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The Twenty-Fourth of June by Grace S. (Grace Smith) Richmond
page 43 of 333 (12%)
gone to the piano and was arranging some sheets of music there.

"Miss Gray," he said, "have you accomplished a great deal to-day?"

She looked up, puzzled. "A great deal of what?" she asked.

"Work--endeavour--strenuous endeavour."

"The usual amount. Lessons--and lessons--and one more lesson. I have
really more pupils than I can do justice to, but I am promised an
assistant if the work grows too heavy," she answered. "Why, please?"

"I've been wondering if the motto of the Gray family might be 'Let us,
then, be up and doing.' Ted gives me that notion."

Roberta glanced at Ted, whose face had grown quite grave. "Can you tell
him what the motto is, Ted?"

"Of course I can," responded Ted proudly. "It's _Hoc age_."

Richard hastily summoned his Latin, but the verb bothered him for a
minute. "_This do_," he presently evolved. "Well, I should say I came
pretty near it."

"What's yours?" the boy now inquired.

"My family motto? I believe it is _Crux mihi ancora_; but that doesn't
just suit me, so I've adopted one of my own"--he looked straight at
Roberta--"_Dum vivimus, vivamus_. Isn't that a pleasanter one in this
workaday world?"
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