One winter night as Aunt Betsy returned from work, she found a queer looking bundle on her door-step and, on unrolling it, she found Bobby, one of the neighbor"s children. Now Bobby had no mother and only a poor drunken father, who often beat him. And Aunt Betsy saw, as she unrolled him, that his face was all tear-stained, so she knew what had been happening. Bobby had crept away from the blows to come to his best friend when in trouble--Aunt Betsy.
Carefully she picked the little fellow up, carried him into her bare little room, gave him a hot drink, and then tucked him all comfortably on the couch which served as her bed. Tired from his day of play and work, the little fellow was soon lost in sleep.
Not so Aunt Betsy. Sitting by the fire, all she could see were the great holes in the shoes she was drying. Bobby needed some shoes very badly, but she had no money with which to buy some.
"There is the money in the cup," said a voice within.
"But I couldn"t give that, for I want so much to buy a seed to bring happiness to this alley," thought Aunt Betsy.
"But a pair of shoes would bring happiness to Bobbie now," said the voice.
She looked again at the little swollen feet under the cover on the couch.
Then slowly, yet with a smile of infinite tenderness, she softly stole to the cupboard, took the money from the little tin cup, drew on her old shawl, and went out into the night.
"Twas a very happy Bobbie who went back to his home in the morning, and behind Aunt Betsy"s stove were the little worn shoes. A little later a little old woman went down the narrow stairs to her work and she sang as she went.
That night Aunt Betsy, hurrying past a florist"s shop, b.u.mped into a barrel of waste that stood on the walk. Stopping abruptly, she saw a wilted-looking plant in an old broken pot on the top of the pile.
"Why, you poor little plant," said Aunt Betsy. "I"ll just take you home and love you; perhaps you will grow for me in my little upper room."
So she carried it home, transplanted it into the old tin cup from which she had taken the money, and then set it where the sunshine would find it the very first thing in the morning.
In two days the plant showed signs of life. In a week it stood tall and firm. In two weeks there was a bud which Aunt Betsy watched with great care. Would it be pink or red or yellow? She didn"t care if only it were a blossom.
"Twas night when she came home from her work, but as soon as she opened the door she knew that the little flower had opened, for the room was full of the fragrance that it was sending forth. She hurried to the window and she saw--oh, could she believe her eyes! She saw a little flower, white as the driven snow. Its petals were heart-shaped and surrounded a heart of wonderful gold. It was the White Flower of Happiness.
During the night, the little plant stayed with her in the attic room, but in the morning she carried it to the palace and gave it to the King. Thus, through a simple loving old woman, the White Flower of Happiness was given to a whole kingdom.
But the strange thing about the plant was this: Whenever its owner kept the flower only for self and did not share it with others, it withered and died; but, when lovingly shared, it grew and blossomed and made happy, not only its owner, but all to whom it went. It was in very truth to all--The White Flower of Happiness.
THE SPEAKING PICTURE
There had been a great discussion in the High School all the week, and as Friday drew nearer the excitement grew more and more intense. For Barton High School had many girls from the Hill section of the town where the mill owners lived, and also many girls from the River section where the mill workers lived.
There was to be an election for the president of the Senior Cla.s.s and when the names of the candidates for the presidency had been posted on the bulletin board by the nominating committee, a mill girl headed the list.
Such a thing had never been heard of in the school. Always the president of the cla.s.s had been the one who could entertain the cla.s.s, who could stand out prominently during cla.s.s week, whose father would help to pay the bills of the Commencement time.
But at the beginning of the year, the cla.s.s had decided to learn to do things according to parliamentary law and to be democratic, and this was the result. Never for a moment had the girls and boys of the Hill section dreamed that a committee would dare to choose a River-section president.
To be sure, the girl whom they had chosen had led the cla.s.s both in marks and in the debating club. Yes, she could make a splendid Commencement Day speaker, but she was a River-section girl, and they just wouldn"t have it.
So they argued and pleaded and tried to persuade their friends to make her fail the election. Why, there would be no fun at all during Commencement week if she led the cla.s.s. She had nothing at all to spend for fun.
Chief among the objectors had been Mary Waite. Her father owned the largest mill and she had thought surely the place was to be hers. She had even planned how she would entertain the cla.s.s on the lawn of her home.
She was ready to do almost anything to upset the plans of the nominating committee.
So the group of girls were still scolding when they reached the door of the museum about four o"clock on Thursday afternoon. Mary had an errand in the picture gallery and the rest were to wait for her in the corridor below.
As she entered the gallery, she pulled from her book the a.s.signment which had been given to her:
"Study the pictures in Gallery Nine and bring the name and the artist of the picture that speaks most plainly to you."
What an a.s.signment! How could any picture speak to her when she was feeling in such an unpleasant mood. She pa.s.sed down one side and then along the end of the gallery. She liked the children in this and the flowers in that. But surely none would speak to her.
Down another side she went, stopping more often to look at the things that interested her.
Suddenly she saw a picture of the Christ. It was at the end of the gallery, and a wonderful light was thrown on it from a globe just above the picture. The Christ was standing in a room and in his face was such a tender, thoughtful look.
Mary sat down in the seat nearest to her. She did not want to move nearer lest she lose the rare expression of the face of the Christ. It had only been a few weeks since she had been standing before the altar of the church, making herself a gift to the Christ. So as she sat and watched the picture, she thought to herself:
"What a wonderful man he was! I should have loved to have had him look in my face as he is looking into theirs. I wish I might have really seen him."
After a time she moved nearer. Then she could see the faces of the other persons in the picture. From where she had been sitting, only the face of the Christ had seemed to stand out, though one knew the others were there.
They were sitting about the table in a home.
What a rude table it was! How roughly they were dressed! Why, they were only poor people, yet the Christ was standing in their midst, giving them to eat.
She studied his face. How beautiful it was! How much she loved him! How eager she was to give him her very best! What could she do to show her love? And as she looked she heard a voice saying to her: "The poor ye have always with you, but me ye have not always."
Then somehow the faces of the men in the picture seemed like those of the men who worked in her father"s mill and in the face of the woman she saw a likeness to Elizabeth Meeker. But the face of the Christ was still full of love and tenderness.
The head of the girl drooped as she sat long before the picture. What had she against Elizabeth Meeker? Nothing except the fact that she was poor.
She was a girl that Jesus would have loved, for she was always dependable.
Yet Mary was trying to take away the greatest pleasure that might ever come to that poor girl.
She had no pretty home, she had little time for play; she hadn"t even a mother. Yet Mary knew she had been very, very unkind to her.
And now the face of the Christ seemed searching her very soul: "The poor ye have always with you, but me ye have not always. Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these, ye have done it unto me."
There was a sound of a bell and Mary knew she must leave the room. One last look she gave to the Christ of the picture. Then she smiled and nodded her head.
When she came to join the girls below, she said quietly:
"Girls, let"s give the school a surprise to-morrow. Let"s go and vote for Elizabeth Meeker, since so many of the cla.s.s want her for president, and then prove to the rest that we can still have a good time during Commencement week. Father will let us use the grounds when we like and we can all have a part in the planning of the fun. I should just like to see if she really can make a cla.s.s president as well as we girls from the Hill."
And though the girls couldn"t understand why she had changed, yet they were glad to follow her lead.
That night Mary Waite sat before her desk in her pretty room on the Hill and looked again at the a.s.signment which had been given to her--
"Study the pictures in Gallery Nine and bring to me the name of the picture and the artist who painted the one that speaks most plainly to you."
And in no uncertain letters she wrote: