Out of the Triangle: a story of the Far East by Mary E. (Mary Ellen) Bamford
page 107 of 169 (63%)
page 107 of 169 (63%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
|
Tio Diego laughed with joy and put the beans to cooking. Arturo
stayed home from school that afternoon, and helped wash. To-morrow the pay would come. Tio Diego tried lamely to help Arturo wash. Tia Marta was feeling better, and had just declared her intention of washing, when Arturo suddenly forsook the tub and dropped beside her. "Me malo, malo!" (bad) he sobbed. He cried bitterly, and told tia Marta about the watch-chain. Old tia Marta looked pityingly at her shamefaced nephew. "Poor child!" she said, "thou art young." But when next day the school teacher asked Arturo the reason of his absence from school the previous afternoon, and he had confessed the whole story, the teacher said, "Arturo, it is more beautiful to have a heart of love toward others than it is to wear a watch-chain even of real gold. Will you remember that?" Arturo promised, and the teacher said to herself: "I will see that tia Marta does not come to such straits again." COMALE'S REVENGE |
|


