There was once a little boy who perhaps
might have been a good little fellow if his friends
had taken pains to make him so; but I do
not know how it was instead of teaching
him to be good, they gave him everything he cried
for; so, whenever he wished to have anything, he had
only to cry, and if he did not get it directly, he
cried louder and louder till at last he got it.
By this means Alfred was not only very naughty, but
very unhappy. He was crying from morning till
night. He had no pleasure in anything; he was
in everybody’s way, and nobody liked to be with
him.
Well, one day his mother thought she
would give him a day of pleasure, and make him very
happy indeed, so she told him he should have a feast,
and dine under the great cedar tree that stood upon
the lawn, and that his cousins should be invited to
dine with him, and that he should have whatever he
chose for his dinner. So she rang the bell, and
she told the servants to take out tables and chairs
and to lay the cloth upon the table under the tree,
and she ordered her two footmen to be ready to wait
upon him.
She desired the butler to tell the
cook to prepare the dinner, and to get all sorts of
nice dishes for the feast; but she said to Alfred:
“What shall you like best of all, my dear boy?”
So Alfred tried to think of something
that he had never had before, and he recollected that
one day he had heard a lady, who was dining with his
father and mother, say that the oyster patties were
the best she had ever eaten. Now Alfred had never
tasted oyster patties, so he said he would have oyster
patties for dinner.
“Oyster patties, my dear boy?
You cannot have oyster patties at this time of the
year; there are no oysters to be had,” his mother
said to him. “Try, love, to think of something
else.”
But naughty Alfred said:
“No, I can think of nothing else.”
So the cook was sent for, and desired
to think of something that he might like as well.
The cook proposed first a currant pie, then a barberry
pie, or a codlin pie with custard.
“No, no, no!” said Alfred, shaking his
head.
“Or a strawberry tart, my sweet
boy? or apricot jam?” said his mother, in a
soothing tone of voice.
But Alfred said:
“No, mother, no. I don’t
like strawberries. I don’t like apricot
jam. I want oysters.”
“But you cannot have oysters, my little master,”
said the cook.
“But I will have oysters,”
said the little boy, “and you shan’t say
that I can’t have them shall she,
mother?”
And he began to scream and to cry.
“Do not cry, my sweet soul,”
said his mother, “and we will see what we can
do. Dry up your tears, my little man, and come
with me, and, the cook, I dare say, will be able to
get some oysters before dinner. It is a long
time to dinner, you know, and I have some pretty toys
for you upstairs, if you will come with me till dinner
is ready.”
So she took the little crying boy
by the hand and led him up to her room, and she whispered
to the cook, as she passed, not to say anything more
about it now, and that she hoped he would forget the
oyster patties by the time dinner was ready. In
the meantime she took all the pains she could to amuse
and please him, and as fast as he grew tired of one
toy she brought out another.
At last, after some hours, she gave
him a beautiful toy for which she had paid fifteen
shillings. It was a sand toy of a woman sitting
at a spinning-wheel, and when it was turned up the
little figure began spinning away, and the wheel turned
round and round as fast as if the woman who turned
it had been alive. Alfred wanted to see how it
was done, but, instead of going to his mother to ask
her if she would be so good as to explain it to him,
he began pulling it to pieces to look behind it.
For some time he was very busy, and he had just succeeded
in opening the large box at the back of the figure
when all the sand that was in it came pouring out
upon the floor, and when he tried to make the little
woman spin again, he found she would not do it any
more. She could not, for it was the sand dropping
down that had made her move before.
Now, do you know that Alfred was so
very silly that he began to be angry even with the
toy, and he said, “Spin, I say! spin directly!”
and then he shook it very hard, but in vain. The
little hands did not move, and the wheel stood still.
So then he was very angry indeed, and, setting up
a loud cry, he threw the toy to the other end of the
room. Just at this very moment the servant opened
the door and said that dinner was ready, and that
Alfred’s cousins were arrived.
“Come, my dear child; you are
tired of your toys, I see,” said his mother,
“so come to dinner, darling. It is all ready
under the tree.”
So away they went, leaving the room
all strewed with toys, with broken pieces, and the
sand all spilt in a heap upon the floor. When
they went under the dark spreading branches of the
fine old cedar-tree, there they saw the table covered
with dishes and garnished with flowers. There
were chickens, and ham, and tongue, and lobsters,
besides tarts, and custards, and jellies, and cakes,
and cream, and I do not know how many nice things
besides. There was Alfred’s high chair
at the head of the table, and he was soon seated in
it, as master of the feast, with his mother sitting
by him, his cousins opposite to him, his nurse standing
on the other side, and the two footmen waiting besides.
As soon as his cousins were helped
to what they liked best, his mother said:
“What will you eat first, Alfred,
my love? A wing of a chicken?”
