Excerpt from Elizabeth Winthrop's "Counting on Grace"
This novel about a 12-year-old mill worker was inspired by a Lewis Hine photograph.
- By Elizabeth Winthrop
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2006, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 11)
"I can't. I don't read as good. When I sit my brain stops working."
"Nonsense. Your brain works just like everybody else's. I want you to stay in one place when you read. Stop hopping around the room. Look at Arthur. He can sit still. Now you try it."
Arthur's desk is hooked up to mine and he never moves a muscle 'cepting his lips when he's reading. That's why Miss Lesley likes him the best. It's not only 'cause he's the best reader. It's 'cause he's a sitter and the rest of us are hoppers, jumpers, fidgeters. Arthur's twelve too, but he's four months older than me. I can read just as good as him so long as I can move around at the same time.
I go on." 'He could not accept with asshur—' "
"Assurance," Miss Lesley says. "That means he could not believe. Henry, sit up and listen. Your sister's reading a story."
I finish the sentence. " '. . . he was about to mingle in one of those great affairs of the earth.' "
"Thank you, Grace. Please sit now. What do you think that means? Class?"
Arthur's hand goes up. Miss Lesley nods at him.
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