St. Nicholas, Vol. 5, No. 5, March, 1878 by Various
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page 5 of 203 (02%)
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of you boys for everything, and that is so nice; but there is only one
of me, ever, and that is _so_ lonely." And the little maid sighed; for besides these three, there were no children in the village. The brawny wood-cutters who lived in groups in the huts around, and who came home at night-fall to cook their own suppers and sleep on rude pallets before the fires, were the only other persons whom the little maiden knew; and sometimes the two boys (as boys will do to their sisters) teased and laughed at her, because she was timid, and because her little legs were too short to climb up on the great pile of logs where they loved to play. So it was no wonder that she longed for a playmate like herself. "Hi!" cried the boys, both together; "one might be sure you would wish for something silly! What should we do with _two_ girls, indeed?" "But father said he would bring 'something nice,' and _I_ think girls are the very nicest things in the world," replied Olga, sturdily. There would certainly have been more serious words, but just then good grandmother Ingeborg called "supper," and away scampered the hungry little party to their evening meal of brown bread and cream, to which was added, as a treat that night, a bit of goat's-milk cheese. During midsummer in Norway the sun does not set for nearly ten weeks, and only when little heads nod, and bright eyes shut and refuse to open, do children know that it is "sleep-time." So on this day, though the little hearts longed to wait for father's coming, six heavy lids said "no," and soon the tired children were sleeping soundly on their sweet, fresh beds of birch-twigs. |
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