Marching Men
MARCHING MEN BY SHERWOOD ANDERSON Author of "Windy Mcpherson's Son" MCMXVII TO AMERICAN WORKINGMEN BOOK I
Mrs. Minot wrote one page of a new letter, then stopped, pushed
her papers about, thought a little, and finally got up, saying, as if
she found it impossible to resist the yearning of her heart for the
naughty boy,--
"I am going to see if Jack is covered up, he is so helpless, and
liable to take cold. Don't stir till I come back."
"No, 'm, I won't."
Away went the tender parent to find her son studying Caesar for
dear life, and all the more amiable for the little gust which had
blown away the temporary irritability. The brothers were often
called "Thunder and Lightning," because Frank lowered and
growled and was a good while clearing up, while Jack's temper
came and went like a flash, and the air was all the clearer for the
escape of dangerous electricity. Of course Mamma had to stop and
deliver a little lecture, illustrated by sad tales of petulant boys, and
punctuated with kisses which took off the edge of these afflicting
narratives.
Jill meantime meditated morally on the superiority of her own
good temper over the hasty one of her dear playmate, and just
when she was feeling unusually uplifted and secure, alas! like so
many of us, she fell, in the most deplorable manner.
MARCHING MEN BY SHERWOOD ANDERSON Author of "Windy Mcpherson's Son" MCMXVII TO AMERICAN WORKINGMEN BOOK I