Charles Grant lived in a good house,
and wore fine clothes, and had a great many pretty
toys to play with; yet Charles was seldom happy or
pleased; for he was never good. He did not mind
what his mother said to him, and would not learn to
read, though he was now seven years old.
He called the servants names, pinched
and beat his little sister Clara, and took away her
playthings, and was not kind and good to her, as a
brother should be. “Oh, what a sad boy Charles
is!” was his mother’s daily bitter exclamation.
His father was a proud, bad man, who
let Charles have his own way, because he was his only
son, and he thought him handsome. But how could
anyone be handsome that was so naughty? I am sure
that when he was froward, and put out his lip, and
frowned, he looked quite ugly. Mother told him
so, and said that no one was pretty that was not good;
but Charles did not mind his mother, and was so vain
he would stand before the looking-glass half the day,
instead of learning his lessons; and was so silly
he would say, “What a pretty little boy I am!
I am glad I am not a shabby boy, like Giles Bloomfield,
our cowboy.” At such times his mother would
say to him: “I wish, Charles, you were
only half as good as Giles; he is not much older than
you, yet he can read in the Bible quite well; he works
hard for his poor mother, and never vexes her, as
you do me; and when he comes home of an evening, he
nurses the baby, and is kind to all his sisters.
I dare say he never pinched nor beat any of them in
his life.”
“Oh!” said that wicked
Charles, “I hate him for all that, for he wears
ragged clothes, and has no toys to play with.”
“Oh fie, Charles!” said
his mother; “you are a wicked boy: have
not I often told you that God made the poor as well
as the rich, and He will hate those who despise them?
Now, Charles, if God, to punish you for your pride,
were to take away your father and me, and you had no
money to buy food, and your clothes became old and
ragged, you would then be a poor, shabby boy, and
worse off than Giles; for you could not earn your
own living, as he does; and you would consequently
be starved to death if God did not take care of you.
And if, while you were rich, you hated the poor, how
could you expect God to care for you when you grew
poor, like those you had scorned?”
But Charles, however, was so naughty
he would not stay to hear what his mother said, but
ran away into the fields.
Then Charles’s mother was so
vexed that she could not help crying at his being
such a wicked, proud boy; and she could not sleep all
that night for the grief his conduct had occasioned
her. The next day she was forced to take a long
journey to visit a friend who was very ill, and who
lived in London. She was very sorry to leave her
children, for she knew if Charles behaved naughty
when she was with him, he would be a sad boy indeed
when he was left to himself, and had none to correct
him and tell him of his faults.
When the carriage that was to take
Mrs. Grant to London drove to the door, she kissed
her children a great many times, and begged that they
would be very good while she was away from them.
“You, my dear Clara, I know,
will mind what nurse says to you, and will try to
be good while I am gone; for you know that God will
see everything you do amiss, if I do not; and I hope
you will never forget to say your prayers to Him night
and morning.”
Clara kissed her dear mother, and
promised that she would attend to all she said; and
her mother was satisfied, for she knew that Clara
never told stories, though she was but a little girl.
Then Mrs. Grant turned to Charles,
and said: “As for you, Charles, I cannot
help feeling great pain at leaving you; for you are
such a bad, wilful boy that I shall not have a happy
moment while I am away from you, lest you should do
anything amiss. But if you love me, you will
try to be good; and whenever you are about to do anything
wrong, say to yourself, ’How much this would
grieve my poor mother if she knew it! and how much
it will offend God, who does see, and knows, not only
everything I do, but even my most secret thoughts!
And He will one day bring me to an account for all
I do or say against His holy will and my kind parents’
commands.’”
Charles, who knew he was a bad boy,
hung down his head, for he did not like to be told
of his faults.
Then his mother said: “My
dear Charles, do try and be good, and I will love
you dearly.”
“But what will you bring me
from London,” said Charles, “if I am a
good boy? for I never will behave well for nothing.”
“Do you call the love of God
and of dear mother nothing?” said Clara; “I
will behave well, even if mother forgets to bring me
the great wax doll, and the chest of drawers to keep
her clothes in, which she told me about yesterday.”
Mrs. Grant smiled fondly on her little
girl, but made no reply to Charles; and soon the coach
drove away from the door.
Charles was very glad when his mother
was gone, and he said: “Now mother is gone
to London, I will do just as I please: I will
learn no ugly lessons, but play all day long.
