Veronica And Other Friends - Two Stories For Children by Johanna Spyri
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page 4 of 111 (03%)
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also watching her, but his dancing blue eyes had in them a merry look of
pleased expectation. "I want to go out, Cousin Judith," said the girl, and her tones were half angry, half anxious, "Where can my mother be?" "Be still, be still," said the woman, still tumbling the contents of the cup-board about nervously. "I shall find something pretty for you presently; then you must sit down quietly and play with it, and not go outside, not one step, do you hear? Pshaw! there is nothing but rubbish here!" "Well, then give us the rose," said the little girl, still scowling. The woman looked about the room. "There are no roses here," she said. "How should there be, in March?" she added, half vexed at having looked for them. "There," said the child, pointing towards a book that the woman had but a moment before replaced in the cup-board. "Ah! now I know what you mean. So your mother always kept the rose, the "Fortune rose?" I often envied her when she used to show it to us in her hymn-book;" and as she spoke, she turned the leaves of the old hymnal, until she found the rose and handed it to the child. "Take it," she said, "be quiet, and do not get up from your seats till I come back;" and she hurried from the room. The little girl took the prettily-painted rose, in her hand; it was an old |
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