* THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES HOLLO AT PLAY; OR, SAFE AMUSEMENTS. 521395 ROLLO AT PLAY. THE ROLLO SERIES til COMPOSED OF FOURTEEN VOLUMES TI Hollo Learning to Talk. Rnllo Learning to Rend. Hollo at Work. Hollo at Play. Hollo's Museum. Hollo's Travels. Hollo's Correspondence. Hollo's Philosophy WaMi Eoilo at School. 5 Hollo's Philosophy Air. Rollo'a Vacation. \ Hollo's Philosophy Fir* ttuiio'f Experiment;), ( Hollo's Philosophy **y. HEW EDITION, REVISED BY THE AUTUOK NEW YORK: SHELDON & COMPANY, PUBLISHERS, 498 & 500 BKOADWAY. 1865. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1355, by PHILLIPS, SAMPSON & CO., iu the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the District of Massa- chusetts. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1S65, by JACOB ABBOTT, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States, for the Southern District of New York. NOTICE TO PARENTS. ALTHOUGH this little book, and its fellow, " ROLLO JLT WORK," are intended principally as a means of Entertainment for their little readers, it is hoped by the writer that they may aid in accomplishing sctne of the following useful purposes : 1. In cultivating ilie thinking powers ; as frequent occasions occur, in which the incidents of the narra- tive, and the conversations arising from them, are intended to awaken and engage the reasoning aud reflective faculties of the little readers. 2. In promoting the progress of children in read- ing and in knowledge of language; for the diction of the stories is intended to be often in advance of the natural language of the reader, and yet so used as to be explained by the connection. 3. In cultivating the amiable and gentle qualities of the heart. The scenes are laid in quiet and vir- tuous life, and the character and conduct described are generally with the exception of some of the ordinary exhibitions of childish folly character and conduct to be imitated ; for \t is generally bet- ter, in dealing with children, to allure them to what is right by agreeable pictures of it, than to attempt to drive them to it by repulsive delineatious of what vr wrong. CONTENTS. ROLLO AT PLAY BIORT 1. ROLLO AT PLAT m THE WOODS. The Set ting out. Bridge-Building. A Visitor. Difficalty. Hearts wrong. Hearts right again. STORY 2. THE STEEPLE-TRAP. The Way to catch a Squirrel. The Way to lose a Squirrel. How to keep a Squirrel. Fires in the Woods. STORY 3. THE HALO ROUND THE MOON ; OR LUCY'S VISIT. A Round Rainbow. Who knows best, a Lit- tle Boy or his Father! Repentance. STORY 4. THE FRESHET. Maria and the Caravan Small Craft. The Principles of Order. Clearing up STORY 5. BLUEBERRYING. Old Trumpeter. I>evia lion. Little Mosette. Going up. The Secret out STORY o. TROUBLE ON THE MOUNTAIN. Boasting Getting in Trouble. A Test of Penitence. HOLLO AT P JL, A Y THE WOODS. THE SETTING OUT. ONE pleasant morning in the autumn, when Rollo was about five years old, he was sitting on the platform, behind his father's house, playing. He had a ham- mer and nails, and some small pieces of board. He was trying to make a box. He hammered and hammered, and pres- ently he dropped his work down and said, fretfully, " O dear me ! " "What is the matter, Rollo?" said Jonas, for it happened that Jonas was going by just then, with a wheelbarrow. " I wish these little boards would not split so. I cannot make my box." 8 HOLLO AT PLAY " You drive the nails wrong ; you put the wedge sides with the grain." " The wedge sides ! " said Rollo ; 'what are the wedge sides, and the grain? I do not know what you mean." But Jonas went on, trundling his wheel- barrow ; though he looked round and told Rollo that he could not stop to explain it to him then. Rollo was discouraged about his box. He thought he would look and see what Jonas was going to do. Jonas trundled the wheelbarrow along, until he came op- posite the barn-door, and there he put it down. He went into the barn, and pres- ently came out with an axe. Then he took the sides of the wheelbarrow off, and placed them up against the barn. Then he laid the axe down across the wheelbarrow, and went into the barn again. Pretty soon he brought out an iron crowbar, and laid that down also in the wheelbarrow, with the axe. Then Rollo called out, "Jonas, Jonas, where are you going?" " I am going down into the woods beyond the brook " " What are you going to do ? '* IN TI1L WOODS. 9 " I ai going to clear up some ground. 7 " May I go with you ? " " I should like it but that is not for me to say." Hollo knew by this that he must ask his mother. He went in and asked her, and she, in return, asked him if he had lead his lesson that morning. He said he had not ; he had forgotten it. "Then," said his mother, "you must first go and read a quarter of an hour." Rollo was sadly disappointed, and also a little displeased. He turned away, hung down his head, and began to cry It is not strange that he was disappointed, but. it was very wrong for him to feel dis- pleased, and begin to cry. " Come here, my son," said his mother. Rollo came to his mother, and she said to him kindly, " You have done wrong now twice this morning ; you have neglected your duty of reading, and now you are out of humor with me because I require you to attend to it. Now it is my duty not to yield to such feelings as you have now, but to punish them. So I must say that, instead wf a quarter of an hour, you must wait 10 ROLLO AT PLAY lialf an hour, before you go out with Jonas." Rollo stood silent a minute, he per- ceived that he had done wrong, and was sorry. He did not know how he could find Jonas in the woods, but he did not say any thing about that then. He only asked his mother what he must do for the half hour. She said he must read a quarter of an hour, and the rest of the time he might do as he pleased. So Rollo took his book, and went out and sat down upon the platform, and began to read aloud. When he had finished one page, which usually took a quarter of an hour, he went in to ask his mother what time it was. She looked at the clock, and told him he had been reading seven- teen minutes. " Is seventeen minutes more than a quarter of an hour, or not so much ? " asked Rollo. " It is more ; -fifteen minutes is a quarter of an hour. Now you may do what you please till the other quarter has elapsed." Rollo thought he would go and read more It is true he was tired* but he IN THE WOODS. I was sorry he had done wrong, and ho thought that if he read more than he was obliged to, his mother would see that he was penitent, and that he acquiesced in his punishment. So he went on reading, and the rest of the half hour passed away very quick- ly. In fact, his mother came out before he got up from his reading, to tell him it was time for him to go. She said she was very glad he had submitted pleasant- ly to his punishment, and she gave him something wrapped up in a paper. " Keep this till you get a little tired of play, down there, and then sit down on a log and open it." Rollo wondered what it was. He took it gladly, and began to go. But in a minute he turned round and said, "But how shall I find Jonas ? " " What is he doing ? " said his mother " He said he was going to clear up some land." " Then you will hear his axe. Go down to the edge of -he woods and listen, and when yvxi hear him, call him. But you must not go into the woods unless you hear him." 1 2 HOLLO AT PLAY BRIDGE BUILDING Hollo went on, down the green lane, lill lie came to the turn-stile, and then went through into the field. He then followed a winding path until he came to the edge of the trees, and there stopped to listen. He heard the brook gurgling along over the stones, and that was all at first ; but presently he began to hear the strokes of an axe. He called out as loud as ho could, " Jonas ! Jonas ! " But Jonas did not hear. Then he walked along the edge of the woods till he came nearer the place where he heard the axe. He found here a little opening among the trees and bushes, so that he could look in. He saw the brook, and over beyond it, on the opposite bank, was Jonas, cutting down a small tree. So Hollo walked on until he came to the brook, and then asked Jonas how he should get over. The brook was pretty wide and deep. Jonas said, if he would wait a fe\i minutes, he would build him a bridge. IN THE WOODS. 13 '* You cannot build a bridge," said Hollo. " Wait a little and see." So Hollo sat down on a mossy bank, and Jonas, having cut down the small tree, began to work on a larger one that stood near the bank. After he had cut a little while, Hollo asked him why he did not begin the bridge. " I am beginning it," said he. Rollo laughed at this, but in a minute Jonas called to him to stand back, away from the bank; and then, after a few strokes more, the top of the tree began to bend slowly over, and then it fell faster and faster, until it came down with a great crash, directly across the brook. " There ! " said Jonas, " there is your bridge." Rollo looked at it with astonishment and pleasure. " Now," said Jonas, " I will come and help you over." " No," said Rollo, " I can come over myself. I can take hold of the branches for a railing." So Rollo began to climb along the stem 14 ROLLO AT PLA\ of the tree, holding on carefully by the branches. When he reached the middle of the stream, he stopped to look down into the water. " This is a capital bridge of yours, Jonas," said he. " How beautiful the water looks down here ! O, I see a little fish ! He is swimming along by a great rock. Now he is standing perfectly still O, Jonas, come and see him." " No," said Jonas, " I must mind my work." After a little time, Hollo went carefully on over the bridge, and sat down on the bank of the brook. But he did not have with him the parcel his mother gave him. He had left it on the other side. After he had watched the fishes, and thrown pebble-stones into the brook some time, he began to be tired, and he asked Jonas what he had better do. " I think you had better build a wig warn." "A wigwam? What is a wigwam?' said Hollo. "It is a little house made of bushes such as the Indians live in." ROLLO ON THE TREE BRIDGE. Pago 14. iN THE WOODS. 15 " O, I could not make a house," said Rollo. " I think you could if I should tell you how, and help you a little." "But you say you must mind your work." " Yes, I can mind my work and tel you at the same time." Rollo thought he should like to build a wigwam very much. Jonas told him the first thing to be done was to find a good place, where the ground was level. Rollo looked at a good many places, but at last chose a smooth spot under a great oak tree, which Jonas said he was not going to cut down. It was near a beautiful turn in the brook, where the water was very deep. Jonas told him that the first thing was to make a little stake, and drive it down in the middle of his wi<^wam-ground. Then Rollo recollected thai he had left his hatchet over on the other side of the brook, together with the parcel his mother gave him ; and he was going ovcf to gel them, when Jonas told him he wcv v \ trim up the bridge a little, and then .V v " O, so that 1 can run faster," said Hollo. " Run faster ? I do not think you will run much, up old Benalgon, unless he holds his back down lower than when I went up." Rollo did not mean that he was going to run up the mountain, but he did not ex- plain what he did mean, for he thought that Jonas would laugh at him, if he told him he was afraid of the bears. So he said, " Jonas, don't you wish you were going with us ? " " I should like it well enough, but 1 must stay at home and mind my work." " I wish you could go. I will go and ask my father if he will not let you." Rollo ran into the house with great haste and eagerness, leaving all the doors open, and calling out, "Father, father," as soon as he had begun to open the parlor door. " Father, father," said he, running up to him, " I wish you would let Jonas go with us to-morrow." Now, Rollo's father had come ruime but a short time before, and was just seated quie ,lv in his arm-chair, reading a news- "0 THE HALO ROUND THE MOON paper, and Hollo came up to him, pulling down the paper with his hands, and look- ing up into his father's face, so as to stop his reading at once. Heedless boys very often come to ask favors in this way.* His father gently moved him back and said, " No, my son, it is not convenient for Jonas to go to-morrow. Besides, I am busy now, and cannot talk with you ; you must go away." Rollo turned away disappointed, and went slowly back through the kitchen. His mother, who was there, and who heard all that passed, as the doors Avere open, said to him, as he walked by her, " What a foolish way that was to ask him, Rollo ! You might have known it would have done no good." Rollo did not answer, but he went and sat down on the step of the door, and was just beginning to think what the foolish- ness was in his way of asking his father, when a little bird came hopping along in the yard. He ran in to ask his mother to give him some milk to feed the bird with. She smiled, and told him milk was good for OR, Lucrs VISIT. 7s kittens, but not for birds; and she gave him some crumbs of bread. Rollo threw the crumbs out, but they only frightened the little thing away. That night, when Rollo went to bed, his father said, that when he was all ready, he would come up and see him. When he came into his chamber, Rollo called out to him, " O, father, look out the window, and see what a beautiful ring there is round the moon." " So there is," said his father ; " I am r\ther sorry to see that." " Sorry, father ! why ? It is beautiful, I think." "It does look pretty, but it is a sign of rain to-morrow. " Of rain ? O no, father ; it is a kind of a rainbow. It is a round rainbow. I am sure it will be pleasant to-morrow." " Very well," said his father, " we shall 6ee in the morning." Then he sat down on Rollo's bed-side some time, talking with him on various subjects, and then heard him say his prayers. At length he took the light, and bade Rollo good night. Rollo's eye caught another view of the t 72 THE HALO ROUND THE MOON, moon as his father was going, and lie said, " O, father, just look at the moon once more ; that is a rainbow ; I see the colors. I expect it will grow into a large one, such as you told me was a sign of fair weather. I will watch it." " Yes," said his father, " you can watch it as you go to sleep." So Rollo laid his face upon his pillow in such a way that he could see the moon through the window ; and he began to watch the bright circle around it, but before it grew any bigger, he was fast asleep. WHO KNOWS BEST, A LITTLE BOY Oil HIS FATHER \ The next morning, Rollo awoke early, and he was very much pleased to see, as soon as he opened his eyes, that the sun was shining in at the windows. He was not only pleased to find that the prospect was so good for a pleasant ride, but his vanity was gratified at the thought that it had turned out that he knew better aboul OR, LUCY'S VISIT. 