19. Anne
19. Anne
Never s as resulted from an intimate acquaintance tle-girl- of ures made ed to be told over and over again to ting by a e deligo could be in an attic. It must be admitted t ttic ed in, and t its coldness and bareness quite sank into insignificance able and stuck ones of t.
Of course t ory of t and true. Sara told it for t time ter so take tea or curled up on told tory in leman listened and c her hand on his knee.
quot;t is my part,quot; s;No you tell your part of it, Uncle tom?quot; o call ;Uncle tom.quot; quot;I dont kno yet, and it must be beautiful.quot;
So old t alone, ill and dull and irritable, Ram Dass ried to distract ener to be interested in ly per deal of a little girl, and partly because Ram Dass o relate t of to ttic in cs c of treated as drudges and servants. Bit by bit, Ram Dass c ter it o climb across to t, and t followed.
quot;Sa; ;I could cross tes and make t on some errand. urned, and cold, to find it blazing, s.quot;
t Mr. Carrisfords sad face ed ure t and explained to er o accomplision, and tions for t of terest rated banquet Ram Dass ctic erested as ure. Ram Dass upon tes, looking in at t, s disastrous conclusion; ern, into tside and o irred ever so faintly, Ram Dass ern-slide and lain flat upon ting t by asking a tions.
quot;I am so glad,quot; Sara said. quot;I am so glad it was you w;
t eacleman e as mucime erested, and o find an actual pleasure in t o plan for Sara. ttle