“TOMORROW is May-day," the children said; "the
birds must call us very early, and we will go to the woods and make a
garland." And in the morning, long before the sun had looked over the
tops of the houses into the village street, they were far away in the
woods.
"I will give them some roses as they
come back," the gardener said. "They shall put them among the spring
flowers, as a swallow among the thrushes, to show that summer is on its
way."
When the children had made their
garland and a posy for each one of them, they went singing all down the
village street, over the grey stone bridge, beyond the hayricks, and
past the houses on the hill-side.
In one of the houses there was a pale
little child with a sad, thin face. "Mother," he said, “here are some
children with a garland. Will it be summer when they have gone by?" He
called after them as they went on, " Come back, oh, come back again!”
"Yes, we will come back," they
answered, but they went on their way singing. All through the day he
waited for them, but they did not come; and at last, when it was
evening, the mother took him up into her arms to carry him to his bed.
Suddenly he heard the children singing in the distance. “Oh, mother,"
he exclaimed, “they are coming;” and he watched till they came up the
hill again and stood before him. " But where is your garland? “he
asked.
" We gave it to lame Mary, the
postman's wife, for she is always longing to see the fields," they
answered ; " but these roses are for you, dear little boy; they are all
for you," and putting them into his hands they went back to the
village.
“You are very tired," the child said
to the roses; “all your leaves are drooping. Poor roses, perhaps you
are lonely away from the garden; but you shall sleep near me, and there
is a star rising up in the sky; it will watch us all through the
night." Then the child nestled down in his white bed he and his little
warm heart, in which there was love for all things. While he slept the
roses looked at his pale little face and sighed, and presently they
stole softly on to his cheeks and rested there. The children saw them
still there when the summer was over; when the garland was quite dead,
and lame Mary longed for the fields no more.
No comments:
Post a Comment