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The Dawn of a To-morrow by Frances Hodgson Burnett
page 40 of 71 (56%)

Polly hid her face in her hands.

"Oh, when they took her away to the hospital!" she shuddered. "Oh, when
they lifted her up to carry her!"

"I thought Polly 'd 'ave a fit when she 'eard 'er screamin' an'
swearin'. My! it was langwich! But it was the 'orspitle did it."

"Did what?"

"Dunno," with an uncertain, even slightly awed laugh. "Dunno wot it
did--neither does nobody else, but somethin' 'appened. It was along of
a lidy as come in one day an' talked to 'er when she was lyin' there.
My eye," chuckling, "it was queer talk! But I liked it. P'raps it was
lies, but it was cheerfle lies that 'elps yer. What I ses is--if THINGS
ain't cheerfle, PEOPLE's got to be--to fight it out. The women in the
'ouse larft fit to kill theirselves when she fust come 'ome limpin' an'
talked to 'em about what the lidy told 'er. But arter a bit they liked
to 'ear 'er--just along o' the cheerfleness. Said it was like a
pantermine. Drunken Bet says if she could get 'old 'f it an' believe it
sime as Jinny Montaubyn does it'd be as cheerin' as drink an' last
longer."

"Is it a kind of religion?" Dart asked, having a vague memory of rumors
of fantastic new theories and half-born beliefs which had seemed to him
weird visions floating through fagged brains wearied by old doubts and
arguments and failures. The world was tired--the whole earth was sad--
centuries had wrought only to the end of this twentieth century's
despair. Was the struggle waking even here--in this back water of the
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