some ornaments to adorn this little divinity."


SUBMITTED BY: tanishqjaichand

DATE: July 11, 2017, 6 p.m.

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  1. "Well, who is there? Let us know."
  2. "Do you remember Owen, that used to make your shoes?"
  3. "Yes, I remember something about him."
  4. "Well, he has fallen into a consumption, and cannot work any more; and he, and his wife, and three little children live in one of the rooms."
  5. "How do they get along?"
  6. "His wife takes in sewing sometimes, and sometimes goes out washing. Poor Owen! I was over there yesterday; he looks thin and wasted, and his wife was saying that he was parched with constant fever, and had very little appetite. She had, with great self-denial, and by restricting herself almost of necessary food, got him two or three oranges; and the poor fellow seemed so eager after them!"
  7. "Poor fellow!" said Eleanor, involuntarily.
  8. "Now," said her aunt, "suppose Owen's wife should get up on Christmas morning and find at the door a couple of dozen of oranges, and some of those nice white grapes, such as you had at your party last week; don't you think it would make a sensation?"
  9. "Why, yes, I think very likely it might; but who else, aunt? You spoke of a great many."
  10. "Well, on the lower floor there is a neat little room, that is always kept perfectly trim and tidy; it belongs to a young couple who have nothing beyond the husband's day wages to live on. They are, nevertheless, as cheerful and chipper as a couple of wrens; and she is up and down half a dozen times a day, to help poor Mrs. Owen. She has a baby of her own, about five months old, and of course does all the cooking, washing, and ironing for herself and husband; and yet, when Mrs. Owen goes out to wash, she takes her baby, and keeps it whole days for her."
  11. "I'm sure she deserves that the good fairies should smile on her," said Eleanor; "one baby exhausts my stock of virtues very rapidly."
  12. "But you ought to see her baby," said Aunt E.; "so plump, so rosy, and good-natured, and always clean as a lily. This baby is a sort of household shrine; nothing is too sacred or too good for it; and I believe the little thrifty woman feels only one temptation to be extravagant, and that is to get some ornaments to adorn this little divinity."

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