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Willie’s Earnings


A Story of a Woman’s Devotion


“Wine, grapes, oranges!”

The delicate-looking girl repeated the words slowly and sadly, as she quietly ascended the stairs that led to the sick brother’s room. On the landing she halted a moment to brush off the two great tears that trembled upon her eyelids, and then choking down a sob, she softly opened the door and advanced to the bedside.

The sufferer had fallen into a slight slumber, and the tears that she would have driven back had he been awake to see them, now raining down her cheeks, as she noted how ghastly white was his face, how sunken his eyes, and how thin and pinched were his lips.

“He will, he must die!” she breathed to herself, turning away, she went with a noiseless footstep into the next room; “for how, how can I get the money to buy anything for him that he really needs? Wine, grapes, oranges! Oh, how easy it is for physicians to tell what their patients need—but how terribly, how fearfully hard it is sometimes for their nurses to get it! What can I do, what shall I do?”

“Is Alfred worse?”

“No, darling; at least I think not. The doctor was here a while ago, and said he was doing as well as we could expect. All he needs now is nourishing food.”

“Oh, Willie, if there was only some way that we could get wine, and grapes and oranges!”

And the tears started again.

“Did the doctor say he ought to have them?” And the boy’s eyes opened very wide.

“Yes, Willie; and they cost so much. And then I must pay the rent, and—”

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