How happy I shall be! I hope mother may not come
for a whole month.”
But Charles soon found he was not
so happy as he thought he should have been; he did
not know the reason, but I will tell you why he was
not happy. No one can be happy who is not good,
and Charles was so naughty as to resolve not to obey
his kind mother, who loved him so much.
Charles brought out all his toys to
play with, but he soon grew weary of them, and he
kicked them under the table, saying, “Nasty dull
toys, I hate you, for you do not amuse me or make
me happy. I will go to father, and ask him to
give me something to please me that I am not used
to.”
But father was busy with some friends
in the study, and could not attend to his wants.
Charles was a rude, tiresome boy; so he stood by his
father, and shook his chair, and pulled his sleeve,
and teased him so much that his father at last grew
angry, and turned him out of the room.
Then Charles stood and kicked at the
door, and screamed with all his might, when one of
the gentlemen said to him: “If you were
my little boy, I would give you something to cry for.”
So Charles’s father told him if he did not go
away, he would come out of the study and whip him.
When Charles heard this, he ran away,
for he was afraid of being beaten; but, instead of
playing quietly with his toys, he went and laid under
the great table in the hall and sulked and fretted
till dinner-time.
When nurse came to call him to dinner,
he said: “I won’t come; Go away,
ugly nurse!”
Then said nurse: “Master
Charles, if you like to punish yourself by going without
your dinner, no one will prevent you, I am sure.”
Then Charles began to cry aloud, and
tried to tear nurse’s apron; but nurse told
him he was a bad boy, and left him.
Now, when Clara sat down to dinner,
she said to nurse: “Where is brother Charles?
Why is he not here?”
“Miss Clara, he is a naughty
child,” said nurse, “and chooses to go
without his dinner, thinking to vex us; but he hurts
no one but himself with his perverse temper.”
“Then,” said Clara, “I
do not like to dine while Charles goes without; so
I will try and persuade him to come and eat some pie.”
“Well, Miss Clara,” said
nurse, “you may go, if you please; but I would
leave the bad boy to himself.”
When Clara came to Charles, and asked
him if he would come and eat his dinner, he poked
out his head, and made such an ugly face that she was
quite frightened at him, and ran away.
Nurse did not take the trouble of
calling him to tea; and, though he was very hungry,
he was too sulky to come without being asked; so he
lay under the table, and cried aloud till bedtime.
But when it grew dark, he was afraid to stay by himself,
for bad children are always fearful; so he came upstairs
and said in a cross, rude tone of voice: “Nurse,
give me something to eat.”
Nurse said: “Master Charles,
if you had been good, you would have had some chicken
and some apple-pie for your dinner, and bread and butter
and cake for your tea; but as you were such a bad boy,
and would not come to your meals, I shall only give
you a piece of dry bread and a cup of milk, and you
do not deserve even that.”
Then Charles made one of his very
worst faces, and threw the bread on the ground, and
spilt the milk.
Nurse told him that there were many
poor children in the world who would be glad of the
smallest morsel of what he so much despised, and that
the time would come when he might want the very worst
bit of it; and she bade him kneel down and say his
prayers, and ask God to forgive him for having been
such a wicked boy all day.
But Charles did not mind what she
said, and went crying to bed. Thus ended the
first day of Charles Grant’s happiness.
He awoke very early the next morning,
and told nurse to get him his breakfast, for he was
very hungry. But nurse said he must wait till
eight o’clock, which was the breakfast hour.
He now found it was of no use sulking,
as no one seemed to care for his tempers; so he looked
about for something to eat, but found nothing but
the piece of bread he had thrown on the ground the
night before; and he was glad to eat that, and only
wished there had been more of it.
As soon as breakfast was over, Clara
brought her books, and began to learn her lessons,
and nurse asked Charles if he would do the same.
But Charles said, “No, indeed! I do not
mean to learn any lessons while mother is away, for
I mean to please myself and be happy.”
“You did as you pleased yesterday,
Master Charles,” said nurse; “yet I do
not think you were so very happy, unless happiness
consists in lying under a table and crying all day,
and going without dinner and tea, merely to indulge
a sullen, froward temper.”
Now, Charles hated to be told of his
faults, so he left nurse, and went into the garden
to try and amuse himself. When there, instead
of keeping in the walks, as he ought to have done,
he ran on the beds, trampled down the flowers, and
pulled the blossoms from the fruit-trees.
