Nelly sat beside her mother picking
lint; but while her fingers flew, her eyes often looked
wistfully out into the meadow, golden with buttercups,
and bright with sunshine. Presently she said,
rather bashfully, but very earnestly, “Mamma,
I want to tell you a little plan I’ve made,
if you’ll please not laugh.”
“I think I can safely promise
that, my dear,” said her mother, putting down
her work that she might listen quite respectfully.
Nelly looked pleased, and went on confidingly,
“Since brother Will came home
with his lame foot, and I’ve helped you tend
him, I’ve heard a great deal about hospitals,
and liked it very much. To-day I said I wanted
to go and be a nurse, like Aunt Mercy; but Will laughed,
and told me I’d better begin by nursing sick
birds and butterflies and pussies before I tried to
take care of men. I did not like to be made
fun of, but I’ve been thinking that it would
be very pleasant to have a little hospital all my
own, and be a nurse in it, because, if I took pains,
so many pretty creatures might be made well, perhaps.
Could I, mamma?”
Her mother wanted to smile at the
idea, but did not, for Nelly looked up with her heart
and eyes so full of tender compassion, both for the
unknown men for whom her little hands had done their
best, and for the smaller sufferers nearer home, that
she stroked the shining head, and answered readily:
“Yes, Nelly, it will be a proper charity for
such a young Samaritan, and you may learn much if
you are in earnest. You must study how to feed
and nurse your little patients, else your pity will
do no good, and your hospital become a prison.
I will help you, and Tony shall be your surgeon.”
“O mamma, how good you always
are to me! Indeed, I am in truly earnest; I will
learn, I will be kind, and may I go now and begin?”
“You may, but tell me first
where will you have your hospital?”
“In my room, mamma; it is so
snug and sunny, and I never should forget it there,”
said Nelly.
“You must not forget it anywhere.
I think that plan will not do. How would you
like to find caterpillars walking in your bed, to hear
sick pussies mewing in the night, to have beetles
clinging to your clothes, or see mice, bugs, and birds
tumbling downstairs whenever the door was open?”
said her mother.
Nelly laughed at that thought a minute,
then clapped her hands, and cried: “Let
us have the old summer-house! My doves only use
the upper part, and it would be so like Frank in the
storybook. Please say yes again, mamma.”
Her mother did say yes, and, snatching
up her hat, Nelly ran to find Tony, the gardener’s
son, a pleasant lad of twelve, who was Nelly’s
favorite playmate. Tony pronounced the plan a
“jolly” one, and, leaving his work, followed
his young mistress to the summer-house, for she could
not wait one minute.
“What must we do first?”
she asked, as they stood looking in at the dusty room,
full of garden tools, bags of seeds, old flower-pots,
and watering-cans.
“Clear out the rubbish, miss,” answered
Tony.
“Here it goes, then,”
and Nelly began bundling everything out in such haste
that she broke two flower-pots, scattered all the squash-seeds,
and brought a pile of rakes and hoes clattering down
about her ears.
“Just wait a bit, and let me
take the lead, miss. You hand me things, I’ll
pile ’em in the barrow and wheel ’em off
to the barn; then it will save time, and be finished
up tidy.”
Nelly did as he advised, and very
soon nothing but dust remained.
“What next?” she asked, not knowing in
the least.
“I’ll sweep up while you
see if Polly can come and scrub the room out.
It ought to be done before you stay here, let alone
the patients.”
“So it had,” said Nelly,
looking very wise all of a sudden. “Will
says the wards that means the rooms, Tony are
scrubbed every day or two, and kept very clean, and
well venti-something I can’t
say it; but it means having a plenty of air come in.
I can clean windows while Polly mops, and then we
shall soon be done.” Away she ran, feeling
very busy and important. Polly came, and very
soon the room looked like another place. The
four latticed windows were set wide open, so the sunshine
came dancing through the vines that grew outside, and
curious roses peeped in to see what frolic was afoot.
