[We and the World, Part I by Juliana Horatia Ewing]@TWC D-Link bookWe and the World, Part I CHAPTER VI 7/11
His own were still fixed steadily on Charlie's, and he went on. "_I've heard it._ My ears are quick, and for many a Sunday after I came I caught the whispers behind me as I went up the aisle, 'Poor man!' 'Poor gentleman!' 'He looks bad, too!' One morning an old woman, in a big black bonnet, said, 'Poor soul!' so close to me, that I looked down, and met her withered eyes, full of tears--for me!--and I said, 'Thank you, mother,' and she fingered the sleeve of my coat with her trembling hand (the veins were standing out on it like ropes), and said, 'I've knowed trouble myself, my dear.
The Lord bless yours to you!'" "It must have been Betty Johnson," I interpolated; but the school-master did not even look at me. "You and I," he said, bending nearer to Cripple Charlie, "have had our share of this life's pain so dealt out to us that any one can see and pity us.
My boy, take a fellow-sufferer's word for it, it is wise and good not to shrink from the seeing and pitying.
The weight of the cross spreads itself and becomes lighter if one learns to suffer with others as well as with oneself, to take pity and to give it.
And as one learns to be pained with the pains of others, one learns to be happy in their happiness and comforted by their sympathy, and then no man's life can be quite empty of pleasure.
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