SHE was always called the bad girl, for she had
once, when she was very little, put out her tongue at the postman. She
lived alone with her grandmother and her three brothers in the cottage
beyond the field, and the girls in the village took no notice of her.
The bad girl did not mind this, for she was always thinking of the
cuckoo clock. The clock stood in one corner of the cottage, and every
hour a door opened at the top of its face, and a little cuckoo came out
and called its name just the same number of times that the clock ought
to have struck, and called it so loudly and in so much haste that the
clock was afraid to strike at all. The bad girl was always wondering
whether it was worse for the clock to have a cupboard in its forehead,
and a bird that was always hopping in and out, or for the poor cuckoo
to spend so much time in a dark little prison. "If it could only get
away to the woods," she said to herself, " who knows but its voice
might grow sweet, and even life itself might come to it!
"She thought of the clock so much that her grandmother used to say--
"She thought of the clock so much that her grandmother used to say--
"Ah, lassie, if you would only think of me sometimes! " But the bad girl would answer--
"You are not in prison, granny dear,
and you have not even a bee in your bonnet, let alone a bird in your
head. Why should I think of you?”
One day, close by the farm, she saw the big girls from the school gathering flowers.
“Give me one," she said; "perhaps
the cuckoo would like it." But they all cried, "No, no!" and tried to
frighten her away. "They are for the little one's birthday. To-morrow
she will be seven years old," they said,” and she is to have a crown of
flowers and a cake, and all the afternoon we shall play merry games
with her."
“Is she unhappy, that you are taking so much trouble for her?“ asked the bad girl.
"Oh, no; she is very happy: but it will be her birthday, and we want to make her happier.”
"Why?"
“Because we love her," said one;
“Because she is so little," said another;
“Because she is alive," said a third.
“Are all things that live to be loved
and cared for? " the bad girl asked, but they were too busy to listen,
so she went on her way thinking; and it seemed as if all things round
the birds, and bees, and the rustling leave*, and the little tender
wild flowers, half hidden in the grass answered, as she went along
"Yes, they are all to be cared for and made happier, if it be possible."
“The cuckoo clock is not alive," she thought.
"Oh, no; it is not alive," the trees
answered; "but many things that do not live have voices, and many
others are just sign-posts, pointing the way."
“The way ! The way to what, and where?”
“We find out for ourselves; we must all find out for ourselves," the trees sighed and whispered to each other.
As the bad girl entered the cottage,
the cuckoo called out its name eleven times, but she did not even look
up. She walked straight across to the chair by the fireside, and
kneeling down, kissed her granny's hands.
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