What
makes you have tears in your eyes?--tell me."
"We're good friends--I knew we should be," said Miss Polly, quite
cheerily. "Look out of the window, and see that swing. How many times
I've pushed you and Dotty in that swing when it seemed as if it would
break my back!"
Flyaway looked out. There stood the two trees, and between them hung
the old swing; but the charm was forgotten. In the field beyond, her
eye fell on an object more interesting to her.
"O, O," said she, "I don't see how God _could_ make a man so homebly
as that!"
"So homely as what?"
"Why," laughed Dotty, "she means that scarecrow."
The corn was up long ago, but one direful image had still been left to
flaunt in the sunlight and soak in the rain.
"That isn't a man," said Prudy; "it's only a great monstrous rag baby,
with a coat on."
"Put there to frighten away the crows," added Miss Polly. "When Abner
dropped corn in the ground, the great black crows wanted to come and
pick it out, and eat it up."
Flyaway frowned in token of strong dislike to the crows.
Pages:
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57