73 ihe weather than his father. He began to dress himself, as far as he could with out help, and was preparing to hasten down to his father, to tell him that it was going to be a pleasant day. When he was nearly dressed, he was surprised to observe that the bright sunlight on the wall was gradually fading away, and at length it wholly disappeared. He went to look out the window to see what was the cause. He found that there was a broad expanse of dark cloud covering the eastern sky, excepting a narrow strip quite low down, near the horizon. When the sun first rose, it shone brightly through this narrow zone of clear sky ; but now it had ascended a little higher, and gone be- hind the cloud. " Never mind," said Rollo to himself. " The cloud is not so very large after all, and the sun will come out again above it when it gets up a little higher." Rollo came down to breakfast, and he went out into the yard every two or three minutes, to look at the sky. The cloud seemed to extend, so that the sun did not come out of it, as he expected, but still he thought it was going to be pleasant d o 74 THE HALO ROUND THE MOON; Children generally think it is going to he pleasant, whenever they want to gc away. His father thought it was probably go- ing to rain, and that, at any rate it was very doubtful whether Uncle George would come. However, he said they should soon see, and, true enough, just as they were rising from the breakfast table, a chaise drove up to the door, and out jumped Uncle George and cousin Lucy. Lucy was a very pleasant little blue- eyed girl, two or three years older than Rollo. She had a small tin pail in her hand, with a cover upon it. " Good morning, Rollo," said she " Have you got your basket ready ? " " Yes," said Rollo ; " but I am afraid it is going to rain." While the children were saying this, Uncle George said to Rollo's father, " I suppose we shall have to give up our expedition to-day. I am in hopes we are going to have some rain." " In hopes," thought Rollo ; " that is very strange when we want to go a blue- berrying." Rollo's father and mother and hii OR, LUCY S VIST. V* uncle looked at the clouds all around. They concluded that there was every ap- pearance of rain, and that it would be best to postpone their excursion, and then went into the house. Rollo was very confident it would not rain, and was very eager to have them go. He asked Lucy if she did not think it was going to be pleasant, but Lucy was more modest and reasonable than he was, and said that she did not know ; she could not judge of the weather so well as her father. Rollo began by this time to be consid erably out of humor. He said he knew it was not going to rain, and he did not see why they might not go. He did not believe it would rain a drop all day. Lucy just then pointed down to a little dark spot on the stone step of the door, where a drop had just fallen, and asked Rollo what he called that. " And that, and that, and that," said she, pointing to several other drops. Rollo at first insisted that that was not rain, but some little spots on the stone. Then Lucy reached out her hand and said, " Hold out your hand sc, Rollo, and you 76 THE HALO HOUND THE MOON, will feel the drops coming down out of the sky." Rollo held out his hand a moment, but then immediately withdrew it, saying, im- patiently, that he did not care ; it was not rain ; at any rate it was only a little sprink- ling. Lucy observed that Rollo was getting very much out of humor, and she tried to please him by saying, " Rollo, I would not mind. If it does Klin, I will ask my father to let me stay and play with you to-day, and we can have a fine time up in your little room." "No, we cannot," said Rollo ; "and be- sides, they will not let you stay, I know. I went yesterday to ask my father to let Jonas go with us to-day, and he would not." It was certainly very unreasonable for Rollo to imagine that his father and uncle would be unwilling to have Lucy stayjust because it had not been convenient to let Jonas go with them. But when children are out. of humor, they are always very unreasonable. " Why wC uld not he let Jonas go ? * asked Lucy. OR, LUCY'S VISIT. T* " I do not know. Mother said it was he- cause I did not ask him right." " How did you ask him ? " " O, I interrupted him. He was read- ing." " O, that is not the way. I never inter- rupt my father if I want to ask him any thing." " Suppose he is busy, and you want to know that very minute ; what do you do ? " " I will show you. Come with me and I will ask him to let me stay with you to- day." So Lucy and Rollo walked in. When they came to the parlor door, they saw that their parents were sitting on the sofa, talking about other things. Rollo stopped at the door, but Lucy went in gently. She walked up to her father's side, and stood there still. Her father took no notice of her at first, but went on talking with Rollo's father. Lucy stood very patiently until, after a few minutes, her father stopped talking, and said, " Lucy, my dear, do you want to speak to me ? " * Yes, sir," said Lucy, " T wanted tc G* 78 THE HALO ROF^'D THE MUOJi; ask you if you were willing to let me stay here to-day and play with Rollo, if you do not go to the mountain." " I do not know," said her father, hesi- tating, and patting Lucy on the head * that is a new idea ; however, I believe I have no objection." Lucy ran back joyfully to Hollo, and after a short time, her father went home. Rollo, however, did not feel in any better humor, and all Lucy's endeavors to en- gage him in some amusement, failed. She proposed building with bricks, or going up into his little room, and drawing pic- tures on their slates, or getting his story- books out and reading stories, and various other things, but Rollo would not be pleased. Rollo ought, now, when he found that he must be disappointed about his ride, to have immediately banished it from his mind altogether, and turned his thoughts to other pleasures ; but like all ill-humored people, he would keep thinking and talk- ing, all the time, about the thing which caused his ill-humor. So he sat in a large back entry, where he and Lucy were, looking out at the door, and saying a great OR, LUCY'S VISIT. 71; many ill-natured things about the weather, and his father's giving up the ride just for a little sprinkling of rain that would not last half an hour. He said it was a shame, too, for it to rain that day, just because he was going to ride. Just then, his father spoke to him from the window, and called him in. He and Lucy went in together into the parlor. " Hollo," said his father, " did you know you were doing very wrong ? " Rollo felt a little guilty, but he said rather faintly, " No, sir, I was not doing any thing." " You are committing a great many sins, all at once." Rollo was silent. He knew his father meant sins of the heart. " Your heart is in a very wicked state You are under the dominion of some of the worst of feelings ; you are self-conceited, ungrateful, undutiful, unjust, selfish, and," he added in a lower and more solemn tone, " even impious." Rollo thought that these were heavy charges to bring upon him ; but his father 60 THE HALO ROUND THE MOON. spoke calmly and kindly, and he knew that he could easily show that what he said was true. 44 You are self-conceited vainly imagin- ing that you, a little boy of seven years old, can judge better than your father and mother, and obstinately persisting in your opinion that it is not going to rain, when the rain has actually commenced, and is falling faster and faster. You are ungrate- ful, to speak reproachfully of me, and give me pain, by your ill-will, when I have been planning this excursion, in a great degree, for your enjoyment, and only give it up because I am absolutely compelled to do it by a storm ; undutiful, in show- ing such a repining, unsubmissive spirit towards your father; unjust in making Lucy and all of us suffer, because you are unwilling to submit to these circumstances that we cannot control ; selfish, in being unwilling that it should rain and interfere with your ride, when you know that rain is so much wanted in all the fields, all over the country ; and, what is worse than all f impious, in openly rebelling against God, and censuring the arrangements of his OR, Luurs VISIT. 81 providence, and pretending to think that they are made just to trouble you." When he had said this, he paused to hear what Rollo would say. He thought that if he was convinced of his sin, and really penitent, he would acknowledge that he was wrong, or at least be silent ; but that if, on the other hand, he were still unsubdued, he would go to making excuses. After a moment's pause, Rollo said, " I did not know that there was need of rain in the fields." " Did not you ? " said his father. " Did not you know that the ground was very dry, and that, unless we have rain soon, the crops will suffer very much ? " " No, sir," said Rollo. " It is so." said his father ; " and this rain, which you are so unwilling to have descend, is going down into the ground all over the country, and into the roots of all the plants growing in the fields, carry- ing in the nourishment which will swell out all the corn and grain, and apples and pears. In a few days there will be thou- sands and thousands of dollars' worth of 6 82 THE HALO ROUND THE MOON: fruit and food more than there would have been without this rain ; and yet you are very unwilling to have it come, because you want to go and get a few blueberries ! M Hollo was confounded, and had not a word to say. "Now, Rollo," continued his father, "all the rest of us are disposed to be good humored, and to acquiesce in God's decis- ion, and try to have a happy day at home ; and we cannot have it spoiled by your wicked repinings. So you must go away by yourself, until you feel willing to sub- mit pleasantly and with good humor. Then you may come back, but be sure not to come back before." REPENTANCE. Now there was in Hollo's house a small back garret, over a part of the kitchen chamber, which had one small window in it, looking out into the garden. This gar- ret was not used, and Hollo's father had put a little rocking-chair there, and a small table with a Bible on it, and hung some OR, LUCY'S VISIT. S3 old maps about it, so as to make it as pleasant a little place as he could ; and there he usod to send Hollo when he had done any thing very wrong, or when he was sullen and ill natured, that he might reflect in solitude, and either return a good boy, or else stay where his bad feel- ings would not trouble or injure others. His father had put in marks, too, at sev- eral places in the Bible, where he thought it would be well for him to read at such times ; as he said that reading suitable passages in the Bible would be more likely to bring him to repentance, than any other book. Rollo knew that when his father told him to go away by himself, he meant for him to go into this back garret. So he turned round and walked out of the room. As he passed up the back stairs, the kitten came frisking around him, but he had no heart to play with her, and walked on He then turned and went up the narrow, steep stairs that led to the garret ; they were rather more like a ladder than like stairs. Rollo ascended them, and then sat down in the little rocking-chair. The rain was beating against the vr -'fc^s, and 84 THE HALO ROUND THE MOON; paltering on the roof which was just over his head. It is sometimes but a little thing which turns the whole current of the thoughts and feelings. In Hollo's case, at this time, it was but a drop of water. For after having sat some time in his chair, his heart remaining pretty nearly the same, a drop of water, which, somehow or other, con- OR. LUC* S VISIT. S5 rrived to get through some crevice in the boards and shingles over his head, fell ex- actly into the back of his neck. The first feeling it occasioned was an additional emotion of impatience and fretfulness. But he next began to think how unreason- able and wicked it was to make all that difficulty, just because his father was pre- venting his going out to stay all day in the rain, when a single drop falling upon Imp vexed and irritated him. He also looked out of the window tow ards the garden, and the dry ground, and all the trees and garden vegetables seemed to be drinking in the rain with de- light. That made him think of the vast amount of good the rain was doing, and he saw his own selfishness in a striking point of view. In a word Hollo was now beginning to be really penitent. The tears came into his eyes ; but they were tears of real sorrow for sin, not of vexation and anger. He took up his little Bible, to read one of the passages, as his father had advised him. He happened to open at a mark which his father had put in at the para- ble of the prodigal son. The first verse 66 THE HALO ROUND THE MOON, which his eye fell upon, was the verse, * 1 will arise and go to my father." Rollo thought that that was exactly the thing for him to do to go and confess his fault to his father. So he laid down his little Bible, wiped the tears from his eyes, and went down stairs. He met his father in the entry. He went up to him, and took his hand, and said, " Father, I am really very sorry I have been so naughty ; I ivill try to be a good boy now." His father stooped down and kissed him. " I am very glad to hear it, Rollo," said he. " Now you may go and find Lucy. I believe she is up in your mother's chamber." Rollo went off quite happy in pursuit of Lucy. He found her sitting on a cricket in his mother's room, looking over a little picture-book. Rollo ran laughing up to her, and said, " What have you got, Lucy ? " 44 One of your little picture-books. Will you lend it to me to carry home ? " Rollo said he would, and then they be- gan to talk about what they should da Oil, LUCY S VISIT. 81 ft rained very fast, and they could not go out of doors ; and, after proposing several things, which, however, neither of them seemed to like, they turned to Hollo's mother, and asked her what they had bet- ter do. " I always find," said his mother, " that when I am disappointed of any pleasure, it is best not to try to find any other pleasure in its place, but to turn to duty" The children did not understand this very well, and they were silent. " What I mean," she continued, " is this : When we have just been disap- pointed of any pleasure which we had set our hearts upon, it is very difficult to find any thing else that we can have in its place, that will look as pleasant as the one we had lost. You see that you are not satisfied with any thing you propose to one another. Now, I find that the best way, in such cases, is to give up pleasure altogether, and turn to some duty ; and after performing the duty a short time, peace and satisfaction return to the mind again, and we get over the effects of the disappointment in the quickest and pleas- an test 'vay," 88 THE HALO ROUND THE MOON, Rollo and Lucy looked at one anothcv rather soberly. They did not seem to know what to say. " I presume, however, you will not do this," continued his motiier. " Why ? " said Rollo. " Because," said his mother, " it re- quires a good deal of resolution, at first, to turn to duty when you have just been setting your heart on pleasure" " O, we have got resolution enough," said Rollo. " What duty do you think we had bet- ter do ? " asked Lucy. " If I were you," replied Rollo's mother, " I should first of all sit down and have a good reading lesson." Rollo and Lucy hesitated a little, but they concluded to take their mother's ad- vice at last, and went to Rollo's little li- brary, and chose a book, and then went down to the back entry, and sat down there, on a long cricket, and began to read. At first, it was rather hard to do it, for it did not look very pleasant to either of them to sit down and read, just at the time ?n they expected to be gathering blun- OK, LUCY'S VISIT. 