The walls shone white again, for not a spider dared
to stay; the wide seat which encircled the room was
dustless now, the floor as nice as willing
hands could make it; and the south wind blew away
all musty odors with its fragrant breath.
“How fine it looks!” cried
Nelly, dancing on the doorstep, lest a foot-print
should mar the still damp floor.
“I’d almost like to fall
sick for the sake of staying here,” said Tony,
admiringly. “Now, what sort of beds are
you going to have, miss?
“I suppose it won’t do
to put butterflies and toads and worms into beds like
the real soldiers where Will was?” answered Nelly,
looking anxious.
Tony could hardly help shouting at
the idea; but, rather than trouble his little mistress,
he said very soberly: “I’m afraid
they wouldn’t lay easy, not being used to it.
Tucking up a butterfly would about kill him; the
worms would be apt to get lost among the bed-clothes;
and the toads would tumble out the first thing.”
“I shall have to ask mamma about
it. What will you do while I’m gone?”
said Nelly, unwilling that a moment should be lost.
“I’ll make frames for
nettings to the windows, else the doves will come
in and eat up the sick people.
“I think they will know that
it is a hospital, and be too kind to hurt or frighten
their neighbors,” began Nelly; but as she spoke,
a plump white dove walked in, looked about with its
red-ringed eyes, and quietly pecked up a tiny bug
that had just ventured out from the crack where it
had taken refuge when the deluge came.
“Yes, we must have the nettings.
I’ll ask mamma for some lace,” said Nelly,
when she saw that; and, taking her pet dove on her
shoulder, told it about her hospital as she went toward
the house; for, loving all little creatures as she
did, it grieved her to have any harm befall even the
least or plainest of them. She had a sweet child-fancy
that her playmates understood her language as she
did theirs, and that birds, flowers, animals, and
insects felt for her the same affection which she
felt for them. Love always makes friends, and
nothing seemed to fear the gentle child; but welcomed
her like a little sun who shone alike on all, and
never suffered an eclipse.
She was gone some time, and when she
came back her mind was full of new plans, one hand
full of rushes, the other of books, while over her
head floated the lace, and a bright green ribbon hung
across her arm.
“Mamma says that the best beds
will be little baskets, boxes, cages, and any sort
of thing that suits the patients; for each will need
different care and food and medicine. I have not
baskets enough, so, as I cannot have pretty white
beds, I am going to braid pretty green nests for my
patients, and, while I do it, mamma thought you’d
read to me the pages she has marked, so that we may
begin right.”
“Yes, miss; I like that.
But what is the ribbon for?” asked Tony.
“O, that’s for you.
Will says that, if you are to be an army surgeon,
you must have a green band on your arm; so I got this
to tie on when we play hospital.”
Tony let her decorate the sleeve of
his gray jacket, and when the nettings were done,
the welcome books were opened and enjoyed. It
was a happy time, sitting in the sunshine, with leaves
pleasantly astir all about them, doves cooing overhead,
and flowers sweetly gossiping together through the
summer afternoon. Nelly wove her smooth, green
rushes. Tony pored over his pages, and both found
something better than fairy legends in the family
histories of insects, birds, and beasts. All
manner of wonders appeared, and were explained to them,
till Nelly felt as if a new world had been given her,
so full of beauty, interest, and pleasure that she
never could be tired of studying it. Many of
these things were not strange to Tony, because, born
among plants, he had grown up with them as if they
were brothers and sisters, and the sturdy, brown-faced
boy had learned many lessons which no poet or philosopher
could have taught him, unless he had become as child-like
a s himself, and studied from the same great book.
