"When are you going to leave?" my mother asked.
"I've got to leave right after breakfast.," I told her. "I'm way behind in my work."
And she said, "Aw, you're always in such a rush."
"Yes, but I've got to go," I told her.
And she said, "Do you know what?"
And I said, "No, what?"
And then she laughed a while before she could speak, and finally she stopped and reached out for my hand, and said, seriously, "Some of these days you're going to die. And when you do the world will get along just fine without you. Do you know that?"
And I said, sort of on the defensive, "Yes, I know it plenty. But as long as I'm in the world I've got to keep rushing around and trying, haven't I? A fellows got to. You always did yourself. You wouldn't want me to just stop and go on relief, would you?"
And then she said, no, she wouldn't want me to go on relief. And that's all we ever said about it.
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