The gardener’s boy earnestly
requested Charles not to do so much mischief; but
Charles told him he was a gentleman’s son, and
would do as he pleased. So he again ran over
the new-raked borders, and pulled up the flowers;
and the poor boy was sadly vexed to see his nice work
all spoiled.
Charles did not care for that, and
would have behaved still worse, had not the gardener,
who then came up, taken him in his arms, and carried
him into the house, in spite of his kicking and screaming.
He cried for a long time, and made a sad noise; but,
finding that no one paid any regard to him, he became
quiet, and went into the nursery, and asked Clara
to come and play with him.
“I cannot come just now, brother
Charles,” said she; “for I want to finish
this frock that I am making for Giles Bloomfield’s
little sister.”
“I am sure,” said Charles,
“if I were you, I would much rather play than
sit still and sew.”
“Not if you knew what pleasure
there is in doing good,” said Clara; “but
if you will wait till I have finished it, you shall
go with me and give it to the poor woman, and then
you will see how pleased she will be, and how nicely
the baby will look when she is dressed in this pretty
frock, instead of her old faded, ragged one.”
Charles did not know how to amuse
himself, so he sat down on his little stool, and watched
his sister while she worked.
When Clara had finished making the
frock, she said: “Thank you, dear nurse,
for cutting out and fixing the frock for me.”
So she threw her arms round nurse’s neck, and
kissed her cheek; and nurse put on Clara’s tippet
and her new bonnet, and walked with Charles and her
to Dame Bloomfield’s cottage.
The good woman took the baby out of
the cradle, and laid it on Clara’s lap, and
Clara had the pleasure of dressing it herself in the
nice new frock; and the baby looked so neat and pretty,
and the poor mother was so pleased, that Clara was
much happier than if she had spent her time in playing
or working for her doll.
While Clara was nursing and caressing
the baby, Charles went into the little garden, where
he found Giles Bloomfield, who had just returned from
working in the fields, with a beautiful milk-white
rabbit in his arms, which he had taken out of the
hutch, and was nursing with much affection.
“Oh, what a pretty rabbit!”
said Charles. “Giles, will you sell it to
me?”
“No, Master Charles,”
said Giles, “I cannot sell my pretty Snowball.”
“And why not?” asked Charles in a fretful
tone.
“Because, Master Charles, the
old doe, its mother, died when Snowball was only a
week old, and I reared it by feeding it with warm milk
and bran; and it is now so fond of me that I would
not part with it for a great deal.”
So saying, he stroked his pretty favorite,
who licked his hand all over, and rubbed her soft
white head against his fingers.
Then Giles said: “My dear
Snowball, I would not sell you for the world.”
“But you shall sell Snowball
to me,” said Charles, making one of his ugly
faces. “I will give you a shilling for her;
and if you do not let me carry her home this very
day, I will tell father of you, and he will turn you
out of the cottage.”
When Giles’s mother heard Charles
say so, she came out of the house, and said:
“Pray, Giles, let Master Charles have the rabbit.”
“Dear mother,” said Giles,
“Master Charles has a pony and a dog, and a
great many fine toys to play with, and I have only
my pretty Snowball; and it will break my heart to
part with her.”
“Then,” said his mother,
“would you rather see your mother and sisters
turned out of doors than part with your rabbit?
You know, Giles, that I had so many expenses with
your poor father’s illness and death that I
have not paid the rent due last quarter-day; and you
know it is in our landlord’s power to turn us
into the streets to-morrow.”
“Well, mother,” cried
Giles, bursting into tears, “Master Charles must
have the rabbit. But oh!” continued he,
“he does not love you as I do, my pretty Snowball;
he will not feed and take care of you as I have done,
and you will soon die, and I shall never see you again.”
And his tears fell fast on the white head of his little
pet as he spoke.
Clara was quite grieved, and begged
her naughty brother not to deprive poor Giles of his
rabbit; but Charles was a wicked and covetous boy;
he therefore took Snowball from Giles, and carried
her home in his arms, and put her in a box. He
went into the fields and gathered some green herbs
for her to eat, and said: “I am glad I have
got Snowball; now I shall be quite happy.”
