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“
I
think
the
most
difficult
thing
in
teaching
,
as
well
as
the
most
interesting
,
is
to
get
the
children
to
tell
you
their
real
thoughts
about
things
.
One
stormy
day
last
week
I
gathered
them
around
me
at
dinner
hour
and
tried
to
get
them
to
talk
to
me
just
as
if
I
were
one
of
themselves
.
I
asked
them
to
tell
me
the
things
they
most
wanted
.
Some
of
the
answers
were
commonplace
enough
.
.
.
dolls
,
ponies
,
and
skates
.
Others
were
decidedly
original
.
Hester
Boulter
wanted
‘
to
wear
her
Sunday
dress
every
day
and
eat
in
the
sitting
room
.
’
Hannah
Bell
wanted
‘
to
be
good
without
having
to
take
any
trouble
about
it
.
’
Marjory
White
,
aged
ten
,
wanted
to
be
a
WIDOW
.
Questioned
why
,
she
gravely
said
that
if
you
weren
’
t
married
people
called
you
an
old
maid
,
and
if
you
were
your
husband
bossed
you
;
but
if
you
were
a
widow
there
’
d
be
no
danger
of
either
.
The
most
remarkable
wish
was
Sally
Bell
’
s
.
She
wanted
a
‘
honeymoon
.
’
I
asked
her
if
she
knew
what
it
was
and
she
said
she
thought
it
was
an
extra
nice
kind
of
bicycle
because
her
cousin
in
Montreal
went
on
a
honeymoon
when
he
was
married
and
he
had
always
had
the
very
latest
in
bicycles
!
“
Another
day
I
asked
them
all
to
tell
me
the
naughtiest
thing
they
had
ever
done
.
I
couldn
’
t
get
the
older
ones
to
do
so
,
but
the
third
class
answered
quite
freely
.
Eliza
Bell
had
‘
set
fire
to
her
aunt
’
s
carded
rolls
.
’
Asked
if
she
meant
to
do
it
she
said
,
‘
not
altogether
.
’
She
just
tried
a
little
end
to
see
how
it
would
burn
and
the
whole
bundle
blazed
up
in
a
jiffy
.
Emerson
Gillis
had
spent
ten
cents
for
candy
when
he
should
have
put
it
in
his
missionary
box
.
Annetta
Bell
’
s
worst
crime
was
‘
eating
some
blueberries
that
grew
in
the
graveyard
.
’
Willie
White
had
‘
slid
down
the
sheephouse
roof
a
lot
of
times
with
his
Sunday
trousers
on
.
’
‘
But
I
was
punished
for
it
‘
cause
I
had
to
wear
patched
pants
to
Sunday
School
all
summer
,
and
when
you
’
re
punished
for
a
thing
you
don
’
t
have
to
repent
of
it
,
’
declared
Willie
.
“
I
wish
you
could
see
some
of
their
compositions
.
.
.
so
much
do
I
wish
it
that
I
’
ll
send
you
copies
of
some
written
recently
.
Last
week
I
told
the
fourth
class
I
wanted
them
to
write
me
letters
about
anything
they
pleased
,
adding
by
way
of
suggestion
that
they
might
tell
me
of
some
place
they
had
visited
or
some
interesting
thing
or
person
they
had
seen
.
They
were
to
write
the
letters
on
real
note
paper
,
seal
them
in
an
envelope
,
and
address
them
to
me
,
all
without
any
assistance
from
other
people
.
Last
Friday
morning
I
found
a
pile
of
letters
on
my
desk
and
that
evening
I
realized
afresh
that
teaching
has
its
pleasures
as
well
as
its
pains
.
Those
compositions
would
atone
for
much
.
Here
is
Ned
Clay
’
s
,
address
,
spelling
,
and
grammar
as
originally
penned
.
“
‘
Miss
teacher
ShiRley
Green
gabels
.
p
.
e
.
Island
can
birds
“
‘
Dear
teacher
I
think
I
will
write
you
a
composition
about
birds
.
birds
is
very
useful
animals
.
my
cat
catches
birds
.
His
name
is
William
but
pa
calls
him
tom
.
he
is
oll
striped
and
he
got
one
of
his
ears
froz
of
last
winter
.
only
for
that
he
would
be
a
good
-
looking
cat
.
My
unkle
has
adopted
a
cat
.
it
come
to
his
house
one
day
and
woudent
go
away
and
unkle
says
it
has
forgot
more
than
most
people
ever
knowed
.
he
lets
it
sleep
on
his
rocking
chare
and
my
aunt
says
he
thinks
more
of
it
than
he
does
of
his
children
.
that
is
not
right
.
we
ought
to
be
kind
to
cats
and
give
them
new
milk
but
we
ought
not
be
better
to
them
than
to
our
children
.
this
is
oll
I
can
think
of
so
no
more
at
present
from