
Marjorie awakes to find a little brown Dream perched on her footboard, insisting it’s time for her to work. Their banter drifts from sleepy complaints to a gentle debate about what “work” really means, hinting that everyone carries a purpose—even if it’s hidden beneath a pillow. The Dream’s quiet observations set the tone for a reflective, slightly whimsical tale.
Soon the Dream points to a girl struggling up a hill with a cumbersome basket, a simple scene that becomes a moral crossroads for Marjorie. She wrestles with the urge to rescue the girl versus letting her bear the load, and the Dream nudges her toward honest self‑assessment rather than imposed duty. Through this modest encounter, the story explores the balance between helping others and respecting their own strength, inviting listeners to consider their own “basket” and the choices that lift it.
Language
en
Duration
~38 minutes (36K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2006-05-17
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1865–1951
A Canadian-American writer of children's books, she also published imaginative and sometimes eerie fiction under more than one name. Her life stretched from Ontario to Chicago and Honolulu, and that wide range of experience shows in the unusual mix of spiritual, adventurous, and fantastic themes in her work.
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