Page:Lynch Williams--The girl and the game.djvu/349

 thing else in the world, but that is only right and reasonable.

"Laugh and the world laughs with you, weep and you weep alone," has been accepted as a truism, and yet I have observed that most of us find it much easier to weep with them that weep than to rejoice with them that do rejoice, though weeping is a disagreeable process and smiling rather pleasant. This maudlin world is pretty generous in its sympathy with your sorrows, if you will but voice them loud enough; but you get precious little of it for your triumphs—even when you say nothing about 'em. A mere acquaintance will supply sympathy for your troubles. Some people find all they want of it in smoking-cars. But it takes a real friend to be glad when you are glad.

Walk along the street and hear the pennies jingle in the beggar's tin cup. But on the very next corner we read on a news bulletin that Buller Wall has cleverly cleaned up a million or so in the Stock Exchange, or that young Mr. So-and-So has scored a hit in