Page:Mrs. Spring Fragrance - Far - 1912.djvu/277

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BANISHMENT OF MING AND MAI
265

"Nearly five," returned Liu Venti, himself stifling a sigh.

"Sometimes," said Pau Tsu, "I feel I cannot any longer bear their absence."

She drew from her bosom two little shoes, one red, one blue.

"Their first," said she. "Oh, my sons, my little sons!"

A messenger boy approached, handed Liu Venti a message, and slipped away.

Liu Venti read:

May the bamboo ever wave. Son and daughter, return to your parents and your children.

Liu Jusong,
Li Wang.

"The answer to our prayer," breathed Pau Tsu. "Oh Liu Venti, love is indeed stronger than hate!"

THE BANISHMENT OF MING AND MAI

I

𝕄ANY years ago in the beautiful land of China, there lived a rich and benevolent man named Chan Ah Sin. So kind of heart was he that he could not pass through a market street without buying up all the live fish, turtles, birds, and animals