A Small Book of Short Stories - The Best of Lucy Clifford. Lucy Clifford

A Small Book of Short Stories - The Best of Lucy Clifford - Lucy Clifford


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      A SMALL BOOK

      OF SHORT STORIES

      THE BEST OF

      LUCY CLIFFORD

       By

LUCY CLIFFORD

      Copyright © 2020 Read & Co. Children's

      This edition is published by Read & Co. Children's,

      an imprint of Read & Co.

      This book is copyright and may not be

      reproduced or copied in any way without the express permission of the publisher in writing.

      British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data

      A catalogue record for this book is available

      from the British Library.

      Read & Co. is part of Read Books Ltd.

      For more information visit

      www.readandcobooks.co.uk

      Contents

       ON THE WAY TO THE SUN

      FOR MONEY - FOR LOVE

       THE SANDY CAT

       THE NEW MOTHER

       WRITING A BOOK

       OVER THE PORRIDGE

       WOODEN TONY

       IN THE MOONLIGHT

       TOMMY

       THE DONKEY ON WHEELS

       THE BOY AND LITTLE GREAT LADY

       GOOD-DAY, GENTLE FOLK

       BIBLIOGRAPHY

      “I’ll give you the whole secret to short story writing. Here it is. Rule 1: Write stories that please yourself. There is no Rule 2.”

      —O. Henry

A SMALL BOOK OF SHORT STORIES

      ON THE

      WAY TO THE SUN

      He had journeyed a long way, and was very tired. It seemed like a dream when he stood up after a sleep in the field, and looked over the wall, and saw the garden, and the flowers, and the children playing all about. He looked at the long road behind him, at the dark wood and the barren hills; it was the world to which he belonged. He looked at the garden before him, at the big house, and the terrace, and the steps that led down to the smooth lawn—it was the world which belonged to the children.

      "Poor boy," said the elder child, "I will get you something to eat."

      "But where did he come from?" the gardener asked.

      "We do not know," the child answered; "but he is very hungry, and mother says we may give him some food."

      "I will take him some milk," said the little one; in one hand she carried a mug and with the other she pulled along her little broken cart.

      "But what is he called?" asked the gardener.

      "We do not know," the little one answered; "but he is very thirsty, and mother says we may give him some milk."

      "Where is he going?" asked the gardener.

      "We do not know," the children said; "but he is very tired."

      When the boy had rested well, he got up saying, "I must not stay any longer," and turned to go on his way.

      "What have you to do?" the children asked.

      "I am one of the crew, and must help to make the world go round," he answered.

      "Why do we not help too?"

      "You are the passengers."

      "How far have you to go?" they asked.

      "Oh, a long way!" he answered. "On and on until I can touch the sun."

      "Will you really touch it?" they said, awestruck.

      "I dare say I shall tire long before I get there," he answered sadly. "Perhaps without knowing it, though, I shall reach it in my sleep," he added. But they hardly heard the last words, for he was already far off.

      "Why did you talk to him?" the gardener said. "He is just a working boy."

      "And we do nothing! It was very good of him to notice us," they said, humbly.

      "Good!" said the gardener in despair. "Why, between you and him there is a great difference."

      "There was only a wall," they answered. "Who set it up?" they asked curiously.

      "Why, the builders, of course. Men set it up."

      "And who will pull it down?"

      "It will not want any pulling down," the man answered grimly. "Time will do that."

      As the children went back to their play, they looked up at the light towards which the boy was journeying.

      "Perhaps we too shall reach it some day," they said.

      FOR MONEY

      FOR LOVE

      It was just like a fairy story come to life, and I will tell you all about it, fairy-story fashion, and then you can judge for yourselves. Once upon a time, but not long ago, there were two sisters living with their grandmama and their maiden aunt down at Chislehurst. The one was called Mary, and the other was called Etta, and they were both very pretty and so on. Mary was quiet and sympathetic, and always did all she could to help everyone, and was rather put upon in consequence, but didn’t know it, and would not have minded if she had. Etta was very lively and thoughtless, and had a way of getting other people to do all manner of things which she ought to have done herself; and she used to long for fine dresses and pretty trinkets, and all the pomps and vanities of this wicked world. And the young men who went to the house to talk to the grandmother, and from admiration of the maiden aunt, used to like Etta better than Mary, for they thought there was more “go” in her, and never realised that there was also much less heart. And among the young men who went, there was one who had been in the habit of going from his youth up. His name was Wilfred Martin, but for some unknown reason, and probably because his name was not William, he was always called Will. He was a very nice young man and very handsome, but unfortunately he had only one hundred and twenty pounds a year, which was the magnificent salary paid to him by the firm of engineers that employed him as a clerk. Now of


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