But how could Charles be happy when
he had broken God’s holy commandment, which
says, “Thou shalt not covet?” Nurse and
Clara told him so, and begged him to give Snowball
back again to Giles. But Charles said he would
not, for he meant to keep her all his life; but the
next morning, when he went into the stable to look
at her, he found her stretched at the bottom of the
box. He called her, but Snowball did not stir;
he then took her out of the box to see what ailed
her; but she was quite cold and dead.
Oh dear! how Charles did cry!
But it was of no use. He had better not have
taken her away from Giles, for he did not know what
to feed her with, and had given her among the greens
he had gathered a herb called hemlock, which is poisonous
and will kill whatever eats of it; and it had killed
poor Snowball.
The coachman told Charles so when
he saw how swollen she was, and Charles cried the
more. Giles cried too when he heard what a sad
death poor Snowball had died; but he had been a good
dutiful boy in parting with her when his mother wished
it, though it had cost him much pain and many tears.
Well, Charles’s mother was gone
a long time, more than a month, and it would quite
shock you to be told how naughty Charles was all that
time; at last a letter came to say she was very ill,
and then another to tell them she was dead.
What would Charles then have given
if he had not grieved her so often with his perverse
temper and wicked conduct? He now said when he
saw her again, he would beg her to forgive him; but
when Charles did see his poor mother again she was
in her coffin and could not hear him; and he cried
exceedingly, and wished he had been good. Clara,
though she cried as much as Charles for her dear mother,
was glad she had obeyed her, and been so good while
she was away.
“And I will always be as good
as if dear mother could see me, and love me for it
too,” said she to nurse the day after her mother
was buried.
“My dear young lady,”
said nurse, “your mother will see it,
and love you for doing your duty.”
“How can dear mother see me?
Her eyes are closed, and she is in the dark grave,”
said Clara.
“But she will see you from heaven,
Miss Clara, where she is gone to receive the reward
of her good conduct in this world; for though her
body is in the earth, her spirit is in heaven.”
“And shall I never see my own
dear mother again?” said Clara.
“Yes, Miss Clara; if you are
good, you will go to heaven when you die, and become
an angel like her.”
“Then,” said Clara, “I
will pray to God to make me good, and when I am going
to do anything wrong I will say to myself, ’If
I do this, I shall never go to heaven, and see my
dear mother when I die.’”
“I wish,” said nurse,
“that Master Charles was like you, and would
try to be good.”
But though Charles was sometimes sorry
for his bad behavior, he did not try to mend, because
he thought it was too much trouble to be good, and
said he did not care, because he was the son of a gentleman.
Charles did not know that at this
very time his father had spent all his money, and
owed a great many debts to different people; and at
last he ran away that he might not be put in prison;
and the people to whom he owed so much money came
and seized his fine house and gardens, and the coach,
and all the furniture, and sold them by auction, to
raise money to pay the debts; so Charles found that,
instead of being rich, he was now very, very poor.
When the auction was over and all
the things were sold, and it was getting quite dark
(for it was in the month of November), Clara and Charles
stood in one of the empty parlors, and wondered what
they should do for supper, and where they should sleep
that night; for all the beds were sold, and they saw
the servants go away one after another.
At last nurse came in with her bonnet
and cloak, and said: “Miss Clara, I am
going away to my own cottage, and as you have always
been a kind, good child, you shall go with me, and
I will take care of you.”
Then Clara said, “Thank you;
but will you not take Charles also?”
“No,” said nurse; “he
has always been such a proud bad boy that I will not
take him. I have very little to spare, for I am
a poor woman, and what I have is not more than will
keep my own children and you, Miss Clara.”
Saying this, she got into the cart,
and took Clara on her lap, and one of the footmen
got in after her, and drove away from the door.
Charles stood on the step of the door,
and looked after them till they were out of sight;
and then he began to cry as if his heart would break.
The servant of the gentleman who had purchased the
house came and locked the door, so Charles could not
get in any more, and he sat down on the stone steps,
and covered his face with his hands, and cried bitterly.
“Unhappy child that I am,”
sobbed he; “what will become of me? Oh,
if I had but been good like Clara, I should have found
a friend, as she has; but no one cares what becomes
of me, because I have been so wicked. I used
to despise the poor, and God, to punish me, has made
me poor indeed.”
It was very cold, and the snow began
to fall fast, and it grew quite dark. Charles
rested his head on his knees, and was afraid to look
round; his clothes were almost wet through, and his
limbs were benumbed with cold; he had no place where
he could ask shelter, for no one loved him; and he
thought he should be obliged to stay there all night,
and perhaps be frozen to death.