When the baskets were done, the marked
pages all read, and the sun began to draw his rosy
curtains round him before smiling “Good night,”
Nelly ranged the green beds round the room, Tony put
in the screens, and the hospital was ready. The
little nurse was so excited that she could hardly
eat her supper, and directly afterwards ran up to tell
Will how well she had succeeded with the first part
of her enterprise. Now brother Will was a brave
young officer, who had fought stoutly and done his
duty like a man. But when lying weak and wounded
at home, the cheerful courage which had led him safely
through many dangers seemed to have deserted him,
and he was often gloomy, sad, or fretful, because
he longed to be at his post again, and time passed
very slowly. This troubled his mother, and made
Nelly wonder why he found lying in a pleasant room
so much harder than fighting battles or making weary
marches. Anything that interested and amused him
was very welcome, and when Nelly, climbing on the
arm of his sofa, told her plans, mishaps, and successes,
he laughed out more heartily than he had done for many
a day, and his thin face began to twinkle with fun
as it used to do so long ago. That pleased Nelly,
and she chatted like any affectionate little magpie,
till Will was really interested; for when one is ill,
small things amuse.
“Do you expect your patients
to come to you, Nelly?” he asked.
“No, I shall go and look for
them. I often see poor things suffering in the
garden, and the wood, and always feel as if they ought
to be taken care of, as people are.”
“You won’t like to carry
insane bugs, lame toads, and convulsive kittens in
your hands, and they would not stay on a stretcher
if you had one. You should have an ambulance
and be a branch of the Sanitary Commission,”
said Will.
Nelly had often heard the words, but
did not quite understand what they meant. So
Will told her of that great never-failing charity,
to which thousands owe their lives; and the child
listened with lips apart, eyes often full, and so
much love and admiration in her heart that she could
find no words in which to tell it. When her brother
paused, she said earnestly: “Yes, I will
be a Sanitary. This little cart of mine shall
be my amb’lance, and I’ll never let my
water-barrels go empty, never drive too fast, or be
rough with my poor passengers, like some of the men
you tell about. Does this look like an ambulance,
Will?”
“Not a bit, but it shall, if
you and mamma like to help me. I want four long
bits of cane, a square of white cloth, some pieces
of thin wood, and the gum-pot,” said Will, sitting
up to examine the little cart, feeling like a boy
again as he took out his knife and began to whittle.
Upstairs and downstairs ran Nelly till all necessary
materials were collected, and almost breathlessly
she watched her brother arch the canes over the cart,
cover them with the cloth, and fit an upper shelf
of small compartments, each lined with cotton-wool
to serve as beds for wounded insects, lest they should
hurt one another or jostle out. The lower part
was left free for any larger creatures which Nelly
might find. Among her toys she had a tiny cask
which only needed a peg to be water-tight; this was
filled and fitted in before, because, as the small
sufferers needed no seats, there was no place for it
behind, and, as Nelly was both horse and driver, it
was more convenient in front. On each side of
it stood a box of stores. In one were minute
rollers, as bandages are called, a few bottles not
yet filled, and a wee doll’s jar of cold-cream,
because Nelly could not feel that her outfit was complete
without a medicine-chest. The other box was full
of crumbs, bits of sugar, bird-seed, and grains of
wheat and corn, lest any famished stranger should
die for want of food before she got it home.
Then mamma painted “U.S. San. Com.”
in bright letters on the cover, and Nelly received
her charitable plaything with a long sigh of satisfaction.
“Nine o’clock already.
Bless me, what a short evening this has been,”
exclaimed Will, as Nelly came to give him her good-night
kiss.
“And such a happy one,” she answered.
“Thank you very, very much,
dear Will. I only wish my little amb’lance
was big enough for you to go in, I’d
so like to give you the first ride.”
“Nothing I should like better,
if it were possible, though I’ve a prejudice
against ambulances in general. But as I cannot
ride, I’ll try and hop out to your hospital
to-morrow, and see how you get on,” which
was a great deal for Captain Will to say, because he
had been too listless to leave his sofa for several
days.
