[David Balfour, Second Part by Robert Louis Stevenson]@TWC D-Link book
David Balfour, Second Part

CHAPTER XXI
10/19

But I was too like a miser of what joys I had and would venture nothing on a hazard.
What we spoke was usually of ourselves or of each other, so that if anyone had been at so much pains as overhear us, he must have supposed us the most egotistical persons in the world.

It befell one day when we were at this practice, that we came on a discourse of friends and friendship, and I think now that we were sailing near the wind.

We said what a fine thing friendship was, and how little we had guessed of it, and how it made life a new thing, and a thousand covered things of the same kind that will have been said, since the foundation of the world, by young folk in the same predicament.

Then we remarked upon the strangeness of that circumstance, that friends came together in the beginning as if they were there for the first time, and yet each had been alive a good while, losing time with other people.
"It is not much that I have done," said she, "and I could be telling you the five-fifths of it in two-three words.

It is only a girl I am, and what can befall a girl, at all events?
But I went with the clan in the year '45.


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