Just then some one softly touched
his hand, and said: “Master Charles, I
have been looking for you for more than an hour.”
Charles looked up; but when he saw
it was Giles Bloomfield who had come to seek him in
his distress, he remembered how ill he had behaved
to him, so he hid his face, and began to weep afresh.
Then Giles sat down by him on the
steps, and said: “Dear Master Charles,
you must not stay here. See how fast it snows.
You will catch your death of cold.”
“Yes, I am very cold and hungry,”
sobbed Charles, “but I have no home now; I have
nowhere else to go, and must stay here all night.”
“No, Master Charles,”
said Giles, “you shall come home with me, and
shall share my supper and my bed, though it is not
such as you have been used to; notwithstanding we
are very poor, we will do our best to make you comfortable.”
“Oh, Giles!” said Charles,
throwing his arms round Giles’s neck, “I
do not deserve this kindness; I have been such a proud,
wicked boy, and have treated you so ill. I am
sure you can never forgive me for having taken your
pretty Snowball; and if you forgive me, I can
never forgive myself.”
“Dear Master Charles, do not
think of that now,” said Giles, taking both
Charles’s cold hands in his. “Indeed,
Master Charles, I should never dare say my prayers
if I was so wicked as to bear malice; and, now you
are in distress, I would do anything in my power to
serve you. So pray come home with me, and warm
yourself, and get some supper.”
But Charles hid his face on Giles’s
bosom, and cried the more; at last he said:
“Giles, I am so ashamed of having
behaved so cruelly to you, that I can never go to
your home, and eat the food that you are obliged to
labor so hard for.”
“Master Charles,” said
Giles, “that is because you are so proud.”
“Oh no, no!” sobbed Charles,
“I am not proud now, and I think I shall never
be proud again.” So he kissed Giles, and
they both went home to Dame Bloomfield’s cottage
together.
When Giles’s mother saw Charles,
she said: “Why did you bring this proud,
cross, young gentleman here, Giles?”
Charles, when he heard her say so,
thought he should be turned out again into the cold,
and began to cry afresh; but Giles said:
“Dear mother, Master Charles
has no home to go to now; he is cold and hungry; I
am sure you will let him stay here, and share my bed
and my supper.”
“He can stay here if he likes,”
said Dame Bloomfield; “but you know, Giles,
we are forced to work hard for what food we have, and
I am sure we cannot afford to maintain Master Charles.”
“Then,” said Giles, “he
shall have my supper to-night: he wants it more
than I do, for he has had no food all day.”
“You may please yourself about
that, Giles: but remember, if you give your food
to Master Charles, you must go without yourself.”
“Well,” said Giles, “I
shall feel more pleasure in giving my supper to Master
Charles than in eating it myself.”
So he brought a stool, and, placing
it in the warmest corner by the fire, made Charles
sit down, and chafed his cold frozen hands, and tried
to comfort him; for Charles was greatly afflicted when
he saw that everyone hated him; but he knew that it
was his own fault, and a just punishment for his pride
and bad conduct.
When Giles brought his basin of hot
milk and bread for his supper, he could not thank
him for crying; and he was ashamed to eat it while
Giles went without; but he was so hungry, and the milk
looked so nice, that he did not know how to refuse
it; and Giles begged him so earnestly to eat that
at last he did so, and once more felt warm and comfortable.
Then Giles said to him: “Now,
Master Charles, will you go to bed? Mine is but
a coarse, hard bed, but it is very clean.”
So he took the lamp to show Charles the way to the
chamber in which he was to sleep.
Charles was surprised at seeing no
staircase, but only a ladder. Giles laughed when
he saw how Charles stared, and he said:
“You have been used to live
in a grand house, Master Charles, and know nothing
of the shifts the poor are forced to make.”
Then Charles climbed up the ladder,
and Giles showed him a little room, not much larger
than a closet, with no furniture in it, but a stump
bed without any hangings, and covered with a coarse,
woolen rug. Charles Grant had never even seen
such a bed before, but he was thankful that he could
get any place to sleep in, out of the cold and snow.
Giles helped Charles to undress, for
Charles was so helpless he did not know how to undress
himself. When he was going to step into bed,
Giles exclaimed:
“Will you not say your prayers
before you go to bed, Master Charles?”