09 berries on the mountain. Hollo said, when they were opening the book and finding the place, that, if they had gone, they should, by that time, have just about arrived at the foot of the mountain. " Yes," said Lucy, " but we must not think of that now. Besides, just see how it rains. It would be a fine time now to go up a mountain, wouldn't it ? " Hollo looked out of the open door, and saw the rain pouring down into the yard, and felt again ashamed to recollect how he had insisted that it was not going to rain. Lucy said it was beautiful to see it pour- ing down so fast. "Look," said she; "how it streams down from the spout at the cor- ner of the barn ! " " Yes," said Rollo, " and see that little pond out by the garden gate. How it is all full of little bubbles! It will be a beau- tiful pond for me to sail boats in, when the rain is over. I can make paper-boats and pea boats ! " " Pea boats ? " said Lucy ; " what are pea-boats?" " O ! they are beautiful little boats,'' said he. Jonas showed me how to make them. We take a pea-pod, a good large d* H * DO THE HALO ROUND THE MOON; ftill pea-pod, and shave off the top from one end to the other, and then take out the peas, and it makes a beautiful little boat. I wish we had some ; 1 could show you." " Let us make some when we have done reading, and sail them. Only that pond will all go away when the rain is over." " O no," said Hollo, " I will put some ground all around it, and then the water cannot run away." " Yes, but it will soak down into the ground." "Will it?" said Rollo. "Well, we can sail our boats on it a little while be- fore it is gone." ** But it is so wet," said Lucy, " we cannot go out to get any pea-pods." " I did not think of that," said Rollo. " Perhaps Jonas could get some for us, with an umbrella." "/ could go with an umbrella," said Lucy, "just as well as not." The children saw an umbrella behind the door, and they thought they would go both together, and they actually laid down their book, spread the umbrella, and went OR, LUCY'S VISIT. 91 lo the door. It then occurred to them that it would not be quite right to go out, without leave ; so Hollo went to ask his mother. His mother said it was not suitable for young ladies to go out in the rain, as their shoes, and their dress generally, were thin, and could not bear to be exposed to wet ; but she said that Rollo himself might take off his shoes and stockings, and go out alone, when the rain held up. " But, mother," said he, " why cannot I go out now, with the umbrella ? " " Because," she replied, " when it rains fast, some of the water spatters through the umbrella, and some will be driven against you by the wind." " Well, I will wait, and as soon as it rains but little, I will go out. But must I take off my shoes and stockings ?" " Yes," said his mother, " or else you will get them wet and muddy. And be fore you go, you must get a dipper of wa tcr ready in the shed, to pour on your feet, and wash them, when you get back ; and then wait till they are entirely dry, before you put on your shoes and stockings again 92 THE HALO ROUND TUB MOON j If you want the pea-pods enough to tak all that trouble, you may go for them." . Rollo said he did want them enough for that, and he then went back and told Lucy what his mother had said, and they concluded to read until the rain should cease, and that then Rollo should go out into the garden. They began to read ; but their minds were so much upon the pea-pod boats, that the story did not interest them very much. Besides, children cannot read very well aloud, to one another ; for if they succeed in calling all the words right, they do not generally give the stops and the emphasis, and the proper tones of voice, so as to make the story interesting to those that hear. Some boys and girls are vain enough to think that they can read very well, just because they can call all the words without stopping to spell them ; but this is very far from being enough to make a good reader. Rollo read a little way, and then Lucy read a little way ; but they were not much interested, and thinking that the difficulty might be in the book, they got another, but with no better success. At last Rollo said OR LUCY'S VISIT. 93 I hey would go and get the.r mother to read to them. So they went together to her room, and Rollo said that they could not get along very well in reading themselves, and asked her if she would not be good enough to read to them. " Why, what is the difficulty ? " said she. " O, I do not know, exactly : the story is not very interesting, and then we can- not read very well." " In what respect will it be better for me to read to you ? " she asked. " Why, mother, you can choose us a prettier story ; and then we should under- stand it better if you read it." " I suppose you would ; but I see you have made a great mistake." " What mistake ? " said both the chil- dren at once. " Why is it that you are going to read at all ? " " Why, you advised us to, mot her." " Did I advise you to do it as a duty, or as a pleasure ? " " As a duly, mother ; I recollect now," said Rollo. "Yes, well, now the mistake you have 94 THE HALO ROUND THE MOOS; made is, that you are looking upon it only as a pleasure, and instead of doing il faithfully, in such a way as will make it most useful to you, you are forgetting that altogether, and only intent upon having it interesting and pleasant. Is it not so ? " " Why yes," said Hollo, hesitat- ing, and looking down ; and then turn- Ing round to Lucy, he said, " I suppose we had better go and read the story our- selves." " Do just as you please," said his mother. " I have not commanded you to read, but only recommended it ; and that not as a way of interesting you, but as a way of spending an hour usefully, as a prepara- tion for an hour of enjoyment afterwards. You can do as you please, however ; but if you attempt to read at all, 1 advise you to do it not as play, but as a lesson." " Well, come, Hollo," said Lucy, " let us go." So the children ran back to the entry, and sat down to their story, taking pains to read carefully, as if their object was to learn to read and though they did OR LUCY'S VISIT. 95 not expect it, they did, in fact, have a very pleasant time. The rest of the adventures of Rollo and Lucy, during this day, must be reserved for another story* THE FRESHET, THE FKESHET THE story that Hollo and his cousin Lucy began to read together, in the back entry, looking out towards the garden, that rainy day when they were disappointed of the excursion up the mountain, com menced as follows : MARIA AND THE CARAVAN. Maria Wilton lives in the pretty white house which stands just at the entrance of the wood, where the children find the blackberries so thick in the berrying season. It is not as large or ele- gant a house as many that we pass on a walk through the village ; but yet, with its neatly-paint- ed front and blooming little garden, its appear- ance is quite as inviting as that of many a more splendid mansion. Certain it is, at least, that there is not a more pleasant or happy dwelling in the town. Neatness and good order regulate all the arrangements of the family, and where sucn is the case, it is almost needless to add that peace 100 THE FRESHET. and harmony characterize the intercourse of the inmates. It is seldom that confusion or uproar, or disputes or contentions, are known among the Wil- tons. But it was of Maria that I was unending to speak more particularly, her kind, and yield ing, and conciliating manners towards her broth- ers and sisters. Maria was not the oldest of the children ; she was not quite nine, and her sister Harriet was as much as eleven, and her brother George still older. And yet her influence did more to maintain peace and good feeling in the family group, than would have been believed by a person who had not observed her. In every case where only her own wishes or inclinations were concerned, Maria was ready to give up to George or Harriet ; because, as she said, they were older than herself; and again, she was quite as ready to yield to little Susan and Willy, be- cause they were younger. Her brothers and sis- ters, in their turn, were far less apt to contend for any privilege or advantage, than they would have been, if she had shown herself more tenacious of her own rights. Mr. Wilton used occasionally to go into the city, a few miles distant, upon business. He usually went in a chaise, taking one of the chil- dren with him. The excursion was to them a very pleasant one, and all anticipated, with a great deal of pleasure, their respective turns to ride with their father. It happened that the day when it fell to Maria's turn, was to be the close of ao THE FRESHET. 101 exhibition of animals, which had been for a short time in the city. Maria's eye brightened with pleasure as her father mentioned this circumstance at the dinner table, and inquired if she would like to visit the caravan. " O, father ! " exclaimed George, eagerly, as he laid down his knife and fork; "a caravan ! Mayn't I go ? " " You cannot both go," replied his father ; " and I believe it is Maria's turn to go into town with me." " Well," said George, " but I don't believe Maria would care any thing about seeing it;" and his eye glanced eagerly from his father to Ma- ria, and then from Maria to his father again. " How is it, Maria? " said Mr. Wilton ; " have you no wish to visit the caravan ? " Maria did not answer directly, while yet her countenance showed very plainly what her wishes really were. " Is there an elephant there, father?" she, at length, rather hesitatingly inquired. " There probably is," replied her father. " An elephant I " repeated George with some- thing of a sneer ; " who has not seen an ele- phant ? I would not give a farthing to go, i* there was nothing better than an elephant to be seen." " What should you care so much to see ? " in- quired Mr. Wilton. " Why, I would give any thing to see a leop ird or a camel." " A leopard or a camel ! " repeated his fathci i* 102 THE FRESHET. in the same tone in which George had made lu'a rude speech ; " I am sure I wouldn't give a farthing to see either a camel or a leopard." " No," said George, " because you have seen .hem both ; but J never did." " Nf?ither has Maria seen an elephant," returned Mr. Wilton ; u so what is the difference?" George looked a little mortified at the over- throw of his argument. But still his eagerness for the gratification was not to be repressed. " I shouldn't think a girl need to care about going to see a parcel of wild beasts," he remarked, rather petulantly, as he gave his chair a push, upon rising from the table. " O, George, George," expostulated his father, " I did not think you were either a selfish or a sullen boy." " No, father, and he is not," said Maria, ap- proaching her father, and taking his hand ; " but he wants to go very much, and I do not care so much about it so he may go, and I will stay at home." " You are a good girl," said her father ; " but I shall not consent to any such injustice ; so go and get ready as quick as possible." " But, father, I had really a great deal rath Q j that George should go," insisted Maria. " But I cannot think that George would really, on the whole, prefer to take your place," said Mr. Wilton, turning to George. " No, sir." replied George, who restored by this time to a sense of propriety and justice -wai THE FRESHET. 103 standing ready to speak for himself. u No, sir; Maria is very kind ; but I do not wish to take her place ; I am very sorry indeed that I said any thing about it. I certainly shall not consent to take your place, Maria," he said, perceiving that she was ready to entreat still further. " O ! but I do wish you would," said Maria. But just here her mother interposed. " If Maria would really prefer to give up her place to her brother," said Mrs. Wilton, " I certainly shall like the arrangement very much, for I am to be par- ticularly engaged this" afternoon, and, as Harriet is to be absent, I shall be very glad of some of Ma- ria's assistance in taking care of the baby." " O ! well," said Maria, brightening up, " then I am sure I will not go ; so run, George, for father is almost ready to start." Thus the matter was amicably settled. George went with his father, and Maria remained at home to help take care of little Willy. Maria loved her little brother very much, and she never seemed tired of taking care of him, even when he was ever so fretful or restless. She would leave her play, at any moment, to run and rock the baby, or to hold him in her lap ; for, even if she felt inclined, at any time, to be a little out of patience for a moment, she would recollect how many hours she had herself been nursed, by night and by day, and she was glad of an opportunity to relieve her mother of some of her care and fatigue. Her cousin, Ellen Weston, called, one afternoon, tt 104 THE FRLSHET. ask her to accompany a party of little girls, who were going to gather berries in the wood neai Maria's house. It happened that Maria hac been left with the care o'f Willy, just as her cousin called ; and it happened, too, that Willy was that afternoon unusually fretful and difficult to please. If Maria left him for a moment, or if she did not hold him exactly in the posture which suited him, or if she had not precisely the thing ready which he wanted at the moment, he would act just as all babies of nine or ten months sometimes take it into their heads to act. With all her patience and good-humor, she hardly knew how to manage him ; and especially after having been obliged to reject so agreeable an invitation as the one her cousin brought, she found her task a little irk some. She could hardly repress an occasional expres- sion of impatience, as she tried in vain to please the wayward little fellow. But her patience and good-humor were very soon restored ; and as she reflected that she was doing her mother a great deal of good, by staying at home with Willy, she felt quite willing to dismiss ell thoughts of the berrying expedition. The girls, however, did not forget her. It was proposed by one of the party, when Ellen had stated the reason why Maria could not join them, that each should contribute some portion of her berries to be carried to her on their way home. All agreed very readily to the plan, and each took pains to select the largest and THE FRESHET. 