Page:Anthony John (IA anthonyjohn00jero).pdf/29

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hell. Why couldn't he believe this thing, whatever it was, that everybody else believed?

It was an evening or two later. His aunt had gone to chapel. His uncle was smoking his pipe beside the kitchen fire, old Simon, the bob-tailed sheep-dog, looking up at him with adoring eyes. It seemed just the opportunity for a heart-to-heart talk.

He insinuated his hand into his uncle's grimy paw.

"Why don't you believe?" he asked.

His uncle turned on him his little twinkling eyes.

"Believe what?" he counter-questioned.

"What everybody believes," the child answered.

The little man shook his head.

"Don't you believe them," he answered. "They don't believe any more than I believe. They just say it because they think they're going to get something out of it."

The little man reached forward for the poker and gently stirred the fire.

"If they believed all they say that they believe," he continued, "this world would be a very different place to what it is. That's what I always tell them, and that's what they're never able to answer and never will be."