After a Shadow and Other Stories by T. S. (Timothy Shay) Arthur
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page 11 of 178 (06%)
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homely in their ungilded actualities, that we turn our thought and
interest away from them, and create ideal forms of use and beauty, into which we can never enter with conscious life. We are always losing the happiness of our to-days; and our to-morrows never come." I sighed my response, and sat for a long time silent. When the tea bell interrupted me from my reverie, Arty lay fast asleep on my bosom. As I kissed him on his way to his mother's arms, I said,-- "Dear baby! may it be your first and last pursuit of a shadow." "No--no! Not yet, my sweet one!" answered Mrs. Mayflower, hugging him to her heart. "Not yet. We cannot spare you from our world of shadows." II. IN THE WAY OF TEMPTATION. MARTIN GREEN was a young man of good habits and a good conceit of himself. He had listened, often and again, with as much patience as |
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