The Lever - A Novel by William Dana Orcutt
page 34 of 327 (10%)
page 34 of 327 (10%)
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"Could she be Robert Gorham's daughter and not be an enthusiast?" Mrs. Gorham asked. "If father would only let me, I know I could make a success in business," Alice continued. "I watch him, when he least suspects it; I study the papers which he leaves around, and sometimes it seems as if I just must be a boy, and get into the thick of it." "What a funny idea!" Allen remarked. "I never thought girls cared anything about business." "But it's no use," she bemoaned. "I've got to be a girl whether I like it or not; but you haven't any such handicap." "Haven't I?--you forget the pater." "If you felt as strongly about it as I do, you could persuade him." "Have you--met the pater?" he asked, significantly. Alice smiled for a moment, and then became serious again. "If you have determination enough to succeed in business, Allen, the same characteristic will win out with your father." The boy did not know quite what to answer. Stephen Sanford insisted that the only reason Allen showed a preference for business was because he knew his father had set his heart on a different career for him. It may have been merely an unconscious assertion of his budding manhood which rebelled against having his life-work laid out for him without |
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