Aunt Jane's Nieces out West
E-text prepared by Afra Ullah, Mary Meehan, and the Project Gutenberg
Online Distributed Proofreading Team
Aunt Jane's Nieces Out West
By Edith Van Dyne
1914
This is getting to be an amazing old world, said a young girl, still in her teens, as she musingly leaned her chin on her hand.
It has always been an amazing old world, Beth, said another girl who was sitting on the porch railing and swinging her feet in the air.
True, Patsy, was the reply; but the people are doing such peculiar things nowadays.
Yes, yes! exclaimed a little man who occupied a reclining chair within hearing distance; that is the way with you young folks—always confounding the world with its people.
Don't the people make the world, Uncle John? asked Patricia Doyle, looking at him quizzically.
No, indeed; the world could get along very well without its people; but the people—
To be sure; they need the world, laughed Patsy, her blue eyes twinkling so that they glorified her plain, freckled face.