[Grandmother Elsie by Martha Finley]@TWC D-Link bookGrandmother Elsie CHAPTER XXIII 5/10
You won't tell on me, will you? Perhaps he'll find it out through the loss of the coat and hat, but I hope he won't miss them, at I have several others." "No, Max, I shall certainly not tell on you; no one shall ever learn from me what you have told me in confidence; but I do hope, my dear boy, that you will not try to deceive your kind, loving father, but will confess all to him as soon as he comes home, and patiently bear whatever punishment he sees fit to inflict.
It is the only right and honorable course, Max, and will save you a great deal of suffering from remorse and fear of detection." "But it will be dreadfully hard to confess!" sighed Max.
"I believe I really dread that more than the flogging." "Yet take courage, my boy, and do it.
Do not allow yourself to indulge in moral cowardice, but dare to do right, asking help of God, who is able and willing to give it." Max made no reply, but sat there before her, looking very guilty and miserable. "You must be hungry," she said presently, "and it is not easy to be brave and strong on an empty stomach.
Suppose you go to your room and make yourself neat, then come into the other house and join me and the little folks in a nice luncheon." The proposal was accepted with thankfulness. Max looked several degrees less miserable after satisfying his appetite, yet all the afternoon seemed restless and unhappy. Elsie said little to him, but many times silently lifted up her heart on his behalf, asking that he might have strength given him to do the duty he felt to be so difficult and painful. As the time drew near when the pleasure-seekers might be expected to return, he slipped away out of her sight. Presently the carriages drove up and deposited their load.
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