Charles blushed and hung down his
head, for he had been so naughty that he had not said
his prayers for a long time past, and had almost forgotten
what his dear mother had taught him; and he told Giles
so at last.
“Dear, dear!” said Giles,
“I never dare go to bed without saying mine.”
Then Charles said: “I am
sorry I have been so naughty as to forget my prayers;
will you teach me yours, and I will never forget them
again?”
Then they both knelt down by the side
of the little bed, and Giles taught Charles such prayers
as he knew, and Charles went to bed much happier than
he had been for a long time.
Though the bed was hard, and the sheets
brown and coarse, Charles was so weary that he soon
fell asleep, and slept so soundly that he did not
awake till it was broad day, and Giles was up and gone
to work in the fields.
When Charles looked round he thought
he had never seen such a shabby room in his life.
There was not so much as a chair or table or carpet
in it; he could see all the thatch and the rafters
in the roof, for the chamber was not even ceiled,
but showed the thatch and rafters, and, as I said
before, there was not a single article of furniture
in the room, except the bed. How different from
the pretty little chamber in which Charles used to
sleep, with the nice white dimity window-curtains
and hangings and mahogany tent-bed, with such comfortable
bedding and handsome white counterpane! However,
he now thought himself very fortunate that he had
any roof to shelter him, or any bed, however homely
it might be, on which he could sleep.
He thought he should like to get up
and go downstairs, but he had always been used to
have a servant to dress him, and he did not know how
to dress himself, so while he was considering what
he should do Giles came into the chamber. He
had returned to get his breakfast, and not seeing
Charles downstairs he concluded the cause of his absence,
and came to assist him to dress. Charles observed
how this matter was arranged, and resolved to do it
for himself the next morning.
When he was dressed they both knelt
down by the bedside and said their prayers, for though
Giles had said his at the dawn of day, yet he never
omitted an opportunity of repeating his thanksgivings
and praises to his heavenly Father for the mercies
and blessings which he enjoyed through His grace,
for Giles possessed a grateful and contented heart,
which made him look upon that state of life unto which
it had pleased God to call him, as that which was meet
and fit for him, so he worked hard, and ate the bread
of labor with cheerfulness and satisfaction.
When Charles and Giles joined the
family below Dame Bloomfield set a porringer of milk
and a piece of brown bread for every one but Charles,
who looked ready to cry, but Giles put his porringer
before him, and gave him another spoon, and said:
“Master Charles, we will eat together, for there
will be enough for both of us.” The tears
came into Charles’s eyes, and he whispered:
“Dear Giles, you are very good.”
So these boys ate out of the same porringer, and broke
of the same bread.
After breakfast Giles went out to
work, and Charles thought it very dull till he returned
to dinner. When Dame Bloomfield gave her children
their dinners there was a dumpling for everyone but
Charles; then Giles cut his dumpling in half, and
gave one part to Charles, and ate the other half himself.
Now this was very good of Giles, for he was very hungry
himself, but he could not bear to see Charles sad and
hungry while he was eating, and Giles liked to do good
because he knew it was pleasing to God.
As soon as dinner was over, Giles
went out to work again, and Charles was as dull as
he had been in the morning, for all the family were
at work in some way or other, and could not spare
time to amuse or talk to him, and he did nothing but
sigh and fret to himself till evening, when Giles
came home from work.
Giles’s eldest sister made a
bright fire, and they all sat round it and talked
and told stories, and Giles nursed the baby, and played
with the other little ones, and seemed quite happy,
and so he was, for he had done his duty, and every
one loved him for being so good.
After supper Giles taught those of
his sisters who were old enough to read and write,
and when they had finished learning their tasks Charles
took up the book, and said: “Giles, will
you teach me to read?” and Giles said:
“Certainly, Master Charles, but I am sure you
must know how to read a great deal better than such
a poor boy as I am.”
“I might have done so,”
said Charles, “but Giles, I was a sad, naughty,
perverse boy, and hated to learn any thing that was
good; but I hope I know better now, and if you will
only take the trouble of teaching me I will try and
make up for my lost time.”
So Giles gave Charles a lesson that
very night, and every evening after supper he heard
him read and spell what he had learned during the
day, and Charles took such pains that he soon began
to read so well that he used to amuse himself by reading
pretty stories, and by teaching little Betty, one
of Giles’s youngest sisters, to read.
