Our Baby is very fond of coming down to dessert. I almost think it is the greatest pleasure in his small life, especially as it is not one that very often happens, for, of course, as a rule, he has to go to bed before father and mother begin dinner, and dessert comes at the end of all, even after grace, which I have often wondered at. Our Baby is four; he has rather red hair, and merry-sad eyes, if you know what I mean; and in summer, because his skin is so very fair—"quite lost on a boy," nurse says—he has a great many freckles, especially on his dear little nose. He is a great pet, of course, but not in a very babyish way—he seems too sensible for that; and he is very gentle and thoughtful, but not at all "soft" or cowardly. Our Baby has a brother—he is really, of course, brother to us all; but Baby seems to think he is only "budder" to him—a very big, almost grown-up brother, Baby considers him, for AN HONEST LITTLE MAN Auntie went on speaking, and did not see that Baby did not eat his biscuit, but held it tight in his little hand. And in a minute or two mother looked round and said, "I must find something my little boys will like." Then she drew the cocoa-nut biscuits to her and chose two, a pink one and a white one—you must know there is nothing we children think such a treat as cocoa-nut biscuits—and handed them to them. "Budder" took his and said, "Thank you, mother;" but what do you think dear Baby did? Instead of taking it, as he might easily have done, without any one's ever knowing of the other—and, indeed, if they had known, they couldn't have said it was naughty of him—he held out his hand with the biscuit already in it, and said quite simply, not the least as if he thought he was doing anything very good, "Him has one, zank you." "Honest little man," said mother, and then Baby's face got red, and he did look pleased. For mother And Auntie turned and gave him a kiss. "You dear little fellow," she said; and then in a minute, she added, "that reminds me of something I came across the other day." "What was it? Oh, do tell us, Auntie," we all cried. Auntie smiled—we are always on the look-out for stories, and she knows that. "It was nothing much, dears," she said, "nothing I could make a story of, but it was pretty, and it touched me." "Was it a bear," said Baby, "or a woof that touched you?" "Silly boy," said "Budder"; "how could it be a bear or a woof? Auntie said it was something pretty." And when she had left off laughing, she told us. "It was the other day," she said, "I was walking along one of the principal streets of Edinburgh, thinking to myself how bitterly cold it was for May. Spring has been late everywhere this year, but down here in the south, though you may think you "'Poor little boy,' I exclaimed to the lady I was with; 'just look at him. Why he has hopped all across the street merely for the pleasure of looking at the nice things in that window!' "For by this time the boy was staring in with all his eyes at a confectioner's close to where we were passing. "'Give him a penny, do,' said my friend, 'or go into the shop and buy him something.' "We went close up to the boy, and I touched him on the shoulder. He looked up—such a pretty, happy face he had—and I said to him— "'Well, my man, which shall I give you, a penny or a cookie?' "He smiled brightly, but you would never guess what he answered. Like our 'honest little man' here," and Auntie patted Baby's head as she spoke, "he held out his hand—not a dirty hand 'considering'—and said cheerfully— "'Plenty to buy some wi', thank ye, mem;' and spying into his hand I saw, children, one halfpenny." Auntie stopped. I think there were tears in her eyes. "And what did you do, Auntie?" we all cried. "What could I have done but what I did?" she said. "I don't know if it would have been better not—better to let his simple honesty be its own reward. I could not resist it; of course I gave him another penny! He thanked me again quite simply; I am sure it never struck him that he had done anything to be praised for, and I didn't praise him, I just gave him the penny. And oh, how his bright eyes gleamed! He looked now as if he thought he had wealth enough at his command to buy all the cookies in the shop." "So he hadn't only been pertending to buy," said "Budder." "Poor little boy, he had been toosing—toosing what he would buy. I'm so glad you gave him anoder penny, Auntie." "He's so gad him got anoder penny," echoed Baby; though, to tell the truth, I am not sure that he had been listening to the story. He had been making up for lost time by crunching away at his biscuit. And when the boys said "Good night," Auntie gave them each another biscuit, and mother smiled and said it was because it was Auntie's first night. But "Budder" told Baby afterwards, by some funny reasoning of his own, that they had got And Baby, of course, was quite satisfied, as "Budder" said so. I think I shall always remember that little cripple boy when I see cocoa-nut cakes, and it will make me like them, if possible, better than ever. |