[The Light in the Clearing by Irving Bacheller]@TWC D-Link bookThe Light in the Clearing CHAPTER VIII 23/23
He was then a man of forty. "You're coming to me this fall," he said as he put his hand on my arm and gave me a little shake.
"Lad! you've got a big pair of shoulders! Ye shall live in my house an' help with the chores if ye wish to." "That'll be grand," said Uncle Peabody, but, as to myself, just then, I knew not what to think of it. We were picking up potatoes in the field. "Without 'taters an' imitators this world would be a poor place to live in," said Mr.Hacket.
"Some imitate the wise--thank God!--some the foolish--bad 'cess to the devil!" As he spoke we heard a wonderful bird song in a tall spruce down by the brook. "Do ye hear the little silver bells in yon tower ?" he asked. As we listened a moment he whispered: "It's the song o' the Hermit Thrush.
I wonder, now, whom he imitates.
I think the first one o' them must 'a' come on Christmas night an' heard the angels sing an' remembered a little o' it so he could give it to his children an' keep it in the world." I looked up into the man's face and liked him, and after that I looked forward to the time when I should know him and his home. Shep was rubbing his neck fondly on the schoolmaster's boot. "That dog couldn't think more o' me if I were a bone," he said as he went away. END OF BOOK ONE.
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