Still Charles used to be exceedingly
hungry, for he had not more than half the quantity
of food he was used to eat, and Giles was hungry too,
and grew pale and thin.
Then Charles said to himself:
“It is not right for me to eat the bread which
poor Giles works so hard to earn; I will try and get
my own living, for why should I not do so, as well
as Giles?” So one morning, when Giles rose,
as usual, at five o’clock, Charles got up too.
Then Giles said:
“Why do you rise so early this
cold morning, Master Charles?”
“Because I am going out to work
with you, Giles, if you will permit me,” answered
Charles.
“Oh, Master Charles, such work
as I do is not fit for a young gentleman like you,”
said Giles.
“You must not call me a young
gentleman now, for I am only a poor boy, and
poorer than other poor boys, for they can earn their
own living, while I should have been starved to death
had not you given me half of the bread you work so
hard for. But I will not be a burthen to you
any longer, but learn to work and get my own living
as you do.”
Charles now meant to keep his word,
and they both went out into the fields, and worked
together at picking stones off the young crops of
wheat and clover, and before breakfast. Giles
had picked up two bushels of stones and Charles one,
and the farmer gave them a penny per bushel for gathering
them up.
Then they made haste back to the cottage,
and Giles gave his mother the money he had earned,
and Charles did the same, and when the dame poured
out the milk for the family Charles saw that she filled
a porringer for him also, and they had all a good
breakfast that morning, and Charles felt quite happy
because he had not eaten the bread of idleness.
So he went out to work with Giles again, and earned
twopence before dinner.
When Dame Bloomfield took up the dumplings
Charles saw there was one for him, and he felt happy
that poor Giles had not to deprive himself of half
his food that he might eat.
Charles went out to work every day
with Giles, and in the evening he learned to read
and write. He became quite good and gentle, and
enjoyed more happiness than he had experienced in his
life before, And why was Charles happy? I will
tell you, my dear children. Because he was no
longer a proud, froward boy as he had been, but was
kind and sweet-tempered to every one, and did his
duty both to God and himself.
The winter passed swiftly away, and
the spring came, and the birds began to sing, and
the trees looked green and gay, and the pretty flowers
bloomed in the gardens and covered the meadows all
over, and scented the air with their fragrance, and
Charles thought it very pleasant to work in the fields,
and hear the birds sing as they tended their young,
or built their nests among the green boughs or in the
hedges.
One day Giles said to Charles:
“Master Charles, we cannot work together in
the fields any more; I have got a new employment”
“But why cannot I work with you?” asked
Charles.
“Because, sir, you will not
like to work where I am going,” answered Giles.
Charles asked where that was. “In the garden
of the great house, Master Charles, where you used
to live,” said Giles.
Charles looked very sorrowful, and
remained silent for some minutes; at last he said:
“Well, Giles, I will go with you; my clothes
are grown shabby now, and nobody will know me, and
if they did I hope I am too wise to be ashamed of
doing my duty, so let us go directly.”
Then Giles took Charles into the garden,
and the gardener gave them each a hoe and a rake,
and told them to hoe up the weeds on the flower borders,
and then rake them neatly over, and promised if they
worked well he would give them eight-pence per day.
Now this was much pleasanter than
picking stones in the field, but Charles was very
sad, and could not refrain from shedding tears when
he thought of the time when he used to play in that
very garden, and he thought, too, of his dear mamma
who was dead, and of his sister Clara, whom he had
not seen for so many months, but he worked as hard
as he could, and the gardener praised them both, and
he gave them a basket to put the weeds in, and showed
them how to rake the borders smooth.
Just as they had finished the job,
and Charles was saying to Giles, “How neat our
work looks!” a little boy, dressed very fine,
came into the garden, and, as he passed them, said:
“I am glad I am a gentleman’s son, and
not obliged to work like these dirty boys.”
When Charles thought the little boy
was out of hearing, he said to Giles: “That
little boy is as wicked as I used to be, and I doubt
not but that God will punish him in the same way if
he does not mend his manners.”
The little boy, who had overheard
what Charles said, was very angry, and made ugly faces,
and ran into the newly-raked beds, and covered them
with footmarks. Then Charles said: “I
am sorry for you, young gentleman, for I see you are
not good.”
“How dare you say I am not good?”
said this naughty child. “I am a great
deal better than you, for I am a gentleman, and you
are only a poor boy.”
