“The Reader”, a fable by Robert Louis Stevenson
“I never read such an impious book,” said the reader,
throwing it on the floor.
“You need not hurt me,” said the book; “You will only
get less for me second-hand, and I did not write myself.”
“That is true,” said the reader, “My quarrel is with
your author.”
“Ah, well,” said the book, “you need not buy his rant.”
“That is true,” said the reader. “But I thought him
such a cheerful writer.”
“I find him so,” said the book.
“You must be differently made from me,” said the
reader.
“Let me tell you a fable,” said the book. “There were
two men wrecked upon a desert island; one of them made believe he was at home,
the other admitted …”
“Oh, I know your kind of fable,” said the reader. “They
both died.”
“And so they did,” said the book. “No doubt of that.
And everybody else.”
“That is true,” said the reader. “Push it a little
further for this once. And when they were all dead?”
“They were in God’s hands, the same as before,” said
the book.
“Not much to boast of, by your account,” cried the
reader.
“Who is impious now?” said the book, and the reader
put him on the fire.
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