“No,” said Alfred, pushing it away.
“A slice of ham, darling?” said nurse.
“No,” said Alfred, in a louder tone.
“A little bit of lobster, my dear?”
“No, no,” replied the naughty boy.
“Well, what will you
have, then?” said his mother, who was almost
tired of him.
“I will have oyster patties,” said he.
“That is the only thing you
cannot have, my love, you know, so do not think of
it any more, but taste a bit of this pie. I am
sure you will like it.”
“You said I should have
oyster patties by dinner-time,” said Alfred,
“and so I will have nothing else.”
“I am sorry you are such a sad,
naughty child,” said his mother. “I
thought you would have been so pleased with all these
nice things to eat.”
“They are not nice,”
said the child, who was not at all grateful for all
that his mother had done, but was now in such a passion
that he took the piece of currant tart which his nurse
again offered to him, and, squeezing, up as much as
his two little hands could hold, he threw it at his
nurse, and stained her nice white handkerchief and
apron with the red juice.
Just at this moment his father came
into the garden, and walked up to the table.
“What is all his?” said
he. “Alfred, you seem to be a very naughty
boy indeed; and I must tell you, sir, I shall allow
this no longer. Get down from your chair, sir,
and beg your nurse’s pardon.”
Alfred had hardly ever heard his father
speak so before, and he felt so frightened that he
left off crying and did as he was bid. Then his
father took him by the hand and led him away.
His mother said she was sure he would
now be good and eat the currant tart; but his father
said:
“No, no, it is now too late; he must come with
me.”
So he led him away, without saying another word.
He took him into the village, and
he stopped at the door, of a poor cottage.
“May we come in?” said his father.
“Oh yes, and welcome,”
said a poor woman, who was standing at a table with
a saucepan in her hand.
“What are you doing, my good woman?”
“Only putting out the children’s supper,
your honor.”
“And what have you got for their supper?”
“Only some potatoes, please
you, sir; but they be nicely boiled, and here come
the hungry boys! They are coming in from their
work, and they will soon make an end of them, I warrant.”
As she said these words in came John,
and William, and Thomas, all with rosy cheeks and
smiling faces. They sat down one on
a wooden stool, one on a broken chair, and one on
the corner of the table and they all began
to eat the potatoes very heartily.
But Alfred’s father said:
“Stop, my good boys; do not eat any more, but
come with me.”
The boys stared, but their mother
told them to do as they were bid, so they left off
eating and followed the gentleman.
Alfred and his father walked on till
they arrived once more under the cedar-tree in the
garden, and there was the fine feast all standing
just as they had left it, for Alfred’s cousins
were gone away, and his mother would not have the
dinner taken away, because she hoped that Alfred would
come back to it.
“Now, boys,” said the
gentleman, “you may all sit down to this table
and eat whatever you like.”
John, William, and Thomas sat down
as quickly as they could, and began to devour the
chickens and tarts, and all the good things, at a great
rate; and Alfred, who now began to be very hungry,
would gladly have been one of the party; but when
he was going to sit down, his father said:
“No, sir; this feast is not
for you. There is nothing here that you
like to eat, you know; so you will wait upon these
boys, if you please, who seem as if they would find
plenty that they will like.”
Alfred at this began to cry again,
and said he wanted to go to his mother; but his father
did not mind his crying, and said he should not go
to his mother again till he was quite a good boy.
“So now, sir, hand this bread
to John, and now take a clean plate to Thomas, and
now stand ready to carry this custard to William.
There now, wait till they have all done.”
It was of no use now to cry or scream;
he was obliged to do it all.
When the boys had quite finished their
supper they went home, and Alfred was led by his father
into the house. Before he went to bed, a cup
of milk and water and a piece of brown bread were put
before him, and his father said:
“That is your supper, Alfred.”
Alfred began to cry again, and said
he did not want such a supper as that.
“Very well,” said his
father, “then go to bed without, and it shall
be saved for your breakfast.”
Alfred cried and screamed louder than
ever, so his father ordered the maid to put him to
bed. When he was in bed, he thought his mother
would come and see him and bring him something nice,
and he lay awake a long while; but she did not come,
and he cried and cried till at last he fell asleep.
In the morning, when he awoke, he
was so hungry he could hardly wait to be dressed,
but asked for his breakfast every minute. When
he saw the maid bring in the brown bread again without
any butter, and some milk and water, he was very near
crying again; but he thought if he did he should perhaps
lose his breakfast as he had lost his supper, so he
checked his tears, and ate a hearty meal.
“Well,” said his father,
who came into the room just as he was eating the last
bit of bread, “I am glad to see the little boy
who could not yesterday find anything good enough
for him at a feast eating such simple fare as this
so heartily. Come, Alfred, now you may come to
your dear mother.”