Ornate capital T The breakfast bell had been rung, Miss Lane came in at its last tingle and saw the children waiting for her. “Good morning! Where is your papa?” “Gone: he goes to his office at six every morning, and doesn’t come home till evening,” answered Jennie. “Who reads prayers?” “No one, since mamma died.” The lady stood silent a moment; a little tinge of red colored her cheek, and she did not trust her voice for a few seconds, lest it should tremble. “I cannot,” was her first thought; “it is not my place; they may think it presuming.” “I will,” was her next; “God has put it in my way; it is plainly my duty.” Then speaking “If you will call in the servants, I will read prayers: I suppose Mr. Graham would not object.” “Oh, no, ma’am.” In a little time they came in and sat down, wondering at the new ways of the teacher, but joining in the prayers quite reverently, and as they went out again, casting curious glances at the pale quiet face of the reader. As for the children, their appetites were quite forgotten in this new and interesting study of the governess, and Jennie secretly determined to imitate her in her mode of eating. It was really a pleasure to watch the neat, graceful fingers at any work, and the children began to find and to feel something of that subtle charm in perfect grace and tact which mere beauty cannot supply. Though she spoke but little, and did not seem to watch them at all, not a word, not a motion, scarcely a glance of her new pupils escaped her. She was silently deciding upon the character of each. “He giveth snow like wool, and scattereth the hoar-frost like ashes,” said the teacher. “Who? God?” asked Rosie, who could not be content without caresses, and so had crept shily to the side of the teacher. “Yes, and do you know why it is like wool?” “Because it is white,” answered Frank, coming up softly, while the rest followed after a moment of hesitation, and closed round Miss Lane with bashful but eager glances. “Yes, and for another reason. Because it is warm; it protects the tender wheat, keeps it alive in the ground till the spring opens. It is like your cloaks and overcoats, only so much softer, so much more beautiful.” “Warm? snow warm? I thought it was cold.” “Persons have been saved from freezing by burying themselves in snow.” “Yes, a great many. I will tell you one about a person who had no bed but one of snow for many nights.” “Did you know him? did you ever see him?” were the eager questions; and the children crouched at her feet, forgetting their reserve. “Yes, very, very well, all my life. This person, this gentleman, when he was young like you, cared only for books, books all the time, and wandering about over all the rocks, through all the woods in the neighborhood. After a while, when he grew older, he wanted to travel. He went to Asia, to Africa, to Europe—he saw all the great world, but he forgot God.” “Forgot God! oh, how dreadful!” “Forgot God; forgot to love him and pray to him—tried to live without him. But God remembered him. He never forgets any one, you know—not even the smallest bird or worm. He counts the tiniest blade of grass.” “He looked quite broken-hearted; but the taking of her who was to have been his wife to the rest of the blessed did not seem to draw him any nearer to God, and after a while he wandered off again, and was not heard of for years. He lived for months near the shore of the Gulf of California, alone, excepting the company of two pet seals, which he learned to love dearly. He used to go out on the sand and watch the “He settled at last in New Mexico, and though he lived so much alone, his gentleness and kindliness won him many friends, and he began to think he had found a home. But at length he longed to return, and when he set out he sped towards the mountains. He dared not travel through the valleys, for fear of the Indians, but had to keep out of their sight, if he wished to preserve his life. The mountains were covered with snow. The cold was bitter, and he knew that many days must pass before he could reach a safe shelter; but his heart did not fail him, for he began in those fearful, “Every night he lay down in the snow, hungry and tired, for it was dangerous to shoot game. If the Indians had heard the report of his rifle, they would have been upon him quickly; and he suffered severely for want of food. His shoes gave out too, but not his courage and trust in God, which had all come back to him as he lay under the stars, in his snowy bed, so awfully alone, shut out from humanity. On the thirteenth day, he limped into a fort, almost barefooted, hollow-eyed and gaunt, very weak, but joyful over his deliverance, and, with a new heart, praising God.” “Where is he now?” asked Rosie, when Miss Lane paused. “Gone to rest,” she answered solemnly. By this time the hour for school had arrived, and all were eager to begin the work of learning, so they gladly followed the teacher as she led the way up stairs to the school-room. |