[Melchior’s Dream and Other Tales by Juliana Horatia Ewing]@TWC D-Link bookMelchior’s Dream and Other Tales CHAPTER II 6/6
"He would attend to you if you told him how selfish and stupid he is." "My dear, I never offered to complain to Joseph, but I will order him not to molest you, and I will ask him to play with you." "I'm sure I don't want him to play with me, unless he can play nicely, and invent things for the dolls to say, as Maud Mary would," was my reply; for I was getting thoroughly vexed. "Then I will tell him that unless he can play your game as you wish it, he had better amuse himself with his own toys.
Is there anything else that you want, my dear ?" I could not speak, for I was crying, but I sobbed out that "I missed Maud Mary so." "Who is Maud Mary, Selina ?" "Maud Mary Ibbetson, my particular friend--my _very_ particular friend," I explained. I spoke warmly, for at that moment the memory of Maud Mary seemed adorable, and I longed to pour my complaints into her sympathetic ear. Besides, I had another reason for regretting that she was not with me. When we were together, it was she, as a rule, who had new and handsome toys to exhibit, whilst I played the humbler part of admirer.
But if she had been with me, then, what would not have been my triumph in displaying the Dutch fair! The longer I thought of her the faster my tears fell, but they did not help me to think of anything definite to ask for; and when Lady Elizabeth said, "would you like to go home, my dear? or do you want me to ask your friend to stay with you ?" I had the grace to feel ashamed of my peevishness, and to thank my godmother for her kindness, and to protest against wanting anything more.
I only added, amid my subsiding sobs, that "it did seem such a thing," when I had got a Dutch fair to play at dolls in, that Joseph should be so stupid, and that dear Maud Mary, who would have enjoyed it so much, should not be able to see it..
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