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The Dawn of a To-morrow by Frances Hodgson Burnett
page 45 of 71 (63%)
dropped in the gutter an' don't know 'ow to get out--it's wot yer
mustn't let yer mind go back to."

"That's wot the lidy said," called out Glad. "Tell 'im about the lidy.
She doesn't even know who she was." The remark was tossed to Dart.

"Never even 'eard 'er name," with unabated cheer said Miss Montaubyn.
"She come an' she went an' me too low to do anything but lie an' look at
'er and listen. An' 'Which of us two is mad?' I ses to myself. But I
lay thinkin' and thinkin'--an' it was so cheerfle I couldn't get it out
of me 'ead--nor never 'ave since."

"What did she say?"

"I couldn't remember the words--it was the way they took away things a
body's afraid of. It was about things never 'avin' really been like
wot we thought they was. Godamighty now, there ain't a bit of 'arm in
'im."

"What?" he said with a start.

"'E never done the accidents and the trouble. It was us as went out of
the light into the dark. If we'd kep' in the light all the time, an'
thought about it, an' talked about it, we'd never 'ad nothin' else.
'Tain't punishment neither. 'T ain't nothin' but the dark--an' the dark
ain't nothin' but the light bein' away. 'Keep in the light,' she ses,
'never think of nothin' else, an' then you'll begin an' see things.
Everybody's been afraid. There ain't no need. You believe THAT.'"

"Believe?" said Dart heavily.
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