“Yes,” said Charles, his
eyes filling with tears as he spoke, “I am,
indeed, only a poor boy now, but I was once
rich like you, and lived in this very house, and wore
fine clothes, and had plenty of toys and money, and
was just as proud and naughty as you are, but God,
to punish me, took away my parents and all those things
that I had been so proud of, and that I had made such
a bad use of, and reduced me to a poor boy, as you
see.”
When the little boy heard this he
looked very serious, and said: “I have
been very naughty, but I will do so no more,”
and he went into the house, and never teased Charles
or Giles again.
A few months after this, when Charles
and Giles were working as usual in the garden, they
saw a gentleman come down one of the walks, leading
by the hand a little girl dressed in a black silk frock
and bonnet trimmed with crape.
“Ah, Giles,” said Charles,
“how like that young lady is to my sister Clara.
I wonder whether I shall ever see my dear sister Clara
again.”
“Brother Charles, dear brother
Charles, you have not then quite forgotten your sister
Clara,” said the little girl, throwing her arms
round his neck as she spoke.
When Charles saw that it was, indeed,
his own dear sister Clara, he kissed her and cried
with joy.
Then he told Clara all that had happened
to him since the day they had parted, and how sorry
he had been for all his past conduct, and he asked
her who the gentleman was that had brought her into
the garden.
“It is our uncle, dear Charles.
You know our dear mother had a brother who lived in
India that she used frequently to talk about.
Well, when he came home, and heard that mother was
dead, and we were in distress, he came to nurse’s
cottage, and took me home to his house, and has now
come to find you, for he is very good and kind, and
loves us both for our dear mother’s sake.”
“And will he take me home too?” said Charles.
“Yes, my boy,” said Charles’s
uncle, taking him by the hand, “because you
are good and kind, and are no longer cross and proud,
as I heard you used to be. You shall come home
with me this very day, if you please, and I will teach
you everything that a young gentleman should know,
and you and Clara shall be my children so long as you
continue to be deserving of my love, and are not unkind,
nor despise those who are beneath you in situation.”
“Indeed, uncle,” said
Charles, “I can now feel for the poor, and I
would rather remain as I am than be rich if I thought
I should ever behave as I used to do.”
“My dear child,” said
his uncle, kissing him with great affection, “continue
to think so, and you will never act amiss. The
first and greatest step toward amendment is acknowledging
our faults. What is passed shall be remembered
no more, and I doubt not but that we shall all be
happy for the time to come.”
“But uncle,” said Charles,
laying his hand on his uncle’s arm, “I
have something to ask of you.”
“Well, Charles, and what would
you have of me?” said his uncle.
Then Charles led Giles to his uncle,
and related all he had done for him; how he had taken
him to his own home, and given him half of his food
and his bed, and taught him to read and to work; he,
likewise, told his uncle how ill he had behaved to
Giles in depriving him of his pretty Snowball, and
he said: “Dear uncle, will you allow Giles
to share my good fortune, for I cannot be happy while
he is in want, and he is better than me, for he returned
good for evil.”
Then his uncle said: “Charles,
I should not have loved you had you forgotten your
kind friend.” And he asked Giles if he would
like to go to his house and live with him, and spend
his time in learning to read and write, and in improving
his mind, instead of hard labor.
“I should like it very much
indeed, sir,” said Giles, “but I cannot
accept your kind offer.”
“And why not, my good little friend?”
“Because, sir,” said Giles,
bursting into tears, “my poor mother and sisters
must go to the workhouse or starve if I did not stay
and work for them, and I could not be happy if I lived
in a fine house, and knew they were in want of a bit
of bread to eat.”
“Then,” said the gentleman
smiling, “for your sake they shall never want
anything, for I will put them into a cottage of my
own, and will take care of them, and you shall live
with me, and I will love you as if you were my own
child, and remember, Giles, I do this as a reward
for your kindness to Charles when he was unhappy and
in great distress.”
Charles’s uncle was as good
as his word, and Giles received the blessings of a
good education, while his mother and sisters were
maintained by the benevolence of his benefactor.
Charles was so careful not to relapse
into his former errors that he became as remarkable
for his gentleness and the goodness of his heart as
he had formerly been for his pride and unkindness,
and in the diligent performance of his duty, both
to God and man, he proved to his uncle the sincerity
of his amendment.