MISS EDITH’S MODEST REQUEST.
Bret Haute. My papa knows you, and he says you’re a man who makes reading for books. But I never read nothing you wrote, nor did papa—l know by his looks. So I guess you’re like me when I talk, and I talk, and I talk all the day, And they only say, “ Do stop that child !” or, “Nurse, take Miss Edith away.” But papa said if I was good I could ask you —alone by myse'f— If you wouldn’t write me a hook like that little one up mi the shelf.
Ijjdon’t moan the pictures, of course, for to make them you’ve got to be smart. But the reading that runs all around them, you know—iust the easiest part.
You needn’t "mind wliatdt’s about, for no one will see it but me And Jane —that’s my nurse—and John — he’s the coachman—just only us three. You’re to write of a bad little girl, that was wicked and “bold, and all that ; And then you are to write, if yon please, something’good—very’good—of a cat.
This'cat she was virtuous and meek, and kind to her parents and mild,; Vnd careful and neat in her ways, her mistress was such a bad child ; And hours she would sit and would gaze when her mistress —that’s me—was so bad. And blink, just as if she would say, “ Oh 1 Edith, yon make my heart sad.”
And yet, you would scarcely believe it, that beautiful, angelic cat Was blamed by the servants for stealing whatever, they said, she’d get at. And when John drank my milk—don’t you tell me ! —1 know just the way it was done — They said ’twas "the cat, and she sitting and washing her face in the sun.
And then there was Dick, my canary. When I left its cage open one day, They all made believe that she ate it, Though I ..know that the bird flew away. And why 1 Just because she was playing with a feather she found on the floor, As if cat’s couldn’t play with a feather without people thinking ’twas more.
Why, once we were romping together, when I knocked down a va.se from the sheU, That cat was as grieved and distressed as if she had done it herself ; And she walked away sadly and hid herself, ami never came out until tea—■ So they say, for they sent me to lied, and never came even to me.
No matter whatever happened, it was laid at the door of that cat, Why, once when I tore my apron—she was wrapped in it, and I called “ Rat!” Why, they blamed that on her. I shall never—no, not to my dying day— Forget the pained look that she gave me when they slapped’ me and took me away.
Of course, you know just what comes next, when a child is as lovely as that : She wasted quite slowly away—it was goodness was killing that cat. I know it was nothing she ate, for her taste was exceedingly nice ; But they said she stole Bobby’s ice cream, and caught a bad cold from the ice.
And you’ll promise to make me a book like that little one up on the shelf, And you’ll call her “ Naomi,” because it’s a name that she just gave herself ; For she’d scratch at my door in the morning, and whenever I’d call out •• Who’s there ?” She would answer “Naomi ! Naomi !” like a Christian, I vow and declare.
And you’d put me and her in a book. And, mind, you’re to say I was bad ; And I migh’ have boen bander than that but for the example. I had. And you’ll . - ay that she was a Maltose, and, what’s that you asked ? Is she dead ? Why, please sir, there ain't any cat! You’re to make one up out of your bead !
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TEML18780824.2.11
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Temuka Leader, Volume I, Issue 72, 24 August 1878, Page 3
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644MISS EDITH’S MODEST REQUEST. Temuka Leader, Volume I, Issue 72, 24 August 1878, Page 3
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