"What made them cry," responded the clown, "as you have."
Then his face clouded and his white, chalky brows frowned.
"You have forgotten, haven't you?" he asked eagerly.
"Y-y-yes," replied Jerry, "almost."
"Almost!" exclaimed Whiteface, very much disappointed. "Then it has come
back if you haven't forgotten it altogether. I wonder what it can be if
the secret of laughter can't drive it away?"
He looked up so questioningly that Jerry responded at once. "It's Celia
Jane."
It was the clown's turn to be surprised.
"Celia Jane!" he exclaimed. "Cupid starts in so young nowadays!"
"It was not Cupid," said Jerry, who had no more idea than the man in the
moon who or what Cupid might be.
"No?" said the clown. "That's good! What did Celia Jane do?"
"She cried."
"Was that what you were crying for--because Celia Jane cried?"
"No," Jerry answered. "I gave her my ticket to the circus which I got
for carryin' water for the el'funts."
"Ah!" said the clown. "She cried to get your ticket so she could see the
circus herself.
Pages:
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130