and "weenies" were cooked. 
On one August afternoon the pasture seemed deserted. It was circus 
day and the children of the surrounding blocks had all by one method 
or another won admission to the big tent on the hill east of the town. 
Yet not quite all the children. For under one of the oak trees was a baby 
carriage in which a little girl of two lay fast asleep. And far above her, 
perched lightly but firmly in a swaying fork of the oak, was a 
long-legged little girl of twelve. She sat where she could peer easily 
down on her small sleeping sister, yet high enough to be completely 
hidden from casual view. She was a thin youngster, with short curling 
hair of a dusty yellow. The curly hair did not hide the fine square head, 
a noble head for so small a girl, set well on the little square shoulders. 
Her eyes were blue and black lashed, her nose nondescript, her mouth 
large, her chin square and her little jaw line long and pronounced. She
wore a soiled sailor suit of blue galatea. Caught in the crotch of two 
opposite branches was a doll almost as large as the sleeping child 
below. It was a queer old-fashioned doll, with a huge china head, that 
displayed brilliant black hair and eyes as blue as those of her little 
mistress. The doll wore a clumsily made sailor suit of blue calico, 
which evidently had been washed recently, but not ironed. It is 
necessary to meet the doll properly, for she was an intimate and 
important member of the little girl's family. Her name was Florence 
Dombey. 
A battered red book lay in Florence Dombey's lap. It was called, "With 
Clive in India." It was written by G. A. Henty and told of the marvelous 
and hair-breadth adventures of an English lad in an Indian campaign. 
Florence Dombey's attention, however, was not on the book. It was 
riveted, hectically, on her mistress, who with her tongue caught 
between her lips was deftly whittling a cigar box cover into doll 
furniture, of a scale so tiny that even had Florence Dombey had a doll 
of her own, it could not have hoped to use the furniture. 
It was very quiet in the oak tree. The little furniture-maker spoke softly 
to Florence Dombey occasionally, but otherwise crickets and locusts 
made the only sounds on the summer air. 
Suddenly she closed the knife sharply. "Darn it! I've cut myself again," 
she said. She dropped the knife down the neck of her blouse and began 
to suck her finger. "Here, let me have Henty, Florence Dombey. Don't 
try to pig it, all the time. You know I don't get hardly any time to read." 
The furniture and the remains of the cigar-box cover followed the knife 
into her blouse and she opened the book. But before she had begun to 
read there was a sleepy little call from below. 
"Yes, baby!" called the child. "Here's Lydia, up in the tree! Watch me, 
dearie! See me come down. Here comes Florence Dombey first." 
With some difficulty the book followed the knife and the furniture into 
the blouse. Florence Dombey, being hastily inverted, showed a length
of light martin cord wrapped about her cotton legs. 
"Here she comes, baby! Catch now for Lydia." 
The baby below, a tiny plump replica of Lydia, sat up with a gurgle of 
delight and held up her arms as Florence Dombey, dangling unhappily, 
upside down, on the end of the marlin cord, was lowered carefully into 
the perambulator. 
"And here I come. Watch me, baby!" 
With a swing light and agile as a young monkey, Lydia let herself 
down, landing with a spring of which an acrobat might have boasted, 
beside the perambulator. 
"There, sweetness!"--kissing the baby--"first we'll fix Florence Dombey, 
then we'll start for home." 
"Florence, home wiv baby." 
"Yes, it's getting near supper time." Lydia tucked the still hectically 
staring doll in beside her small sister, turned the perambulator around 
and ran it along one of the little paths to the sidewalk. She hoisted it to 
the sidewalk with some puffing and several "darn its," then started 
toward the block of houses, north of the pasture. 
At the crossing she met a small girl of her own age, who carried a toy 
balloon, and a popcorn ball. 
"Hello, Lydia!" she cried. "It was a perfectly lovely circus!" 
"Was it?" said Lydia, with an indifferent voice that something in her 
blue eyes denied. "Well, I had to take care of little Patience!" 
"Huh!" shrilled the little girl, "old Lizzie would have done that! I think 
your father's mean not to give you the money." 
Lydia's red cheeks went still redder. "My father's got plenty of money," 
she began fiercely. Here the    
    
		
	
	
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