[The Golden Road by Lucy Maud Montgomery]@TWC D-Link book
The Golden Road

CHAPTER IV
7/17

But I've thought of one--I won't do things to spite people." Felicity--who really was in an unbearable mood that night--laughed disagreeably; but Cecily gave her a fierce nudge, which probably restrained her from speaking.
"I will not eat any apples," wrote Felix.
"What on earth do you want to give up eating apples for ?" asked Peter in astonishment.
"Never mind," returned Felix.
"Apples make people fat, you know," said Felicity sweetly.
"It seems a funny kind of resolution," I said doubtfully.

"I think our resolutions ought to be giving up wrong things or doing right ones." "You make your resolutions to suit yourself and I'll make mine to suit myself," said Felix defiantly.
"I shall never get drunk," wrote Peter painstakingly.
"But you never do," said the Story Girl in astonishment.
"Well, it will be all the easier to keep the resolution," argued Peter.
"That isn't fair," complained Dan.

"If we all resolved not to do the things we never do we'd all be on the Roll of Honour." "You let Peter alone," said Felicity severely.

"It's a very good resolution and one everybody ought to make." "I shall not be jealous," wrote the Story Girl.
"But are you ?" I asked, surprised.
The Story Girl coloured and nodded.

"Of one thing," she confessed, "but I'm not going to tell what it is." "I'm jealous sometimes, too," confessed Sara Ray, "and so my first resolution will be 'I shall try not to feel jealous when I hear the other girls in school describing all the sick spells they've had.'" "Goodness, do you want to be sick ?" demanded Felix in astonishment.
"It makes a person important," explained Sara Ray.
"I am going to try to improve my mind by reading good books and listening to older people," wrote Cecily.
"You got that out of the Sunday School paper," cried Felicity.
"It doesn't matter where I got it," said Cecily with dignity.


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