105 the ripest of her berries for Maria's basket. The gratification afforded Maria by this little token of kind remembrance, more than compensated for the self-denial which she had practised. It is al- most always the case when persons cheerfully sub- mit to any privation, for the sake of other persons, or because it is duty, that they are amply reward- ed for it. They enjoy, at least, the consciousness of doing right, which is one of the very highest sources of pleasure. Maria would, at any time, have been satisfied with only this reward ; but it very often happened, very unexpectedly, that something more was in store for her. This was the case upon the time when she gave np her ride, and her visit to the caravan, for the sake of her brother. I have not said that it was absolutely Maria's duty to yield to her brother, in this case : perhaps it would have been perfectly right for her to have maintained her own claims ; and yet there is no doubt that she felt a great deal happier for the sacrifice she had made. But we were going to speak of some further re- ward that her amiable behavior, in this instance, pro- cured her. As her father opened a package which he had brought on his return, he silently placed in her hands a beautiful copy of a newly-published work, upon the fly-leaf of which she found writ- ten " Maria Wilton a reward for her kind and obliging manners towards her brothers and si* tere." *06 THE FRESHE7 SMALL CRAFT. When they had finished the story, Lucjp shut the book, saying, " Maria was a good girl, was not she, Rollo ? " " Yes," said Rollo, " she was an excellent girl. I would have done just so; would not you, Lucy ? " " I ought to, I know," said Lucy, " but perhaps I should not." " I should, I am sure," said Rollo. Lucy was a polite girl, and she did not contradict Rollo, though she recollected how much selfishness he had shown that momiri;, and it did not seem to her very likely that he would have been willing to make any very great sacrifice to oblige others. " My father says we cannot tell what we should do until we are tried," said Lucy. " Well, I know I should have been will- ing to stay at home, if I had been Maria,' replied Rol o. " But, only think, that would be prefer- ring another person's pleasure rather than your own." THE FRESHET. 10" " Well, I should prefer another person's pleasure rather than my own." Rollo was beginning to get a little excited and vexed. People who boast of excel- lences which they do not possess, are very apt to be unreasonable and angry when any body seems to doubt whether their boastings are true He was thus going )n, insisting upon it that he should have acted as Maria had done, and was just saying that he should prefer another per- son's pleasure rather than his own, when Jonas came into the entry from the kitch- en, with an armful of wood, which he was carrying into the parlor. " When is it, Rollo," said Jonas, " that you prefer another person's pleasure to your own ? " " Always," said Rollo, with an air of self-conceit and consequence. Jonas smiled, and went on with his wood. It is always better for boys to be modest and humble-minded. They appear ridic- ulous to others when they are boasting what great things they can do ; and when they boast what good things they do they 106 THE FRESHET. arc very likely to be just on the eve oi doing exactly the opposite. In a moment Jonas came back out of the parlor, and said, as he passed through, " Self-praise Goes but little ways ; " a short piece of versification which all boys and girls would do well to remember. Now it happened that, all this time, Hollo's mother was sitting in a little bed- room, which had a door opening into the entry where Lucy and Rollo had been reading, and she heard all the conversa- tion. She knew that though Rollo was generally a good boy, and was willing to know his faults, and often endeavored to correct them, still that he was, like all other boys, prone to selfishness and to vanity, and she thought that she must take some way to show him clearly what the truth really was, about his disinterested- ness. In a few minutes, therefore, she went out of the room, and took from the store closet an apple and a pear. They weic both good, but the pear was particularly fine. It was large, mellow, and juicy. THE FRESHET. 109 Sue then went back to her seat, and called, " Rollo." Rollo came running to her. " Here," said she, " is an apple and a pear for you." "Is one forme and one for Lucy?" said he. . " That is just as you please. I give them both to you. You may do what you choose with them." Rollo took the fruit, much pleased, and walked slowly back, hesitating what to do. He thought he must certainly give one to Lucy, and as he had just been boasting that he preferred another's pleasure to his own, he was ashamed to offer her the apple ; and yet he wanted the pear very much himself. If he had had a little more time, he would have hit upon a plan which would have removed all the difficulty at once, by dividing both the apple and the pear, and giving to Lucy half of each. But he did not think of this. In fact his mother knew that, as he was going directly back to Lucy he would not have much time to think but must act according to the spontane ous impulse of his heart. K 110 THE FHESHET. But though he did not think of dividing the apple and the pear, he happened to hit upon a plan, which occurred to him just as he was going back into the entry, that he thought would do. He held the fruit behind him ; the apple in one hand, and the pear in the other. Lucy saw him coming, and said, " What have you got, Hollo ? " " Which will you have, right hand or 'eft ? " said he in reply. " Right." Rollo held forward his right hand, and, lo ! it was the pear. But he could not bear to part with it, and he brought forward the other, and said, " No, you may have the apple." " No," said Lucy ; " the pear is fairly mine ; you asked me which I would have, and I said the right." " But I want the pear," said Rollo ; " you may have the apple. Moiher gave them both to me." " I want the pear too," said Lucy ; " it is mine, and you must give it to me." Just then a voice called from the bed' room, Children ! THE FRESHET. Ill 44 What, mother?" said Hollo " I want you both to come here." Rollo and Lucy would both have been ashamed of their contention, w^re it not that the pear looked so very rich and tempting, that they were both very eager to have it. "What is the difficulty?" said Hollo's mother, as soon as they stood before her " Why, Lucy wants the pear," said Rollo, " and you gave them both to me, and said I might do as I pleased with them. I am willing to give her the apple." "Yes, but he offered me my choice," said Lucy, " right hand or left, and I chose the right, and now he ought to give it to me." " And are you willing that I should de- cide it?" said the lady. "Yes, mother," and "Yes, aunt," said Rollo and Lucy together. "You have both done wrong; not very wrong, but a little wrong ; and I think neither ought to have the whole of the pear. So I shall divide the pear and tho apple both between you ; and I will tell you how you have done wrong. 112 THE FRKSHET. "You, Rollo, by asking her which iht would have, implied that you would leave it to chance to decide, and that you would let her have her fair chance. Then you ought to have submitted to the result. If she had chosen the left hand, she ought to have been content. If she had got the apple, you would have had the credit of giving her an equal chance with you, aad she ought therefore to have had the full benefit of the chance. " And then you, Lucy, did wrong, for, although Rollo asked you to choose, he did not actually promise you your choice, and as he was under no obligation to give you either, you ought not to have insisted upon his fulfilling his implied promise. Is it not so? " The children both saw and admitted that it was. "The best way, I think," she continued, " would have been for you, Rollo, to have given the pear to Lucy, as she was your visitor, and a young lady too. Then she would have given you half in eating it. However, you were not very much in the wrong, either of you. It was a sort of a doubtful case. But I hope you se?5 from THE FRESHET. 113 it, Rollo, what I wanted to teach you, that you are no more inclined to prefer other persons' pleasure to your own, than other children are. Remember Jonas's couplet hereafter. I think it is a very good one. Now go and get a knife, and cut the fruit ; and see, it does not rain but little ; you can go and get your pea-pods now." Away went the children out into the kitchen after a knife. Rollo wanted t? cut the apple and the pear himself, and Lucy made no objection ; and we must do him the justice to say that he gave rather the largest half of each to Lucy. They then went out into the shed, Rollo taking with him a dipper of water to wash his feet when he came back from the gar- den. Rollo then took off his shoes, and gave Lucy his share of the fruit, to keep for him, and then sallied forth into the yard, holding the umbrella over his head, as a few drops of rain were still falling. He waded into the little pond at the garden gate, and then turned round to look at Lucy and laugh. He began, too, to caper about in the water, but Lucy told him to take care, or he would fall down, e* 8 K* 114 THE FRtSHET. and they could not wash his clothes, as they could his feet, with their dipper of water. So he went carefully forward till he came to the peas, and gathered as many as he wanted, and then returned. As he was coming back, he saw Jonas in the barn. Jonas called out to him to ask what he had got. " I have been to get some pea-pods," said he, " to make boats with." " Where are you going to sail them ? " said Jonas. " O, in this little pond, when it is done raining." " But you had better have a little pond now, in the shed." " How can we ? " said Hollo. " You might have it in a milk-pan." " So we can. Could you come and get it for us ? " " Yes, in a few minutes by the time you get your boats made." Hollo and Lucy were much pleased with this, and they sat down, one on each side of the milk-pan pond, and sailed their boats a long time. He cut small pieces oi the apple and of the pear for cargo, and Hollo put in the 'tern of th* n>ear for the THE FRESHET. 115 captain of his boat. Each one was good humored and obliging, and the time passed away very pleasantly, until it was near din- ner-time. When they came in to dinner, they observed that it was raining again very fast. THE PRINCIPLES OF ORDER. "Father," said Hollo, at the dinner table, " do you think it will rain all the afternoon ? " "It looks like it," replied his father, " but why ? Do you not enjoy yourselves in the house ? " " O yes, sir," said Rollo, " we have had a fine time this morning ; but Lucy and I thought that, if it did not rain this after- noon, we might go out in the garden a little." " It may clear up towards night; but, if it. does, I think it would be better to go down to the brook and see the freshet, than to go into the garden." " The freshet ? Will there be a freshet, do you think ? " "Yes, if it rains this afternoon as fast as 116 THE FRESHET. it does now, I think the brook will be quite high towards night." Hollo was much pleased to hear this. He told Lucy, after dinner, that the brook looked magnificently in a freshet ; that the banks were brimming full, and the water poured along in a great torrent, foaming and dashing against the logs and rooks. " Then, besides, Lucy," said he, " we can carry down our little boats and set them a sailing. How they will whirl and plunge along down the stream !" Lucy liked the idea of seeing the fresh- et, too, very much ; though she said she was afraid it would be too wet for her to go. Hollo told her never to fear, for his father would contrive some way to get her down there safely, and they both went to the back entry door again, look- ing out, and wishing now that it would rain faster and faster, as they did before dinner that it would cease to rain. " But," said Lucy, " what if it should not stop raining at all, to-night ?" " 0, it will," said Hollo, " I know it will. Besides, if it should not, we can go down to-morrow morning, you know, and THE FRESHET. 117 then there will be a bigger freshet. O how full the brook will be by to-mono^ morning ! " And Rollo clapped his hands, and ca- pered with delight. " Yes," said Lucy, soberly, " but I must go home to-night." "Must you?" said Rollo. "So you, must. I did not think of that." "But I think," continued he, " that ii will certainly clear up to-night. I will go and ask father if he does not think so too." They both went together back into the parlor to ask the question. " I cannot tell, my children, whether it will or not. I see no indications, one way or the other. I think you had better for- get all about it, and go to doing something else ; for if you spend all the afternoon in watching the sky, and trying to guess whether it will clear up or not, you can- not enjoy yourselves, and may be sadly disappointed at last. " Why, we cannot help thinking of it, father." " You cannot, if you stand there at the back door, doing nothing else ; but, if you '118 THfc FRESHET. engage in some other employment, you will soon forget all about it." "What do you think we had better do ? " said Lucy. " I think you had better go up and put your room and your desk all in order, Hollo ; Lucy can help you." "But, father, I have put it in order a great many times, and it always gets out of order again very soon, and I cannot keep it neat." "That is partly because you do not put it in order right. You do not understand the principles of order." " What are the principles of order ? " said Lucy. " There are a good many. I will tell you some of them, and then you may go and apply them in arranging Hollo's things. " One principle is to have the things that are most frequently used in the most accessible place, so that they can be taken out and returned to their proper places easily. " Another good principle for you is to distinguish between the things which you wish to use, and those you only wish to THE FRESHET preserve. The former ought to be in sight, and near at hand. The latter may be packed away more out of view. " Another principle is to avoid having yoar desk and room encumbered with things of little or no value, as stones you have picked up, and papers, and sticks. The place to keep such things is in the barn or shed, not in your private room. " Then you must arrange your things systematically, putting things of the same nature together. Once I looked into your desk after you had put it in order, and I found that, in the back side of it, you had piled up books, and white paper, and pictures, and a slate, and a pocket-book or two, all together. You thought they were in order, because they were in a pile. Now, they ought to have been separated and arranged ; all the white paper by it- self in front, where you can easily get it to use ; the pictures all by themselves in a portfolio; and the books should be ar- ranged, not in a pile, but in a row, on their edges, so that you can get out any one without disturbing the others. Those are some of the principles of order." " Well, come, Rollo," said Lucy, "let uf 120 THE FliESHEl. go and see your things, and try u> put them in order, right." Hollo went, but, as he left the room, he turned round to ask his father if he would not come with them, and just show them a little about it. His father said he could not come very well then, but if they would try and do as well as they could, he would come and look over their work after it was done, and tell them whether it was right or not. Hollo and Lucy went up into Hollo's room, and, true enough, they found not a little confusion there. But they went to work, and soon became very much inter- ested in their employment. A great many of the things were new to Lucy, and as they went on arranging them, they often stopped to talk and play. In this way several hours passed along very pleasantly ; and when, at last, they had got them near- ly arranged, Hollo went to the window to throw out some old stones that he con- cluded not to keep any longer, when h? exclaimed aloud, " O, Lucy, Lucy, come here quick " Lucy ran. Hollo pointed out to the western horizon, and said, " Sec there ! " THE FRESHET. 