"
"You can't have the milkman, William. Don't be so foolish."
"Well, I'd like to have Fisty Green. He can whistle with his fingers
in his mouth."
"He's a butcher's boy, William! You _can't_ have him?"
"Well, who _can_ I have?"
"Johnnie Brent?"
"I don't like him."
"But you must invite him. He asked you to his."
"Well, I didn't want to go," irritably, "you made me."
"But if he asks you to his you must ask him back."
"You don't want me to invite folks I don't _want_?" William said in
the voice of one goaded against his will into exasperation.
"You must invite people who invite you," said Mrs. Brown firmly,
"that's what we always do in parties."
"Then they've got to invite you again and it goes on and on and _on_,"
argued William. "Where's the _sense_ of it? I don't like Johnnie Brent
an' he don't like me, an' if we go on inviting each other an' our
mothers go on making us go, it'll go on and on and _on_. Where's the
_sense_ of it? I only jus' want to know where's the _sense_ of it?"
His logic was unanswerable.
"Well, anyway, William, I'll draw up the list. You can go and play."
William walked away, frowning, with his hands in his pockets.
"Where's the _sense_ of it?" he muttered as he went.
He began to wend his way towards the spot where he, and Douglas, and
Ginger, and Henry met daily in order to wile away the hours of the
Christmas holidays. At present they lived and moved and had their
being in the characters of Indian Chiefs.
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