[The Wouldbegoods by E. Nesbit]@TWC D-Link bookThe Wouldbegoods CHAPTER 6 2/47
And after that, if anyone wants to be good they can jolly well be good on our own, if at all.' The ones who had made the Society did not welcome this wise idea, but Dicky and Oswald were firm. So they had to agree.
When Oswald is really firm, opposingness and obstinacy have to give way. Dora said, 'It would be a noble action to have all the school-children from the village and give them tea and games in the paddock.
They would think it so nice and good of us.' But Dicky showed her that this would not be OUR good act, but Father's, because he would have to pay for the tea, and he had already stood us the keepsakes for the soldiers, as well as having to stump up heavily over the coal barge.
And it is in vain being noble and generous when someone else is paying for it all the time, even if it happens to be your father.
Then three others had ideas at the same time and began to explain what they were. We were all in the dining-room, and perhaps we were making a bit of a row.
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