121 There was a broad band of bright golden sky all along the western hori- zon clear and beautiful, and extending each way as far as they could see. The dark clouds overhead reached down to the edge of this clear sky, where they hung in a fringe of gold, and the daz- zling rays of the sun were just peeping under it. The rain had ceased. t 122 THfc FRESHET. Rollo and Lucy gazed at it a moment and then ran down stairs as fast as they could go, calling out, " It is clearing away ! It is clearing away! Father, it is clearing away. We ran go and see the freshet." CLEARING UP. They went out upon the steps to look at the sky. A few drops of rain were still falling, but the clouds appeared to be breaking in several places, and the tract of golden sky in the west was rising and extending. The air was calm, and the golden rays of the sun shone upon the fields and trees, and upon the glittering drops that hung from the leaves and branches. Rollo and Lucy both said it. was beautiful. They went in and urged their father to go with them down to the brook to see the freshet, but he said they must wait till after tea. " It is too wet to go now," said he. " But, father," said Rollo, " I do nol THE FRESHET. 123 (liiuk it will be any better after tea. The ground cannot dry in half an hour." "No," said his father; " but the water will run off of the paths a great deal, so that we can get along much better." "Well, but then it will run off from the brook a great deal too, and the freshet will not be so high." " It is a little different with the brook," his father replied, "for that is very long, and the water comes a great way, from among the hills. Now, while we are tak- ing tea, the water will be running into the brook back among the hills, faster than it will run away here, so that it will grow higher and higher for some hours." Hollo had no more to say, but he was impatient to go. He and Lucy went out and stood on the steps again. The clouds were breaking up and flying away in all directions, and large patches of clear blue sky appeared everywhere, giving promise of a beautiful evening. " Hark ! " said Rollo ; " what is that? " Lucy listened. It was a sort of roar- Ing sound down in the woods. Rollo at first thought it was a bear growling k'24 THE FRESHET. " Do you think it is a bear ? " said he to Lucy, with a look of some concern. " A bear ! no," said Lucy, laughing. " That is not the way a bear growls. It is the freshet." " The freshet ! " said Hollo. " Yes ; it is the water roaring along thfi brook." Hollo listened, and he immediately per- ceived that it was the sound of water, and he jumped and capered with delight, at thinking how fine a sight it must be. At the tea-table Hollo's father explained the plan he had formed for their going. He said it was rather a difficult thing to go and see a freshet without getting wet especially for a girl. He and Hollo, he said, could put on their good thick boots, but Lucy had none suitable for such a walk, as it would probably be very wet and muddy in some places. "What shall we do then ? " said Hollo. "I believe I shall let Jonas go down and draw Lucy in his wagon," said his father. " How should you like that, Lucy?" Lucy said she should like it very wdl, THE FRESHET. 125 and after tea they went out to the garden- yard door, where they found Jonas with his wagon all ready. This wagon was one which Jonas had made to draw Rollo upon. It was plain and simple, but strong and convenient, and perfectly safe. They helped Lucy into it, and she sat down on the little seat. Rollo, with his boots on, took hold behind to push, and Jonas drew. Rollo's father walked behind, and thus they set off to view the freshet. They moved along carefully through the yard, and then turned by the gate and went into the field. The path led them by the garden fence for some distance, and they went along very pleasantly for a time, until at length they came to a large pool of water covering the whole path. There were high banks on each side, so that the wagon could not turn out. " What shall we do now ? " said Rollo. " I can go right through it," said Jonas ; " it is not deep." " And we can go along on the bank, by the side," said Rollo. " Very well," said his father, " if you are not afraid, Lucy." Lucy did feel a little afraid at first, but 126 THE FRESHET. she know that if her uncle was willing that she should go, there could not be any danger ; so she made no objection. Be- sides, she knew that, as Jonas was to walk along before her, she could see how deep it was, and there could riot be any deep places without his finding it oat before the wagon went into them. Jonas was barefoot, and did not mind wetting his feet ; so he waded in, drawing the wagon after him. It was about up to his ankles all the way. Lucy looked over the side of the wagon, and felt a little fear as she saw the wheels half under water ; but they went safely through. Presently they began to descend a path which led them into the woods. They heard the roaring of the water, which grew louder and louder as they drew nigh, and then Hollo suddenly stopped and said, " Why, father, it is raining here in the woods now." Lucy listened, and they heard the drops of rain falling upon the ground all around them ; and yet, looking up, they saw that the sky was almost perfectly clear Pres- THE FOAMING BKOOK. Page 127. THE FRESHET. 127 ently they thought that this was only the drops falling off from the leaves of the trees. Rollo said he meant to see if it was so, and he ran out of the path, and took hold of a s/ender tree with a large top of branches and leaves, and, looking up to see if any drops would come down, he gave it a good shake ; and, true enough, down came a perfect shower of drops all into IMS face and eyes. At first he was astonished at such an unexpected shower-bath, but he concluded, on the whole, to laugh, and not cry about it ; and he came back wi- ping his face, and looking comically enough. All the party laughed a little at his mishap, and then went on. In a few minutes more, they came in sight of the foaming brook. The water was very high ; in some places, the banks were overflowed, and the current swept along furiously, dashing against the rocks, and whirling round the projecting points. The children stopped, and gazed upon the scene a little while, and then Rollo said he was going to sail his boats, which he had brought in his pocket. Just then Jonas saw a plank which was lying partly on the bank and partly in the 128 THE FRESHET. water, a little up the stream. It had been placed across the brook some dis- tance above, for a bridge ; but the freshet had brought it away, and it had drifted down to where it then was. Jonas said he would find a place for Lucy to stand upon with it. So he went and pushed off this plank, and let it float down to where the children were stand- ing; and then he drew it up upon the shore, and laid it along, so that Lucy could stand upon it safely, and launch the pea-pod boats. These boats were soon all borne away rapidly down the stream, out of sight, and then they threw in sticks and chips, and watched them as they sailed away, and w T hirled around in the eddies, 01 swept down the rapids. Thus they amused themselves a long time, and the* slowly returned home. BLUEBERBY1NG BLUEBERRYING. OLD TRUMPETER. HOLLO'S mother advised him, when he went to bed the evening before the day fixed upon for the blueberrying, to rise early ihe next morning, and take a good reading lesson before breakfast. She said he would enjoy himself much more, du- ring the day, if he performed all his usual duties before he went. Hollo according- ly arose quite early, and, when he came in to breakfast, had the satisfaction of tell- ing his father that he had read his morn- ing lesson, and prepared his basket, and was all ready to go. He wanted Jonas to go too, arid as, the last time when he asked his father's per- mission that he should go, he lost his re- quest by asking it in an improper mannei, he determined to be careful this time. So he was silent at breakfast time 132 BLUEBERRflNG. while his father and mother were talking, and then, watching an opportunity when they seemed disengaged, he asked his father if Jonas might not go with them " I do not think he can very well, for there is no room for him. Both the chaises will be full." "But could not he ride on Old Trum- peter ? " said Rollo. Old Trumpeter was a white horse, that had served the family some time, but was now rather old, and not a very good traveller. Hollo's father hesitated a moment, and then said, perhaps he might. " You may go and tell him that we are going, and that if he thinks Old Trumpeter will do to carry him, he may go. He will be of great help to us, if we should get into an_y difficulty." Rollo thought of the bears that he ex- pected to see on the mountain, and ran to tell Jonas. Jonas was glad to go. So he went and gave Old Trumpeter some oats, and got the saddle and bridle ready, He also got out a pair of saddle-bags that he always used on such occasions, and put into them a hatchet, a dipper, a box of Bl ULBERRYING. 133 matches, and some rope. On second thoughts, he concluded it would be best tft put these things into the chaise-box, and to put the saddle-bags on his horse empty, as he might want them to bring something home in. After breakfast, Lucy and her father, Rollo's uncle George, drove up to the door, for they were going too ; and in a short time you might have seen all the party driving away from the door Rollo's fa- ther and mother in the first chaise, uncle George, and Rollo, and Lucy, in the second, and Jonas on Old Trumpeter be- hind. They rode on for a mile or two, and then turned off of the main road into the woods, and went on by a winding and beautiful road until they came in sight of a range of mountains, one of which seemed very high and near. " Is that Benalgon ? " said Rollo. " I do not know," said his uncle ; 4 1 have never been to it before. ; but I sup- pose Jonas can tell." " 1 will call him," said Rollo. So he turned round, and kneeled up upon the seat,, so that he could look out behind 134 BLUEBERRYING. the chaise, for the back curtain was up. Lucy did the same, but Jonas was not to be seen. They looked a little long- er, and presently saw him coming along round a curve in the road. They beck- oned to him, and as he rode up, they saw he had a bush in his hand. He came ip to the side of the chaise, and handed it t o Hollo. It was a large blueberry-bush, cov- ered with beautiful ripe blueberries. Rollo took them, and admired them very much ; and at first he was going to divide them be- tween Lucy and himself; but they conclu- ded, on the whole, to send them forward to his mother. Jonas told them the moun- tain before them was Benalgon, and rode on to carry the blueberry-bush to the other chaise. Presently he came back, bringing it with him, except a small sprig which Rollo's mother had taken ofT. The rest she had sent back to the children. " Well, Jonas," said uncle George, when he got back, " I do not see but that Old Trumpeter is strong enough to carry you yet." " O yes, sir," said Jonas, " he is strong enough to carry half a dozen like me." " O, uncle George," said Rollo, " let him BLUEBERRYING 135 carry me too with Jonas. I can ride he- hind." " Very well ; if you want to ride with him a little while, you may, if Jonas is willing." Jonas was, and Rollo got out, and climbed up upon a stump, by the side of the road. Jonas drove up to the stump, and Rollo clambered up behind him, with a switch in his hand. "Now, Jonas," said he, "whenever you want him to go any faster, you just speak to me, and I will touch him up with my switch." Jonas said he would, and they jogged along behind the chaise. Lucy kneeled upon the cushion, and looked out behind, talking with Rollo. DEVIATION. They went on so very quietly for some time, until Jonas said there was a turn in the road on before them, where there was a foot-path that led across a ravine, by a nearer way than the chaise-road, and pro- posed that Rollo should ask leave lor 136 BLUEBERRYING. Jonas and himself to go across on horse* back, and wait for the chaises, when they should come out on the main road. So they rode up to the chaise, and Rollo put the question to his uncle George. His reply was that he could not say any thing about it ; Rollo must go and ask his father. " Would you go ? " said Jonas. '< Yes," said Rollo. " Well, touch up Old Trumpeter then." So Rollo applied his switch, and the horse trotted on fast. Rollo had hard work to hold on, but he clasped his arm tight around Jonas's waist, and succeeded in keeping his seat. Rollo's father and mother were riding some distance before them, but they saw Jonas coming up, and rode slowly, that he might overtake them. "Well, Rollo," said his father, "how do you like riding double ? " " Very much," said Rollo ; " and we want you to let Jonas and I cut across by the horse-path through the valley, and wait for you at the mill." " Is there a horse-path across here, Jo- nas?" BLUEBERRYING. 13^ " Yes, sir," said Jonas. " Is it a good path ? " " It is rather rough, sir, througli th6 woods and bushes ; but it is a pretty good road." Hollo's father sat hesitating a moment, and then said " You may go, if you choose, but I ad- vise you not to." " Why do you advise us not to ? " said Rollo. " Why, you may get into some difficulty, and so we get separated." " Yes, but," said Rollo, " it is not near so far across, and we shall have time to get through to the mill long before you come along." " Very well, you may do as you please." " Jonas, what would you do ? Would you go, or not ? " " I think I would not go, if your father thinks we had better not." " I want to go very much," said Rollo. " Very well," said his father ; " you are willing to go with him, I suppose, Jonas, are you not ? " " O yes, sir," said Jonas f* M* v 18 BLUEBERRYING. " Well," said Rollo, " let us go. We will be very careful, father, not to get into any difficulty." So the two chaises rode on, and Jonas and Rollo, in a few minutes, turned off by a narrow path that struck into the woods. Just as they were bending down their heads to pass under a great branch of a tree, Rollo looked along, and saw Lucy waving her handkerchief to him, as the chaise which she was in disappeared by a turn of the road. Rollo at first felt a little uneasy to think that he had deserted his cousin, as it were. He thought that he should not have liked it exactly, if she had gone off, and left him alone so in the chaise. However, it was now too late to repent, and his attention was attracted by the wild and romantic scene around him. The path descend- ed obliquely, by a rough, wet, and stony way, through a dark forest. He heard the sighing of the wind, in the tops of the tall trees, and the mellow notes of forest birds, far off, and high, which came rich and sweet to his ear with a peculiai expression of solitude and loneliness. The boys rode on, and the path became BLUEBERRYING. 