Page:The Story of the Treasure Seekers.djvu/83

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GOOD HUNTING
59

it better than Noël's poetry, though I told him I did not, because he looked as if he was going to cry. This was very wrong, for you should always speak the truth, however unhappy it makes people. And I generally do. But I did not want him crying in the railway carriage.

The lady's piece of poetry:—

          Oh when I wake up in my bed
          And see the sun all fat and red,
          I'm glad to have another day
          For all my different kinds of play.

          There are so many things to do—
          The things that make a man of you,
          If grown-ups did not get so vexed
          And wonder what you will do next.

          I often wonder whether they
          Ever made up our kinds of play—
          If they were always good as gold
          And only did what they were told

          They like you best to play with tops
          And toys in boxes, bought in shops;
          They do not even know the names
          Of really interesting games.

          They will not let you play with fire
          Or trip your sister up with wire,
          They grudge the tea-tray for a drum,
          Or booby-traps when callers come.