A letter to A little boy from
his aunt.
My dear Frank:
I was much pleased with your writing me a letter.
If you were to take a piece of paper, and do up some
sugar plums in it, and send it to me, I should eat
up the sugar plums, and then there would be nothing
left but the piece of white paper; but if you take
a piece of paper, and mark on it with a pen some crooked
and some straight, some round and some long strokes,
they tell me, though they make no noise, that you
love me, and they seem just like little messengers
from you to me, all with something to tell me of my
dear little Frank.
Besides, after these messengers have
spoken once, there they stand ready to speak again
as soon as I only look at them, and tell me the same
pleasant story the second time that they did the first.
If I were to put them away in a safe
place for forty years, and then look at them, when
you were beginning to be an old man, these crooked
scratches of your pen would still talk to me of little
Frank, as he was when I held him in my lap, and we
used to laugh, and talk, and tell stories together.
Think, then, my dear Frank, how much
better it is to be able to fill a letter with these
curious strokes to send to a friend than to have bushels
of sugar plums to send him.
Did you ever think what curious things
these little letters are? You know the great
Bible that you love to look at so much, and to hear
father read from. All the wonderful things related
in it are told by twenty-six little letters.
It is they that tell you of the creation
of the world, of the beautiful garden called Eden
in which Adam and Eve lived; they tell you the sad
story of their disobedience to God, and of their being
turned out of paradise.
Then they tell you all about the Israelites,
or Jews, as we call them. In the same book, these
twenty-six letters place themselves a little differently,
and tell you the story of Joseph and his brethren
that you were so much pleased with when your father
read it to you, and that of David and Goliath, that
you like so much.
Then these same wonderful story tellers
relate to you the beautiful history of Daniel; of
that courageous, good man who chose rather to be torn
to pieces by wild beasts than not to pray every day
to God, and thank Him for His goodness; and how God
preserved him in the lion’s den.
The wonderful story of Elijah they
also tell you, and many others.
But last and most interesting and
wonderful of all, my dear little Frank, is the story
of Jesus Christ and his friends called the apostles.
These little letters have never told
such a beautiful and affecting story as they tell
you of that pure and spotless Being who was sent by
God to teach us our duty, and to show us the way to
be happy forever.
No being ever existed on this earth
who showed so much love and tenderness, so much goodness
and humility, so much wisdom and power as did Jesus
Christ.
There, in that best of books, stand
these little messengers, as I call them, still speaking
the very words of the blessed Saviour; ready to comfort
the poor and sorrowful; to teach patience and hope
to the sick; to instruct the ignorant; to reprove the
wicked; and inviting little children to come to his
arms and receive his blessing.
Do you not want to know all that they
can tell you of this great and good Being?
I could write you, my dear Frank,
a letter so long that I fear you would be tired of
reading it, about these same wonderful little figures;
but now I dare say that you will think more of them
yourself, and that the little book with the corners
rolled up which contains your ABC will be more respectable
in your sight.
Perhaps you will, after thinking some
time, ask who invented these wonderful letters; and
then, if you do really want to know, your father will
tell you all that is known about it, or, at least,
all that you can remember and understand. When
you are old enough to read about the history of letters,
you will find books which will make you laugh by telling
you that there was a time when, if you wanted to write
“a man,” you would have been obliged to
draw the picture of a man; and, as there was then
no paper like ours, you would have been obliged to
take a piece of wood or bark to make the drawing on;
and so the same with every thing else.
So you see, if you and I had lived
at that time, and you had written to me about your
dog, your pleasant ride and the other things that
were in your letter, you would perhaps have been obliged
to get a man to bring me the letter, it would have
been so clumsy, instead of bringing it yourself, folded
neatly in your nice little pocket book; and as for
my letter, only think how much room it would have taken
up.
You will say, “Why, aunt, letters
are not only better than sugar plums, they are better
than dollars.”
Indeed they are, my dear Frank.
The knowledge that they can give, the blessing they
can bestow, is better and more valuable than all the
silver and gold in the whole world; for they can teach
us what is wisdom and happiness; they can teach us
the will of God.
I love to think, too, of what pleasant
messages they can carry backwards and forwards between
friends, and that in a few hours these curious, handy
little things will appear before you, my dear little
Frank, and tell you what I have just been thinking
about, and that I always love you, and am ever
Your affectionate aunt.