139 more and more slippery, stony, and steep Rollo clung tight to Jonas, and began to be somewhat afraid. He would have pro- posed to go back, but he was ashamed to do it. After a little time, he asked Jonas whether the path was as bad as that all the way. " As bad as this ! " said Jonas ; " we call this very good. I will show you the bad road pretty soon.'' Rollo looked frightened, but said noth- ing. " The road seems more wet than com- mon to-day," said Jonas, " I suppose on account of the rain yesterday ; and I de- clare," said he, " I am afraid we shall find the*brook up." " The brook up ! " said Rollo. " Yes why did not I think of that before ? However, we must go on now." " Why?" said Rollo. " Why cannot we go back ? " " O, because we should be too late ; besides, there is no danger, only we may have to wade a little." As they went on. the mud in the road grew deeper and deeper, and presently Old Trumpeter's legs sunk far down among 140 BLUEBERRYING roots and mire. Hollo began to feel more and more alarmed, and heartily wished that he had* taken his father's advice. Soon after they came to a place where the path, for some distance before them, was full of water, deep and miry. Jonas said he thought that they had better go out upon one side ; so he made the horse step over a log and go in among the trees and bushes. The branches brushed and scratched Rollo unmercifully, though he bent down, and leaned over to this side and that, continually, to escape them. He asked Jonas why this path had not dried, as well as the main road, where the chaises had gone ; and Jonas told him that the sun and the wind were the great means of drying the open road, but that this narrow and secluded path was shaded from the sun, and sheltered from the wind, and that the w r ater consequently remained a long time among the moss, and roots, and mire. After a time, they got back into the path again, and, going on a little farther, they came down to the margin of the brook. They found that it was " up," as Jonas had feared. At the place where BLUEBERRYING. 14 1 the path went down and crossed the brook, a deep cut had been worn in the two op- posite banks, and this was filled with wa- ter, and above and below the stream rushed on in a torrent. Jonas hesitated a moment, and then asked Hollo if he thought he could hold on, while they were riding through Rollo said he was afraid it was so deep as to drown them. Jonas then said that, he might get off and stand upon a rock by the side of the path, while he rode through, first, to see how it was, and that then he would come back for him. So Rollo got off, in fear and trembling, and stood on the rock, while Jonas urged his horse into the water. Old Trumpeter did not much like this kind of travelling, but Jonas half persuaded and half com- pelled him to go through. When he was in the middle, the water came up so high, that Jonas was obliged to lift up his feet to keep them from being wet. Presently, however, it became more shoal, as the horse walked slowly along ; and at last he fairly reached the dry ground, and stood dripping on the bank. Roll ) was glad to see that the watei BLUEBERRYIWO. was no deeper, but was still afraid to go over. He told Jonas he could not go ovei there, and that he must go back with him. " No,'- said Jonas, " that would not be right." " Why," said Hollo, " we can ride fast, and overtake them." " Not very soon," said Jonas. " If wj go back now, they will get to the mill be- fore us, and then will be very anxious and unhappy, thinking that something has hap- pened to us ; and perhaps your father will come through here after us. Now it was your own plan, coming across here, and you ought not to make other people suffer by it. Your father advised you not to come." " I know it," said Rollo ; " what a foolish boy I was ! I shall certainly be drowned." " O no," said Jonas, " there is no real danger, or I should not make you go ; " and so saying, he came back slowly through the water. "See," said he, "it is not very deep." BLUEBERRYJNG. 143 LITTLE MOSETTE. After some further persuasion. Hollo gol on behind him, and they began to make their way slowly through the water again. Old Trumpeter staggered along, but not very unsteadily on the whole, until he got a little past the middle, when he blun- dered upon a stone on the bottom, which he could not see, and fell down on his knees. Jonas caught up his feet, in an instant, and Rollo had his already drawn up behind him, and they both grasped the saddle convulsively. The horse happened to regain his feet again in a moment, so that they contrived to hold on ; and in a few minutes they were drawn out safely upon the shore, without even getting their feet wet. "Well, Old Trumpeter," said Jonas, ' you have done pretty well for you, and you have got the mire washed ofl your legs, at any rate. But, Rollo, what is that ? " He pointed back, as he said this, to a little tuft floating round and round in a small eddy, made by a turn of the brook, just above where "hey had crossed. He turned 144 BLUEBERRYING. his horse towards it. "It is a bird's nest," said he. " So it is," said Rollo ; " and I verily believe there is a little bird in it." Jonas jumped off of the horse, handed the bridle to Rollo, and took up a long stick lying on the ground, and very gently and cautiously drew the nest in to the WAJEBERRYING. 14. r i shore. He took it up with great care, and brought it to Hollo. There was a little bird in it, scarcely fledged. Jonas said he believed it was a robin, and that it must have been washed off from its place on some bush, by the freshet in the brook. The bottom of the nest was soaked through by the water, as if it had been floating some time ; and the little bird kept opening its mouth wide The poor little thing was hungry, and heard Jonas and Hollo, and thought they were its mother, come to give it something to eat. "What shall we do with him?" said Rollo. " He will die if we leave him here," said Jonas, " for he has lost his mother now. I think we had better carry him home, if we can, and feed him, till he is old enough to fly." " He is hungry," said Rollo ; " let us feed him now." " We have not any thing to feed him with. Perhaps I can catch a fly, or a grasshopper." "O, that will not do,'' said Rolio g 10 N 140 BLUEBERRYING. "you might as well kill him as kill a grasshopper." Jonas could not reply to this, and the} concluded to carry nest and all carefully to the mill, and show it to Hollo's father there. But how to carry it was the diffi- culty. If either of them undertook to hold it in one hand, he was afraid the bird might be jolted out ; and neither of them had but one hand to spare, for Rollo must have one hand to hold on with, and Jonas one to drive. At last Jonas took off his cap, and placed it bottom upwards on the saddle before him, and put the nest, with the bird in it, in that, and then drove carefully along. The road grew much smoother and better after they passed the brook ; and, after going on a short distance farther, they came in sight of the mill. They had been detained so long that the chaises had reached the mill before them ; and the party in the chaises were looking out down the path where they ex- pected the boys were to come out, watch ing for them with considerable interest. " There they come at last," said Lucy, as she perceived a movement among the BLUEBERRYIING. 147 bushes, and saw Old Trumpeters white iiead coming forward, " Yes," said Rollo's mother, " but the} have met with some accident. Jonas has lost his cap." By this time the boys had emerged from the bushes, and were coming along the path slowly, Jonas bareheaded, and Rollo holding on carefully. Lucy saw that Jonas was holding something before; him, on the saddle, and wondered what it was. Rollo's mother said she was afraid they had got hurt. As soon as they came within hearing Rolio heard his father's voice calling oiu to him, " Rollo, what is the matter ? Have you got into any difficulty ? " " Yes, sir," said Rollo ; " we had some difficulty ; and I should be sorry I did not take your advice, only then we should not have found this little bird." " What bird ?" said they all. By this time, they had come up near the chaises, and Jonas carefully lifted the birdsnest out of his cap, and held it so that they could all see it, while Rollo told them the story. They all looked much pleased 148 BLUEBERRYING but Lucy seemed in delight. She wanted to have it go in theft chaise, and asked Hollo to let her hold the nest in her lap. Rollo did not answer very directly, for he was busy looking at the bird, seeing him open his mouth, and wishing he had something to give him to eat. " Father," said he, " what shall we feed him with ? Jonas was going to catch a grasshopper, but I thought that \vould not be right." " Why not ? " said uncle George. " Because," said Rollo, "he has as good a right to his life as the bird. Has not he, father ? " " Not exactly," said his father : " a bird is an animal of much higher grade than a grasshopper, and is probably much more sensible of pain and pleasure, and his life is of more value ; just as a man is a much higher animal than a bird. It would be right to kill a bird to save a man's life, even if he were only an animal ; and so it would be right to destroy a grasshopper, or a worm, to save a robin." " But I read in a book once," said Lucy, 'that, when \ve tread on a worm, he feels BLUEBERRTING 149 as much pain in being killed as a giant would." " 1 do not think it is true," said he. " I ;liink that there is a vast diversity among the different animals, in respect to their sensibility to pain, according to their struc- ture, and the delicacy of their organiza- tion. I think a crew of a fishing-vessel might catch a whole cargo of mackerel, and not cause as much pain as one of their men would suffer in having his leg bitten off by a shark." "Well, father," said Hollo, "do you think we had better give him a grasshop- per ? " " O no," said Lucy ; " a grasshop- per would not be good to eat, he has got so many elbows sticking out. Let us give him some blueberries." " O yes," said Hollo, " that would be beautiful." So he slid down off of Old Trumpeter's back, and ran to the side of the road to see if he could not find some blueberries. He brought a few in his hand, and his father took them, saying that he would feed the bird for him. He squeezed out the pulp of the berries, and then made a ic* 150 BLUEBERRY INO. chirping sound, when the bird opened his mouth, and he fed him with the soft pulp, and threw away the skins. After giving the bird two or three berries in this way, they put him back into the nest, and gave the nest to Lucy to hold in her lap, and all the party prepared to go on. They rode along about a mile farther, and then came to the place where they must leave the horses, and prepare to as- cend the mountain on foot. They unhar- nessed them, so that they might stand more quietly, and then fastened them to trees by the side of the road. While they were thus taking care of their horses, Hollo and Lucy were standing by, with Hollo's mother looking at the bird. " What are you going to do with him, Rollo ? " said his mother. " Why, I should like to carry him home, and keep him, if you are willing." " I am, on one condition." " What is that ? " " You must keep him in a cage with tho door always open, so that, as soon as he is old enough to fly away, he may go if be chooses." BLUEBERRY^ G. 151 " Then he will certainly fly away, and we shall lose him forever," said Lucy. " That is the only condition," replied Rollo's mother. " But why, mother," said he, " why may we not keep him shut up safe ? " " If I were to tell you the reasons now, they would not satisfy you, you are so eager to keep him. I think you had better deter- mine to comply with the condition, good humoredly, and say no more about it, but try to think of a name for him." " Well, mother, what do you think would be a good name ? " " I do not know : you and Lucy must think of one." Just then uncle George finished tying his horse, and came along to where the children were standing, and, hearing their conversation, and finding that Lucy and Hollo were perplexed about a name, he told them he thought they might, not im- properly, call him Noah, as, like Noah, by floating in a sort of ark, he was saved from a flood. " I think he was more like Moses than Noah," said Lucy. " Why ? " said her father 1 52 BLUEBERRYING. " Because Moses was a little tiling when they found him, and then the ark of bulrushes was something like a birdsnest. I think you had better name him Moses, Rollo," said she. Rollo seemed a little at a loss : he said he thought he was a good deal like Moses* but then he did not think that Moses was a very pretty name for a bird. " Do you think it is, mother ? " said he. " I do not know but that it would do very well. You might alter it a little ; call him Mosette, if you think that would be any better for a bird's name." Rollo and Lucy repeated the name Mo- sette to themselves several times, and con- cluded that they should like it very much. By this time, the horses were all ready, and Jonas recommended that they should hide Mosette away somewhere, until they returned from the mountain, for it would be troublesome to them, and somewhat dangerous to the bird, to carry him up and down. The children approved of this plan, though they were rather unwilling to part with the bird, at all. They went just into the bushes, and found a very secret place, BLUEBERRYING by the corner of a large rock, where the shrubs and wild flowers grew thick, so that it would be entirely out of sight. GOING UP. They then set forward, the children in advance of the rest. Jonas walked with Rollo and Lucy, and. he had round his waist a broad leather belt, which he al- ways wore on such occasions, and which had, on one side, his hatchet and knife, and on the other a sort of bag or pocket, containing several things, such as matches, a little dipper, &,c. Hollo's father and mother, and his uncle George, walked along behind them. The way was, for some distance, a sort of cart- path, too steep and rough for a chaise, but hard and dry, and pretty comfortable walking. Rollo and Lucy asked Jonas if he would not tell them a story, as they went along, to beguile the way. Jonas began a story, about a boy that lived a long time on a mountain alone , but he had not proceeded far, before they 154 B^UEBERRYING. heard a voice behind, calling them. They looked back, and saw that Hollo's father was beckoning them to stop. They wailed till he came up, and he told them he wanted to give them their orders for the day ; and they were rules, he said, which ought to be observed on all berrying expeditions, by children. " First" said he, "always keep in sight of me. For this purpose, watch me all the time, when we are stopping, and keep before, rather than behind, when we are walking. " Second. Take no unnecessary steps, but keep in the right path, and walk slowly and steadily there, so as to save your strength. Otherwise you will get tired out very soon. " Third. Do not touch any flower or berry that you see, except blueberries, without first showing them to one of us." The children listened to these rules, and promised to obey them, and then walked on. They tried to walk slowly and stead- ily, listening to Jonas's story. They turned off, after a time, into a narrower and steeper path, and ascended, stepping from stone to stone The trees and bushes hung over BLUEBERRY ING. 155 iheir heads, making the walk shady