That promise sent Nelly happily away
to bed, only stopping to pop her head out of the window
to see if it was likely to be a fair day to-morrow,
and to tell Tony about the new plan as he passed below.
“Where shall you go to look
for your first load of sick folks, miss?” he
asked.
“All round the garden first,
then through the grove, and home across the brook.
Do you think I can find any patients so?” said
Nelly.
“I know you will. Good
night, miss,” and Tony walked away with a merry
look on his face, that Nelly would not have understood
if she had seen it.
Up rose the sun bright and early,
and up rose Nurse Nelly almost as early and as bright.
Breakfast was taken in a great hurry, and before
the dew was off the grass this branch of the S. C.
was all astir. Papa, mamma, big brother and baby
sister, men and maids, all looked out to see the funny
little ambulance depart, and nowhere in all the summer
fields was there a happier child than Nelly, as she
went smiling down the garden path, where tall flowers
kissed her as she passed and every blithe bird seemed
singing a “Good speed!”
“How I wonder what I shall find
first,” she thought, looking sharply on all
sides as she went. Crickets chirped, grasshoppers
leaped, ants worked busily at their subterranean houses,
spiders spun shining webs from twig to twig, bees
were coming for their bags of gold, and butterflies
had just begun their holiday. A large white one
alighted on the top of the ambulance, walked over
the inscription as if spelling it letter by letter,
then floated away from flower to flower, like one
carrying the good news far and wide.
“Now every one will know about
the hospital and be glad to see me coming,”
thought Nelly. And indeed it seemed so, for just
then a black-bird, sitting on a garden wall, burst
out with a song full of musical joy, Nelly’s
kitten came running after to stare at the wagon and
rub her soft side against it, a bright-eyed toad looked
out from his cool bower among the lily-leaves, and
at that minute Nelly found her first patient.
In one of the dewy cobwebs hanging from a shrub near
by sat a fat black and yellow spider, watching a fly
whose delicate wings were just caught in the net.
The poor fly buzzed pitifully, and struggled so hard
that the whole web shook: but the more he struggled,
the more he entangled himself, and the fierce spider
was preparing to descend that it might weave a shroud
about its prey, when a little finger broke the threads
and lifted the fly safely into the palm of a hand,
where he lay faintly humming his thanks.
Nelly had heard much about contrabands,
knew who they were, and was very much interested in
them; so, when she freed the poor black fly she played
he was her contraband, and felt glad that her first
patient was one that needed help so much. Carefully
brushing away as much of the web as she could, she
left small Pompey, as she named him, to free his own
legs, lest her clumsy fingers should hurt him; then
she laid him in one of the soft beds with a grain
or two of sugar if he needed refreshment, and bade
him rest and recover from his fright, remembering
that he was at liberty to fly away whenever he liked,
because she had no wish to male a slave of him.
Feeling very happy over this new friend,
Nelly went on singing softly as she walked, and presently
she found a pretty caterpillar dressed in brown fur,
although the day was warm. He lay so still she
thought him dead, till he rolled himself into a ball
as she touched him.
“I think you are either faint
from the heat of this thick coat of yours, or that
you are going to make a cocoon of yourself, Mr. Fuzz,”
said Nelly.
“Now I want to see you turn
into a butterfly, so I shall take you, and if get
lively again I will let you go. I shall play that
you have given out on a march, as the soldiers sometimes
do, and been left behind for the Sanitary people to
see to.”
In went sulky Mr. Fuzz, and on trundled
the ambulance till a golden green rose-beetle was
discovered, lying on his back kicking as if in a fit.
“Dear me, what shall I do for
him?” thought Nelly. “He acts as baby
did when she was so ill, and mamma put her in a warm
bath. I haven’t got my little tub here,
or any hot water, and I’m afraid the beetle would
not like it if I had. Perhaps he has pain in
his stomach; I’ll turn him over, and pat his
back, as nurse does baby’s when she cries for
pain like that.”
