The Tapestry Room - A Child's Romance by Mrs. Molesworth
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page 8 of 186 (04%)
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imprisoned fairies escaping at some magic touch. Of all things, Jeanne
loved to give this magic touch. There was no poker, but she managed just as well with a stick of unburnt wood, or sometimes, when she was _quite_ sure Marcelline was not looking, with the toe of her little shoe. Just now it was Marcelline who set the fairy sparks free by moving the logs a little and putting on a fresh one behind. "How pretty they are, are they not, Marcelline?" said Jeanne. Marcelline did not speak, and when Jeanne looked up at her, she saw by the light of the fire that she was smiling. Jeanne held up her forefinger. "Naughty Marcelline," she said; "you are not to smile. You are to _speak_. I want you to speak very much, for it is so dull, and I have nothing to do. I want you to tell me stories, Marcelline. Do you hear, you naughty little thing?" "And what am I to tell you stories about then, Mademoiselle? You have got all out of my old head long ago; and when the grain is all ground what can the miller do?" "Get some more, of course," said Jeanne. "Why, _I_ could make stories if I tried, I daresay, and I am only seven, and you who are a hundred--are you _quite_ a hundred, Marcelline?" Marcelline shook her head. "Not _quite_, Mademoiselle," she said. |
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