2012年3月22日星期四

or at any rate not much older

  "Yes, Luke, I felt worried about you. But you did right. I am always glad to have you help those who are worse off than we are. How terribly I should feel if Bennie had to be out late in the streets like that!"   "There are many newsboys as young, or at any rate not much older. I have sometimes seen gentlemen, handsomely dressed, and evidently with plenty of money, speak roughly to these young boys. It always makes me indignant. Why should they have so easy a time, while there are so many who don't know where their next meal is coming from? Why, what such a man spends for his meals in a single day would support a poor newsboy in comfort for a week."   "My dear Luke, this is a problem that has puzzled older and wiser heads than yours. There must always be poor people, but those who are more fortunate ought at least to give them sympathy. It is the least acknowledgment they can make for their own more favored lot."   "I am going out a little while this evening, mother."   "Very well, Luke. Don't be late."   "No, mother, I won't. I want to call on a friend of mine, who is sick."   "Who it is, Luke?"   "It is Jim Norman. The poor boy took cold one day, his shoes were so far gone. He has a bad cough, and I am afraid it will go hard with him.   "Is he a newsboy, too, Luke?" asked Bennie Walton.   "No; he is a bootblack."   "I shouldn't like to black boots."   "Nor I, Bennie; but if a boy is lucky there is more money to be made in that business."

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