Master Sunshine

Mrs C.F. Fraser
Master Sunshine

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Title: Master Sunshine

Author: Mrs. C. F. Fraser
Release Date: October, 2003 [Etext #4571] [Yes, we are more than one
year ahead of schedule] [This file was first posted on February 11,
2002]
Edition: 10
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
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MASTER SUNSHINE
BY MRS. C. F. FRASER

CONTENTS.

I. WHO HE WAS II. THE WANDERER AND HIS WIFE III. THE
RAINY DAY IV. A SUNDAY WITH FATHER V. BEING A HERO
VI. KIND DEEDS VII. A HAPPY ENDING

CHAPTER I.
WHO HE WAS.
Of course his real name was not Master Sunshine.
Who ever heard of a boy with a name like that?
But his mother said that long before he could speak he chose the name
for himself, for even as a baby he was full of a cheery good humor that
was always sparkling out in his winning smiles and his rippling laugh.
He was a good-natured, happy child from the time that he could toddle
about; and he was very young when he began to give pleasure to his
friends by serving them in all the little ways within his power.
The very golden curls that topped his small head glistened as if they
had caught and imprisoned the glory of the morning sun; and it really
did seem as if a better name could not be found for the merry, helpful
little fellow than Master Sunshine.
His real name was a very different affair--Frederick Alexander
Norton--and his boy friends called him Freddy for short. His little sister
Lucy called him "buzzer" and Suns'ine; and Almira Jane, the help, who
made the brownest and crispest of molasses cookies, and the most
delicious twisted doughnuts, said he was a "swate angel of light,"
except at such times as she called him a "rascalpion."
Master Sunshine never stopped to argue with Almira Jane when she
called him a "rascalpion." He knew that this was a plain sign that she
was getting "nervous;" and when Almira Jane was nervous, it was
always best for small boys to be out of the way.
A little later, when the kitchen floor had been scrubbed, and the stove

polished like a shiny black mirror, and the bread-dough had been
kneaded and set to rise, he knew he would be a welcome visitor again.
Perhaps that was one of the many reasons why people loved him so. He
was always considerate. He had the good sense not to keep on asking
questions and offering help when it was best to go quietly away.
Somehow he always felt sure that his turn would come presently, and
that Almira Jane would be sorry she had called him such a hard name,
and would be
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