She set the beetle on his legs, and
did her best to comfort him; but he was evidently
in great distress, for he could not walk, and instead
of lifting his emerald overcoat, and spreading the
wings that lay underneath, be turned over again, and
kicked more violently than before. Not knowing
what to do, Nelly put him into one of her soft nests
for Tony to cure if possible. She found no more
patients in the garden except a dead bee, which she
wrapped in a leaf, and took home to bury. When
she came to the grove, it was so green and cool she
longed to sit and listen to the whisper of the pines,
and watch the larch-tassels wave in the wind.
But, recollecting her charitable errand, she went
rustling along the pleasant path till she came to
another patient, over which she stood considering several
minutes before she could decide whether it was best
to take it to her hospital, because it was a little
gray snake, with bruised tail. She knew it would
not hurt her, yet she was afraid of it; she thought
it pretty, yet could not like it: she pitied
its pain, yet shrunk from helping it, for it had a
fiery eye, and a keep quivering tongue, that looked
as if longing to bite.
“He is a rebel, I wonder if
I ought to be good to him,” thought Nelly, watching
the reptile writhe with pain. “Will said
there were sick rebels in his hospital, and one was
very kind to him. It says, too, in my little
book, ‘Love your enemies.’ I think
snakes are mine, but I guess I’ll try and love
him because God made him. Some boy will kill
him if I leave him here, and then perhaps his mother
will be very sad about it. Come, poor worm,
I wish to help you, so be patient, and don’t
frighten me.”
Then Nelly laid her little handkerchief
on the ground, and with a stick gently lifted the
wounded snake upon it, and, folding it together, laid
it in the ambulance. She was thoughtful after
that, and so busy puzzling her young head about the
duty of loving those who hate us, and being kind to
those who are disagreeable or unkind, that she went
through the rest of the wood quite forgetful of her
work. A soft “Queek, queek!” made
her look up and listen. The sound came from the
long meadow-grass, and, bending it carefully back,
she found a half-fledged bird, with one wing trailing
on the ground, and its eyes dim with pain or hunger.
“You darling thing, did you
fall out of your nest and hurt your wing?” cried
Nelly, looking up into the single tree that stood near
by. No nest was to be seen, no parent birds
hovered overhead, and little Robin could only tell
its troubles in that mournful “Queek, queek,
queek!”
Nelly ran to get both her chests,
and, sitting down beside the bird, tried to feed it.
To her joy it ate crumb after crumb, as if it were
half starved, and soon fluttered nearer a confiding
fearlessness that made her very proud. Soon baby
Robin seemed quite comfortable, his eye brightened,
he “queeked” no more, and but for the drooping
wing would have been himself again. With one
of her bandages Nelly bound both wings closely to
his sides for fear he should hurt himself by trying
to fly; and though he seemed amazed at her proceedings,
he behaved very well, only staring at her, and ruffling
up his few feathers in a funny way that made her laugh.
Then she had to discover some way of accommodating
her two larger patients so that neither should hurt
nor alarm the other. A bright thought came to
her after much pondering. Carefully lifting the
handkerchief, she pinned the two ends to the roof
of the cart, and there swung little Forked-tongue,
while Rob lay easily below.
By this time, Nelly began to wonder
how it happened that she found so many more injured
things than ever before. But it never entered
her innocent head that Tony had searched the wood
and meadow before she was up, and laid most of these
creatures ready to her hands, that she might not be
disappointed. She had not yet lost her faith
in fairies, so she fancied they too belonged to her
small sisterhood, and presently it did really seem
impossible to doubt that the good folk had been at
work.
