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Allegories of Life

Creator: Adams, J. S., Mrs., 1845-1885
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the day would never come when _she_ should have to carry woe to her young heart; but her life was so uncertain she knew not who would be the next whom she would have to envelop in clouds. She sighed, plucked a rose, and pressed it to her nostrils, as though it was the last sweetness she would ever inhale. "How I pity her!" said the grandmother, her warm, blue eyes filling with tears, as she looked at the bowed form in the doorway. "Ah, good woman, she needs it; for few recognize her mission to them. She is sent by our master to administer woes which contain heavenly truths, while I convey glad tidings. I shall never leave my sister save when our labors are divided." Thus spoke Joy, while tears filled the eyes of all. Then the kind woman went and plucked some roses and gave them to Sorrow, who was weeping. "I did not half know myself," she said, addressing the sad form; "I thought I could see God's angels everywhere, but this time how have I failed! Forgive me," she said to Sorrow, "and when you are weary and need rest, come to our cottage." Sorrow gave her a sad but heavenly smile, and the sisters departed to
Tom Swift and The Visitor from Planet X

The new TOM SWIFT Jr. Adventures TOM SWIFT and The Visitor from Planet X By VICTOR APPLETON II [Spine Text:] Tom Swift and the Visitor from Planet X Victor Appleton II The new TOM SWIFT Jr. Adventures 17 Grosset & Dunlap 9117
the next abode. "Did you ever see them before?" asked the children of their grandparents after the sisters had gone. "Often: they have been going round the world for ages," answered their grandparents. "But Joy looks so young, grandpa." "That's because she has naught to do with trouble. She belongs to the bright side. She carries good tidings and pleasure to all; while Sorrow, her sister, administers the woes." "But Joy is good not to leave her sister." "She cannot," said the grandparent. "Cannot! Why?" "Because Providence has so ordered it that Joy and Sorrow go hand in hand,--pleasure and pain. No two forces in nature which are alike are coupled. Day and night, sunshine and shadow, pleasure and pain, forever." "But I should like to have Joy stay with us," said Helen, the youngest, to her grandparent.