and cool. After slowly ascending in this way, for some time, they came out of the woods into an opening of rocky ground, and patches of blueberry-bushes. They saw, also, at some distance before them, three or four boys, sitting upon a rock, with, pails and baskets in their hands, talking and laughing loud. They did not take much notice of them, but walked on quiet- ly. They were going on directly towards them, but Rollo's father called them, and pointed for them to turn off to the right, round a rocky precipice which was in that direction. The children were turning accordingly, when they heard a shout from the boys before them, " Hallo, come this way, and we will show you where the blueber- ries are." "Father," said Hollo, as he stopped and turned round to his father, " the boys say they will show us the blueberries, out that way : shall we go and see ? " " No," said his father in a low voice, so that the boys did not hear. "No: go *he way I told you." 156 BLUEBERRYING. They went along, and presently gol round the precipice out of sight of the boys again. They walked slowly until their parents overtook them. "Father," said Hollo, "why could you not let us go out with those boys ? They said they were thickest out there." " Because," said he, " I presume they are not good boys, and I do not want you to have any thing to do with them." " But, father, they must be good boys, or they would not want to show us the blueberries. If they were bad, selfish boys, they would want to keep all the good places to themselves." If Rollo had only asked hrs father, in a modest manner, how it could be that the boys were bad, when they wanted to show him the best place for blueberries, it would have been very proper ; but his man- ner of speaking showed a silly confidence in his own opinion, which was very wrong. His father, however, did not attempt to reason with him, but only said, " I think they are bad boys, for I over- heard them using bad language ; and I wish you to have nothing to do with them." BLUEBERRY1NG. 157 He then found a good place for them to begin to gather their berries. It was a beautiful spot of open ground, between the thick woods on one side, and a broken, rocky precipice on the other. Uncle George took Jonas forward alone, until they were out of sight, and presently returned without him. Rollo asked where Jonas was gone, and his uncle told him that that was a secret at present. They heard, soon after, the strokes of his hatchet in the woods, on before them, but could not imagine what he could be doing. Thus things went on very pleasantly, and they gathered a large quantity of ber- ries. There was, indeed, in the course of the day, a serious difficulty between Rollo and the bad boys ; and there is an ac- count of it given in the next story of " TROUBLE ON THE MOUNTAIN." With this exception, every thing went on well until about noon, when Roilo observed that Jonas had been missing a long time 158 BLUEBERRYING THE SECRET OUT. "Where is Jonas, all this time?" said Rollo to Lucy. Lucy said that he had been busy", a long time, doing something over beyond some rocks, but she did not know what, for her father told her she must not go to see. Rollo wondered what the secret was, and he was just going to ask his father to let him go and see what Jonas was doing, when they saw him coming out from the bushes. He came up to Rollo's father, and told him that it was all ready. Then Rollo's father called to all the company, and told them it was time to stop gathering berries, and they might take up their baskets and follow him. The baskets and pails were heavy and full, and the whole party walked along, carrying them carefully towards the place where Jonas had come from. Rollo's father led the way. They entered into a little thicket, and passed through it by a narrow path. They came out presently into a sort of opening, on a brow of the mountain On one side they could Icolf BLUEBERR\1NG. 15P down upon a vast extent of country, ex- hibiting a beautiful variety of forests, rivers, villages, and farms. On the other side was a rocky precipice, rising abruptly to a considerable height, and then sloping off towards the summit of the mountain. They walked along a few steps on a smooth surface of the rock, between patches of grass and blueberry-bushes, until Lucy and Hollo ran forward to a brook which came foaming down the precipice, and then, after tumbling along over rocks a little way, took another foaming leap down the mountain, and was lost among the trees below. The party all stepped carefully over this brook, and then walked along up the bank on the opposite side until they came to the precipice. Here they were surprised and pleased to see a large bower built, in front of a little sort of cavern or recess in the rock. Jonas had built it of large limbs of trees and bushes, which he had leaned up against the rock, in such a manner as to enclose a large space within. There was an opening left round on the farther side, next the rock, and they all went round and went in Rollo first, then Lucy, then 160 BLUEBERRYING. the others. They found that smooth and clean logs and stones were arranged around the sides of the bower ; and in the middle, on a carpet of leaves, was very abundant provision for a rustic dinner. There was bread, and butter, and ham, and gingerbread, and pie, and glasses for water from the brook. Rollo and Lucy wondered how all those things could have got up the mountain. Presently, however, they recollected that, when they were com- ing up, Jonas had two covered baskets to bring, and they thought, at the time, that they seemed to be heavy. Thus the day passed away, and towards evening they came down the mountain. Some remarkable things happened when they were coming down, which will be related in the story called " TROUBLE on THE MOUNTAIN." TROUBLE ON THE MOUNTAIN. TROUBLE ON THE MOUNTAIN BOASTING. " How pleasant it is here ! " said Rolk to his cousin Lucy, as they were gath- ering blueberries high up on old Mount Benalgon, the day they went up with Hollo's father and mother, and bncle; " and how thick the blueberries are, Lucy ! " " Yes," said Lucy, " they are very thick, 1 think; and how far we can see now, we are up here so high ! I wish we were up on that great high rock." Hollo looked where Lucy pointed, and he saw, away above them, a rocky sum- mit projecting out from the mountain. The front of the rock was ragged and pre- cipitous, but it was flat and mossy upon the top, and firs and other evergreen trees grew there, some of them hanging over die edge. 164 TROUBLE ON THE MOUNTAIN. " I wish I could get up there," said Lucy. " I wish I could too," said Hollo. " 1 should like to climb up one of those trees which hangs over, and then I could look down." " O, Hollo," said Lucy, " you would not dare to climb up one of those trees." " Yes, I should dare to," said Rollo. Hollo was sometimes a proud, boasting boy, pretending that he could do great things, and talking very largely. This was one of his greatest faults ; and when- ever he seemed to be in this boasting mood, he almost always got into some difficulty after it. There is a text in the Bible that was proved true, very often, in Hollo's case. It is this "Pride cometh before destruction, and a haughty spirit before a fall." Hollo had a sad fall this day, though it was not from that high rock. It was a different sort of a fall from that, as we shall presently see. " Lucy," said he again, " I do not be* lieve but that I could get up upon thai rock myself. I can climb rocks." " O no, you could not," said Lucy. " Why, yes, I see a way." TROUBLE ON THE MOUNTAIN. 105 44 Which way ? " ' O, round by that great black log There is a path there through the bush- es." "O no," said Lucy, "you could not get up there. But there are some boys by that log ; what boys are they ? " Hollo looked. They were some boys which they had seen coming up the moun- tain, and Rollo's father had warned him not to go near them. They had wanted Hollo to go with them before, but his father had forbidden it. Rollo wanted to go, and now he was glad to see them again ; but Lucy was sorry. GETTING IN TROUBLE. The blueberries were very thick and large, and the bottoms of the baskets were soon covered with them. Each one picked where he found them mosl plenty. Rollo and Lucy kept pretty near to gcther, talking, and gradually strayed awaji to some distance from the rest of the party 1 60 TROUBLE ON THE MOUNTAIN. After a little while, Rollo looked up, ana saw the three boys pretty near them. As soon as Lucy saw them so near, she moved along towards their parents ; and Rollo ought to have done so too, but he remained where he was, and presently one of the boys came up to him. " Why did you not come up where we were ? " said he. " They were thicker out there." " My father would not let me," said Rollo. "Q, come along," said the boy; "he will not care. Besides, he will not know it. He is busy picking by himself. He does not mind where you are." Rollo thought this was not exactly the way that a good boy would speak of obey- ing a father, but he wanted very much to see the place where the berries were so much thicker. " How far is it ? " said he to the boy. " O, it is only a little way just around that rock." By this time the other two boys came up, and they talked with Rollo a little while, and endeavored to persuade him to go. He said finally that he would go and TROUBLE ON THE MOUNTAIN. 161 ask his father. So he left his basket, and went and asked his father if he might just go with those boys round the rock. He said the blueberries were much thick- er around there, and also that he had been talking with the boys, and he was sure they were good boys. " No, Hollo," said his father, decidedly, " I cannot think that any boys that use bad language can be good boys, or safe companions for you. I had rather you would keep with us. If they speak to you, answer them civilly ; but the less you have to say to them or do with them, the better. In fact, I had rather you would not go back to them at all." " I must," said Hollo, " to get my bas- ket." He accordingly returned to his basket, and told the boys that his father preferred that he should stay where he was. The biggest boy of the three was a rag- ged and dirty-looking boy; the others called him Jim, and he talked with Hollo a good deal. Hollo's conscience reproved him for not leaving them, and going back to his father ; but hi wanted to stay and 168 TROUBLE ON THE MOUNTAIN. hear their talk, and he quieted his con- science by saying to himself that his father told him to treat them civilly. At first the boys were careful what they said to Rollo ; but at length Jim grew more and more bold. He used language which Rollo knew was wrong, and he told Rollo that he was a fool to stick so close to his father; that he was big enough to find his way alone all over the mountain, if he was of a mind to. All this Rollo was silly enough to be- lieve, and, as his father only required him to keep in sight, he thought he would show the boys that he was not so much afraid as they thought he was ; and so ho gradually moved off farther and farther from his parents, as he went on gradually filling up his basket. Lucy, in the mean time, went nearer and nearer to them, and in a short time was safely gathering her blueberries by her aunt's side. Things went on so for an hour. Rollo's mother asked his father whether he had not better call Rollo to them. "No," said he; " I have told him his duty once, plainly, and now, if he does nol TPOUBLE ON THE MOUNTAIN. 169 do it, he must take the consequences. I believe I shall leave him to himself." The bojs went on talking to one an- other and to Rollo, telling various stories about their running away from school, stealing apples, and such things. Rollo was much interested in listening to them, though he knew, all the time, that he was doing wrong. But he had not the cour- age to !eave them abruptly, as he ought to have done, and go back to his father. Rollo took a great deal of pains with the berries he picked ; he chose the largest and ripest, and was very careful not to get in any sticks and leaves. His bas- ket was small, and he intended, as soon as he got it full, to carry it carefully to his mother, and pour his berries into her large tin pail. He was succeeding finely in this, but then he had insensibly strayed away so far from his father, that now he was entirely out of his sight. At length, as Jim was sitting on a log tu rest himself, as he said, he saw a little bird alight on the branch of a black stump near. " Hush," said he , " there is a Bobo- link. See how I will fix him." h v 170 TROUBLE ON THE MOUNTAIN. So saying, he picked up a stone, and wag going to throw it. Hollo begged him not to kill that pretty little bird but he paid no attention to what Hollo said. He threw the stone with all his force ; but fortunately it did not hit the bird. It struck the limb that the bird was perched upon, and shivered it to fragments, and the bird flew away, terrified. " Now, what did you do that for ? " said Hollo; " you might have hit him." " Hit him ! " said he ; "I meant to hit him, to be sure." " But what good does it do to kill little birds ? I found one this morning, and I would not kill him for any thing." " Where did you find him ? " said Jim. Rollo then told the boys all about his finding a little bird, in its nest floating in the brook, and about their naming him Mosette ; as is described in the story called " BLUEBERRYING ; " and Jim said, if he had found him, he would have put him on a fence, for a mark to fire stones at. ** I would have made him peep, I tell you," said he. Rollo said he would not have him killed TKOUBLK ON THE MOUNTAIN. 