Coming to the bridge that crossed
the brook, she stopped a moment to watch the water
ripple over the bright pebbles, the ferns bend down
to drink, and the funny tadpoles frolic in quieter
nooks, where the sun shone, and the dragon-flies swung
among the rushes. When Nelly turned to go on,
her blue eyes opened wide, and the handle of the ambulance
dropped with a noise that caused a stout frog to skip
into the water heels over head. Directly in the
middle of the bridge was a pretty green tent, made
of two tall burdock leaves. The stems were stuck
into cracks between the boards, the tips were pinned
together with a thorn, and one great buttercup nodded
in the doorway like a sleepy sentinel. Nelly
stared and smiled, listened, and looked about on every
side. Nothing was seen but the quiet meadow and
the shady grove, nothing was heard but the babble
of the brook and the cheery music of the bobolinks.
“Yes,” said Nelly softly
to herself, “that is a fairy tent, and in it
I may find a baby elf sick with whooping-cough or
scarlet-fever. How splendid it would be! only
I could never nurse such a dainty thing.”
Stooping eagerly, she peeped over
the buttercup’s drowsy head, and saw what seemed
a tiny cock of hay. She had no time to feel disappointed,
for the haycock began to stir, and, looking nearer,
she beheld two silvery gray mites, who wagged wee
tails, and stretched themselves as if they had just
waked up. Nelly knew that they were young field-mice,
and rejoiced over them, feeling rather relieved that
no fairy had appeared, though she still believed them
to have had a hand in the matter.
“I shall call the mice my Babes
in the Wood, because they are lost and covered up
with leaves,” said Nelly, as she laid them in
her snuggest bed, where they nestled close together,
and fell fast asleep again.
Being very anxious to get home, that
she might tell her adventures, and show how great
was the need of a sanitary commission in that region,
Nelly marched proudly up the avenue, and, having displayed
her load, hurried to the hospital, where another applicant
was waiting for her. On the step of the door
lay a large turtle, with one claw gone, and on his
back was pasted a bit of paper, with his name, “Commodore
Waddle, U.S.N.” Nelly knew this was a joke
of Will’s, but welcomed the ancient mariner,
and called Tony to help her get him in.
All that morning they were very busy
settling the new-comers, for both people and books
had to be consulted before they could decide what diet
and treatment was best for each. The winged contraband
had taken Nelly at her word, and flown away on the
journey home. Little Rob was put in a large
cage, where he could use his legs, yet not injure his
lame wing. Forked-tongue lay under a wire cover,
on sprigs of fennel, for the gardener said that snakes
were fond of it. The Babes in the Wood were put
to bed in one of the rush baskets, under a cotton-wool
coverlet. Greenback, the beetle, found ease for
his unknown aches in the warm heart of a rose, where
he sunned himself all day. The Commodore was
made happy in a tub of water, grass, and stones, and
Mr. Fuzz was put in a well-ventilated glass box to
decide whether he would be a cocoon or not.
Tony had not been idle while his mistress
was away, and he showed her the hospital garden he
had made close by, in which were cabbage, nettle,
and mignonette plants for the butterflies, flowering
herbs for the bees, chick-weed and hemp for the birds,
catnip for the pussies, and plenty of room left for
whatever other patients might need. In the afternoon,
while Nelly did her task at lint-picking, talking busily
to Will as she worked, and interesting him in her
affairs, Tony cleared a pretty spot in the grove for
the burying-ground, and made ready some small bits
of slate on which to write the names of those who died.
He did not have it ready an hour too soon, for at
sunset two little graves were needed, and Nurse Nelly
shed tender tears for her first losses as she laid
the motherless mice in one smooth hollow, and the gray-coated
rebel in the other. She had learned to care for
him already, and when she found him dead, was very
glad she had been kind to him, hoping that he knew
it, and died happier in her hospital than all alone
in the shadowy wood.
The rest of Nelly’s patients
prospered, and of the many added afterward few died,
because of Tony’s skilful treatment and her own
faithful care. Every morning when the day proved
fair the little ambulance went out upon its charitable
errand; every afternoon Nelly worked for the human
sufferers whom she loved; and every evening brother
Will read aloud to her from useful books, showed her
wonders with his microscope, or prescribed remedies
for the patients, whom he soon knew by name and took
much interest in. It was Nelly’s holiday;
but, though she studied no lessons, she learned much,
and unconsciously made her pretty play both an example
and a rebuke for others.
