Everychild - A Story Which The Old May Interpret to the Young and Which the Young May Interpret to the Old by Louis Dodge
page 28 of 204 (13%)
page 28 of 204 (13%)
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He had scarcely spoken when he realized that he was all alone: Aladdin with his Oriental rug and his lamp was gone; the genie was gone. His hand was resting upon something very soft and cool. It seemed like a carpet, though finer than any carpet he had ever seen. And he remembered how his mother had scolded him more than once for lying on the carpet at home. "But no one will scold me for lying here," he reflected. So it came about that on his first night away from home he slept on the beautiful green carpet, with the Road of Troubled Children hard by. And he could not know that the thing he had wished for, and which had been given him was the very thing which poor beggars, beloved of God, are granted every tranquil summer night. CHAPTER IV EVERYCHILD IS JOINED BY HANSEL AND GRETTEL In the morning he went on his way along the Road of Troubled Children; and it seemed to him that he had gone a very great distance when he heard voices by the roadside. They were the voices of children, and it was plain to Everychild that they were in trouble. He waited until they came close, and then his heart bounded, because he |
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