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Everychild - A Story Which The Old May Interpret to the Young and Which the Young May Interpret to the Old by Louis Dodge
page 30 of 204 (14%)

"At any rate," said Everychild, "it's no use your searching any more.
You're looking for the crumbs you dropped, so you'd find the way home.
But I should think you could guess the birds had eaten them all up!"

Hansel turned to Grettel, his eyes more round than ever. "It must be
true!" he exclaimed.

"Where you made your mistake was in not dropping pebbles, the way you
did the first time--though I suppose you couldn't have got the pebbles,
being locked up in your room the night before. Anyway, it's no use
your trying to go back. Even if you found the way, the same thing
would happen again. Your father made a great mistake when he agreed to
lose you the first time, simply because your mother asked him to. You
know what the book says: 'If a man yields once he's done for.' You'd
much better go along with me."

Hansel became all curiosity at once. "Where to?" he asked.

Everychild undertook to reply quite frankly; but all of a sudden he
became dumb. It had seemed to him that he knew very well where he was
going. Even now he felt that the answer ought to be perfectly simple.
Just the same, he could not think of a single word!

Then he heard a voice behind him. "He has set forth on a quest of
Truth!" said the voice.

That was it, of course! He turned gratefully--and there was the Masked
Lady! She seemed to be smiling to herself, as if she had thought of
something which amused her. But on the whole her manner was really
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