At first it seemed a childish pastime,
and people laughed. But there was something
in the familiar words “sanitary,” “hospital”
and “ambulance” that made them pleasant
sounds to many ears. As reports of Nelly’s
work went through the neighborhood, other children
came to see and copy her design. Rough lads looked
ashamed when in her wards they found harmless creatures
hurt by them, and going out they said among themselves,
“We won’t stone birds, chase butterflies,
and drown the girls’ little cats any more, though
we won’t tell them so.” And most of
the lads kept their word so well that people said there
never had been so many birds before as all that summer
haunted wood and field. Tender-hearted playmates
brought their pets to be cured; even busy farmers
bad a friendly word for the small charity, which reminded
them so sweetly of the great one which should never
be forgotten; lonely mothers sometimes looked out
with wet eyes as the little ambulance went by, recalling
thoughts or absent sons who might be journeying painfully
to some far-off hospital, where brave women waited
to tend them with hands as willing, hearts as tender,
as those the gentle child gave to her self-appointed
task.
At home the charm worked also.
No more idle days for Nelly, or fretful ones for
Will, because the little sister would not neglect the
helpless creatures so dependent upon her, and the
big brother was ashamed to complain after watching
the patience of these lesser sufferers, and merrily
said he would try to bear his own wound as quietly
and bravely as the “Commodore” bore his.
Nelly never knew how much good she had done Captain
Will till he went away again in the early autumn.
Then he thanked her for it, and though she cried
for joy and sorrow she never forgot it, because he
left something behind him which always pleasantly
reminded her of the double success her little hospital
had won.
When Will was gone and she had prayed
softly in her heart that God would keep him safe and
bring him home again, she dried her tears and went
away to find comfort in the place where he had spent
so many happy hours with her. She had not been
there before that day, and when she reached the door
she stood quite still and wanted very much to cry
again, far something beautiful had happened.
She had often asked Will for a motto for her hospital,
and he had promised to find her one. She thought
he had forgotten it; but even in the hurry of that
busy day he had found time to do more than keep his
word, while Nelly sat indoors, lovingly brightening
the tarnished buttons on the blue coat that had seen
so many battles.
Above the roof, where the doves cooed
in the sun, now rustled a white flag with the golden
“S.C.” shining on it as the wind tossed
it to and fro. Below, on the smooth panel of
the door, a skilful pencil had drawn two arching ferns,
in whose soft shadow, poised upon a mushroom, stood
a little figure of Nurse Nelly, and underneath it another
of Dr. Tony bottling medicine, with spectacles upon
his nose. Both hands of the miniature Nelly
were outstretched, as if beckoning to a train of insects,
birds and beasts, which was so long that it not only
circled round the lower rim of this fine sketch, but
dwindled in the distance to mere dots and lines.
Such merry conceits as one found there! A mouse
bringing the tail it had lost in some cruel trap, a
dor-bug with a shade over its eyes, an invalid butterfly
carried in a tiny litter by long-legged spiders, a
fat frog with gouty feet hopping upon crutches, Jenny
Wren sobbing in a nice handkerchief, as she brought
dear dead Cock Robin to be restored to life.
Rabbits, lambs, cats, calves, and turtles, all came
trooping up to be healed by the benevolent little
maid who welcomed them so heartily.
Nelly laughed at these comical mites till the tears ran down her cheeks, and
thought she never could be tired of looking at them. But presently she saw
four lines clearly printed underneath her picture, and her childish face grew
sweetly serious as she read the words of a great poet, which Will had made both
compliment and motto:
“He prayeth best who loveth best
All things, both great and small;
For the dear God who loveth us,
He made and loveth all.”