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But Lily only whimpered, "I want the cat."
"I'll get her for you, Lily," said Davie, trying to fumble his blind way out of the cradle and start in search of her.
Fortunately for the ending of the story, somebody was in the room and was ready to pick Davie up when his weak little legs suddenly doubled up like a pocket-knife and dropped him on the nursery floor. So, though Lily did not get the cat, neither did Davie get, what Aunt Ann called "his death o' cold."
In due time, the measles turned and went their way wandering off around after other children, one generation and then another. Lily's cat lived out her nine lives and then turned into sage and catnip in the back garden.
And now, after a long, long while, Davie and Lily have a birthday. Not the next one, nor the second, nor the third, nor, if the truth must be told, the fiftieth. But a birthday that came running to meet them with gla.s.ses on and a flourishing of the almond-tree.
This time the twins' birthday is not kept in the gray old mansion, with the shop below and the garden behind, where Aunt Ann rattled her keys and lived out her bustling life. Nor does Aunt Ann come to help keep it. Her hands have long been folded in quiet rest; and it is years, too, since Mary and Celestia went where the shining is brighter than the sunlight and softer than the moon.
But the twins are not alone. Bless you! I should think not! First, here is Amy Starbird, with a pair of pictures she has painted from the very paint-box Davie gave her on her own last birthday. And here is Amy's daughter Rose, with twin marble babies tucked up in a marble crib on top of a marble match box; and Rose, all this time, is Davie's daughter as well as Amy's.
And here is a bright bevy of boys and girls, some of them with Lily's blue eyes and Lily's fair hair, each bringing some double gift for their mother and Uncle Davie.
There are pairs of wristings and pairs of neckties, books in two volumes, and double-frosted cakes; there is a pair of china slippers with a pair of babies on the toes; there is a crystal vase held up by two crystal swans, and a vase of silver in the form of a chariot drawn by two doves; for everything must be in pairs for the birthday of the twins.
Then, last of all, Davie gave to Lily a covered box, and when she opened it she saw within an exquisitely embroidered velvet pen-wiper, with a beautiful tortoise-sh.e.l.l cat lying upon it, and, playfully jumping over her back, were two of the most charming tortoise-sh.e.l.l kittens ever seen.
The mother-cat had around her neck a blue ribbon, and on the ribbon was written these words,--
"Here is your cat, Lily,--after fifty years."
FRANCES LEE.
[Ill.u.s.tration: decoration]
WILLIAM NICHOLSON AND SONS, PRINTERS, WAKEFIELD.
VICTORIA SERIES.
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NEW JUVENILE BOOKS.
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BRAVE ANTHONY ARCHER. By Emily Jane Moore.
A ROSE WITH TWO AND FIFTY THORNS. By Emily Jane Moore.
SET IN GOLD AND SILVER. By Emily Jane Moore.
THE FORTUNES OF BRIDGET MALLORIE. By Emily Jane Moore.
THE ORPHAN OF LESSONTO, and other Tales.
THE BALLAD-SINGER OF THE BOULEVARD. Translated from the French.
WILLIAM TELL, THE HERO OF SWITZERLAND, and other Legends.
OLD FRIENDS AND NEW.
AN ARROW IN A SUNBEAM, and other Tales.
THE FLOWER MISSION, and what grew out of it.
A CROWN OF GLORY.
THE FLOWERS OF THE FOREST.
CHARMING TALES FOR YOUTH.
THE LITTLE WOODMAN AND HIS DOG.
WENTIE ARMITAGE; or the Angel of the Hospital.
THE HONEST BOY, and his Reward.
THE SELF-DENIAL BOX, and other Stories.
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The SNOW STORM, or the Providential Deliverance.
ROBERT JONES, or the Two Paths.
A BOOK ABOUT BOYS.
A BOOK ABOUT GIRLS.
The EIGHT BELLS, and their Voices.
The FOUR LITTLE CRUSOES.
The LITTLE HUNTER, and other Stories.
The BLUE SASH, and other Tales.
LITTLE SUSY'S SIX TEACHERS.
CHARLIE, the YOUNG CONQUEROR.
The BOY ADMIRAL, or What Will You Be?
The YOUNG QUEEN, or the Little Shoes.
YOUTH'S NATURAL HISTORY. Ill.u.s.trated.
RALPH and TOMMY, or I Wish I Wasn't Black.
KIT WEEDON, or the Little Trunkmaker.
JACKETS and TROUSERS, and other Tales.
HARRY and MAUDE, or the White Kitten.
CICELY and the City Girl.
The MOSS ROSE, and other Tales.
The RED SHOES, and other Stories.
A BLOSSOM in the DESERT, and other Tales.
HERMAN the CHARCOAL BURNER. From the German.
The STORY of LITTLE PATCHY.
UNDER the APPLE TREE.