171 on any account. He was going to carry him home, and feed him, and tame him. " But where is he now ? " said Jim. " O, we hid him behind a stone, down at the foot of the mountain, where our horses are tied." " But how can you find him again ? " said Jim. " O," said Rollo, " we know ; it was behind the corner of a stone, just in the bushes, where we tied the horse." Jim winked at the other boys when Rollo said this, though Rollo did not see it. He was vexed with Rollo, because he reproved him for stoning the bird. " I would set him up for a mark, if I had him," said Jim. " I wish I had been there when you found him ; I would have taken him away from you." " No, you would not have taken him t 'tvay. Jonas would not let you." " Jonas ! who is Jonas ? and what do you think I care for Jonas ? " said he. He then came up to Rollo, and looked til to his basket, and saw it nearly full of Urge ripe blueberries. -' And I believe," said he, " that you 172 TROUBLE ON THE MOUNTAIN have stolen some of my berries out of my basket, while I have been sitting here." " No, I have not," said Hollo. " I have not touched your basket." " You have," said Jim, fiercely, " and I will have them back again. Besides, I put some into yours, while you went to your father. So half the berries in your basket are mine." This was a lie ; but bad boys, like Jim will always lie, when they have any thing to gain by it. He came up to Hollo, and began to pull his basket away from him. Rollo struggled against him, and began to cry. But Jim was too strong for him : he tipped his basket over, poured a great many of the berries into his own basket, and the rest were spilled over on to the ground. Then, angry at Hollo's screams and cries, he trampled on all the berries that were on the ground, and was begin- ning to run away. Rollo caught hold of the skirt of his coat, screaming all the time for his father. Jim turned round, and struck Rollo with his fist, knocked h'm down, and then he and the other boys set off, as fast as they could run, through the TROU15T.K ON Till*: MOUNTAIN. I'w ITi TROUBLE ON THE MOUN1 AIN. 173 bushes ; and they disappeared just as Rollo's father and Jonas came hastening to his aid. They raised Rollo up, and his father took him in his arms to carry him away. He saw that there had been some serious difficulty with the bad boys, but he did not ask Rollo any thing about it, then; for he knew that he could not talk intelli- 174 TROUBLE ON THE MOUNTAIN. gibly till he had done crying. Rollo laid his head down on his father's shoulder, as he walked along, and sobbed bitterly A TEST OF PENITENCE. His father carried him back to where his mother and uncle were, who were com- ing towards him looking anxiously. They presently got pretty near them Rollo still continuing to cry. His father then said to him, " Rollo, be still a moment. I want to speak to you." When he first took Rollo up, he did not command him to be still, for he knew that it would do no good. He was then so overwhelmed with pain and terror, that he could not help crying; and his father never commanded impossibilities. By this time, however, the pain, and the im- mediate terror, had so far subsided, that his father knew he could now control him- self, and Rollo knew that he must obey He accordingly stopped crying aloud, and tried to listen to his father. TROUBLE ON THE MOUNTAIN. 175 "Rollo," said his father, "I pity you very much. I warned you against this bad company, and now I perceive you have got into some difficulty with them ; but I cannot hear your story about it till we get home. It is your own fault that has brought you into trouble ; and now you must not extend your trouble over all our party, and spoil our happiness, as you have your own. I must go and put you by yourself, until you get entirely com- posed and pleasant, and then you may join us again." " But, father," said Rollo, beginning to cry afresh at the thoughts of the boys' treat- ment of him, " they came up to me, and and" " Stop, Rollo," said his father. " Be still. You cannot tell the story intelligi- bly now, and if you could, I should not be willing to listen to it. You must not say any thing about it, unless yoi\ are ques- tioned, until we get home." By this time they came up pretty near the place where the rest of the party were ; but his father did not take him there. He turned aside, and, putting Rollo down, he led him along to a smooth log, which laf 116 TROUBLE ON THE MOUNTAIN. among some old trees, close by, and tolcf him to sit there, until he was entirely com- posed and pleasant again, and then to come to him, or to go to picking berries again, just as he pleased. Rollo sat on the log, for some time, with his empty basket by his side, mourn- ing over his sorrows. Lucy came to him, and endeavored to console him. She begged him not to cry ; and she poured out half of her own berries into his basket, and told him that they could soon fill it full again, if he would come with her to a good thick place she had found. Rollo became gradually quiet and composed, and walked along with Lucy. Lucy had indeed found a place where the berries were very thick and large, and Rollo determined to be as industrious as possible. They worked away very busi- ly for half an hour, and Rollo gradually recovered his spirits. His mother watched him from time to time, and when she saw that he was good- humored again, she said to his father, " Rollo seems to be picking his berries very pleasantly. I rather think he is sorry for his conduct." TROUBLE ON THE MOUNTAIN. 177 " Yes, I see he is getting good-humored again, but I am afraid he is not truly pen- itent. It is easier to forget a sin, than to be sorry for it. It is very easy, however, for us to ascertain." " How can we ascertain ? " asked his mother. "Why, if you should go and ask him about it, if he is really penitent, he will be troubled most to think of his disobedience in going into the bad company ; but if he is not penitent, he will not think of that, but only go to scolding about the bad boys." " That is true," said she. " I have a great mind to go and try him." Hollo's father thought it would be a good plan, and she, accordingly, walked along towards Rollo slowly, gathering berries as she went. Rollo saw her coining, and said, " Here is mother, Lucy ; let us go and give her our berries." So saying, he carried his bahket up to her very pleasantly, and said, " Here, moth- er, see, here are all these berries I have been picking for you." 12 I 79 TROUBLE OiN THE MOUNTAIN. " Ah," said she, " did you pick all these for rne ? " " E h no," said he ; " not all ; Lucy gave me some." " Well, Lucy, I am very much obliged to you, and I am glad to see that you, Rollo, are pleasant again ; I am sorry you went and got into difficulty with those boys." " They came and took away my berries," said he, " and struck me that great ugly Jim." The feelings of vexation and anger against the bad boys began to rise again in Hollo's mind, the moment he began to talk about them, and he was just going to cry. His mother stopped him, saying, " You need not tell me about him any more. I see how it is." " How what is ? " said Rollo. " How it is about your being sorry. Your father told me that, if you were truly penitent for what happened about those boys, I should find you, when I came to talk with you about it, grieved for your own fault, and if you were not penitent, you would only be angry at (heirs. } see which it is." TROUBLE ON THE MOUNTAIN. 17f) Rollo was silent a moment. He felt the truth and justice of the distinction: but, like all boys who are not sorry for thys ? " " No, sir." " Your mother went to talk with you, and said you did riot seem very sorry for your fault." " Why, father," said Hollo, " I did not do any thing to the boys at all : it was all their fault, entirely." " I don't suppose you did do any thing wrong towards them, but you committed u great fault in respect to me." " What fault ? " said Hollo. " Disobedience." " Why, father, how ? You did not tell me to stay close by you." " And is a boy guilty of disobedience TROUBLE ON THE MOUNTAIN 183 only when he does what his father forbids in words ? " " I suppose so," said Rollo. " What is disobedience ? " asked his father. " Why, it is doing what you tell me not to do ; is it not ? " " That is not a sufficient definition of it ; for suppose you were out there in the bushes, and I was to beckon you to come here, and you should not come, would not that be disobedience ?" " Why, yes, sir." " And yet I should not tell you to come." " No, sir." " And so, if 1 were to shake my head at you when you were doing any thing wrong, and you were to continue doing it, that would be disobedience." Rollo admitted that it would. " So that it is not necessary that I should tell you in words what my wishes are : if I express them in any way so that you plainly understand it, that is enough. The most important orders that are given by men, are often given without any words." 4 How, father?" 184 TROUBLE ON THE MOUNTAIN " Why, at sea, sometimes, where there is a great fleet of ships, and the admiral, who commands them all, is in one of them. Now, if he wants all the fleet to sail in any way ; or if he wishes to have some ont, vessel come near to his, or go back home, or go away to any other part of the world ; or if he wants any particular person in the fleet to come on board his vessel, he does not send an order in words; he only hoists flags of a particular kind upon the masts of his vessel, and they all obey them. " Now, suppose," continued he, " one of the ships did not sail as he wished, and when he called the captain to account for it, he should say that he was not guilty of disobedience, because he did not tell him to Sail so." Hollo laughed, and said he thought tnat would not be a very good excuse. " Well, it is just such an excuse as yours. I did not positively command you not to go near the boys, or not to have any conversation with them at all, though I expressed my wish that you would not, so that you could not help understand- ing it." TROUBLE ON THE MOUNTAIN. 18ft Rollo could not deny that this was so. " But that is not the only case of diso- bedience. For you did one thing which was contrary to my express command in words." Rollo looked concerned, and said he was sure he did not know it. " I told you not to go out of my sight." "Well, but, father," said Rollo eagerly, in reply, " I am sure 1 did not mean to. I was picking berries so busy, I did not observe where I was." " I know you were, and that was the disobedience ; for when I command you to keep in sight of me, that means that you must take good care that you do mind where you are. Suppose I were to tell Jonas that he might go and take a walk, but that he must be sure to come back in half an hour, and he should go, and pay no attention to the time, and so not come back until three quarters of an hour; would that be obedience ? " " No, sir ; but it would not be so had as it would be if he should stay away when he knew that the time was out." " No, it would not be so wilful an acl of disobedience, but it would be disobedi h* a* 186 TROUBLE ON THE MOUNTAIN ence, notwithstanding. You see, Rollo, % he continued, " when I tell you or any boy to come back in half an hour, there are two things implied in the command- first, that you should notice the time, and, secondly, that you should come back when the time is out. Now, you may disobey the command by neglecting either of these." "Yes, sir," said Rollo, " I see we may, but I did not think of it before." " No, I presume you did not," said his father ; " but I want you to understand it, and remember it after this forever. You have disobeyed, to-day, in two ways, in which boys are very apt to disobey, when they do not mean to do it wilfully. I will tell you what the principles are, again, so that you can remember and tell me when I ask you. " 1. Boys must take care to comply with their parents' drections, if they are expressed in any way whatsoever ; and, " 2. When directed to do any thing in a particular time or way, they must see to it themselves, that they notice and keep in mind the circumstances which they are re- quired to attend to." Rollo said he would try to remember it, TROUBLE ON THE MOUNTAIN. 18T and as ho seemed attentive and docile, his father did not talk \\ith him any more about his fault at that time. Besides, they came now to some very rough places in the path, and Hollo's father had to lift Lucy over them. Lucy spilled some of her berries in one place, and Rollo was going to help her pick them up, but Jonas said they had better leave them for the birds, and walk on. " So we will, Lucy." said Rollo, " and I rather think that Mosette is hungry by this time." " Yes," said Jonas, " and what are you going to do with Mosette ? " " O, put him in a cage, and bring him up tame," said Rollo. I mean to teach him to eat out of my hand. I shall treat him very kindly, though he is my little prisoner." " I would give him the liberty of the yard, if I were you," said some one behind, .aughing. Rollo looked round. It was his uncle George, walking close behind him " What is the liberty of the yard ? " said Rollo. 188 TROUBLE ON THE MOUNTAIH. " Why, when men intend to treat a pris- oner kindly, they leave the prison door open, and let him walk about the yard ; and this is called letting him have the liberty oi the yard ; and sometimes they let them go over half the town." " Do you think I had better do so with Mosette ? " said Hollo. " Yes," said his uncle George ; " leave his cage open, and let him go where he pleases." " O, he would fly entirely away," said Rollo. " Perhaps not, if you should feed him well, and treat him very kindly. He might like his cage better than any nest.'' " I shall treat him as kindly as I can," said Rollo ; " only think, Jonas, that Jim said, if he had found him, he should have set him up upon the fence for a mark to fire stones at ! " " Jim said so ? " said Jonas ; " how did Jim know any thing about it ? " " Why e h why I told him," said Rollo. " What did you tell him for ? " " O, because," sa'd Rollo, " we were calking, and I told him." TROUBLE ON THE MOUNTAIN. 18& fc< 1 hope you did not tell him where ws Hid Mosette, behind the rock." "Why yes," said Hollo, "I believe 1 did." " Then 1 am afraid you will never see poor Mosette again," said Jonas. 11 Why," said Rollo, " you don't think that he would go and get him." " I don't know," said Jonas, " what he would do ; but I should not have want- ed to tell such a boy any thing about him." Rollo began to be alarmed. He went back to his father, and asked him to let him and Jonas go on before the rest, to see if their bird was safe. His father told him he might go. " But," said he, " I am afraid you have lost your bird ; when a boy allows himself to get into bad com- pany, he does not know how many troubles he plunges himself into." Rollo and Jonas ran on, and soon disap- peared among the trees. Rollo found it hard to keep up, as the road was not very smooth, though they had got down the steepest part of the mountain. Jonas ( kept hold of Rollo's hand, and went on runn ag and walking alternately, until they got down to the end of the trees 190 TROUBLE ON THE MOUNTAIN. and bushes, and then they came out in sight of the place where the horses were tied. It was fortunate for poor Mosette, and for Hollo too, that they did thus run on before, for it happened that Jim, and the boys with him, had come down the moun- tain by another road, and were just going up to the place as Jonas and Hollo came out of the woods. " There they are," said Jonas. " You stay here ; I must run on." And he let go of Hollo's hand, sprang forward, and ran with all his might. Hollo tried to follow, but soon stopped and looked on. Jim and his boys did not see Jonas coining, and they went to work looking around the bushes and stones after Mo- sette. In a few minutes, one smaller boy came out from the bushes, close by the place where Hollo recollected the nest was hid, with something in his hand, and Rollo could distinctly hear him calling out, " Here he is, Jim I have got him, Jim." Just that moment, Jonas came running up among the boys, calling out, " Let that bird alone ! Let that bird TROUBLE ON THE MOUNTAIN. 191 alone ! " The boys, terrified at this unex- pected onset, started and ran in every direction. The boy who had the nest, dropped it upon the ground, and dodged back into the bushes. Jonas took it up carefully, put little Mosette, who had fall- en out, back in the nest, and walked out into the road to meet Rollo, who was coming down as fast as he could come, on the other side. They saw Jim and his comrades no more, and Rollo said he believed he should never again want to have any thing to do with bad boys. UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY Los Angeles This book is DUE on the last date stamped below. " MAR 7 arm L9-25m-8,'46 (9852 ) 444 LOS ANGELES UC SOUTHERN REGIONAL LIBRARY FACILITY AA 000475631 PZ6 Alor Hi K