Everybody's Lonesome eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 58 pages of information about Everybody's Lonesome.

Everybody's Lonesome eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 58 pages of information about Everybody's Lonesome.

“It is a splendid game,” he said when he was going, “and I’m glad you let me play.  If more people played this game, I’d find the world a lot pleasanter place to live in.”

“When you know the Secret you can show other people how to play,” Mary Alice suggested.

“That’s so,” he said.  “Well, I shan’t let you forget you are to tell it to me.”

VIII

LEARNING TO BE BRAVE AND SWEET

Godmother’s charming drawing-room seemed intolerably empty when he had gone and they two stood by the fire and looked into it trying to see again the jungle scene he had pointed out to them in the bed of coals.  But the jungle was gone; the vision had faded with the seer.  And Godmother and Mary Alice began picking up the teacups and the toast plate, almost as if there had been a funeral.

Then Godmother laughed.  “How solemn we are!” she said, pretending to think it all very funny.

But Mary Alice couldn’t pretend.  She set down his teacup which she had just lifted with gentle reverence off the mantel, where he left it, and went closer to Godmother.  Her lips were trembling, but she did not have to speak.

“I know, Precious—­I know,” whispered Godmother.  She sat down in a big chair close to the fire—­the chair he had just left—­and Mary Alice sat on the hearth-rug and nestled her head against Godmother’s knees.  Neither of them said anything for what seemed a long time.  They just looked into the glowing bed of coals and saw—­different things!

Then, “I think,” Mary Alice began, in a voice that was full of tears, “I think I wish we hadn’t played any game.  I think I wish I hadn’t seen him at all.”

“Lovey dear!”

“Yes, I do!” wept Mary Alice, refusing to be comforted.  “Everything was beautiful, before he came.  And now he’s gone, and I’m so—­lonesome!”

Godmother was silent for a moment.  “There’s the Secret,” she suggested, at last.  “It was—­it was when I felt just as you do now, that I began to learn the Secret.”

Mary Alice made no reply; there seemed to be nothing that she could say But after they had sat silent for a long while, she got up and kissed her godmother with a new passion which had in it tenderness as well as adoration.

“I don’t believe I can be brave and lovely about it, as you must have been to make people love you so.  But I’m going to try,” she said.

The success with which Mary Alice’s trying met was really beautiful to see.  At first, it was pretty hard for her to care much about the Secret, or about people.  Every assemblage just seemed to her an empty crowd where he was not.  But when she began to wonder to how many of those selfsame people the others seemed the same as to her, she was interested once more; the Secret began to work.

It worked so well, in fact, that Mary Alice came to be quite famous in a small way.  People in Godmother’s distinguished and delightful “set” talked enthusiastically of Mary Alice’s quiet charm, and she was asked here and asked there, and had a quite wonderful time.

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Project Gutenberg
Everybody's Lonesome from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.