." |
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