One pleasant morning in June, Mr.
Lee ordered the carriage, and drove with Minnie to
a delightful residence on the border of a lovely lake.
Minnie had often been here to visit little Harry, only
child of her mother’s friends.
This dear boy, like Minnie, had many
pets, and could fully sympathize with her in her love
for animals and for the beauties of nature.
Harry had a pony named Cherokee; he
had also pretty birds, that he delighted to watch,
as they hung in their cage.
But the pet which Harry loved more
than all others was a lamb, which he had named Hatty.
This little creature had been given him but a short
time before Minnie’s visit; but it had learned
to know his voice, to run to meet him, and to eat
grass from his hand.
When Hatty was first carried from
her mother to Harry’s home, she cried for her
usual companions. The boy’s tender heart
was touched, and he begged his father to let the lamb
sleep in his room.
“She will be so lonely!”
he urged; “and I shall want to take care of
her. Please, papa, be so kind as to let me have
her there.”
His parents, ever anxious to please
their dear child, readily consented; but first his
mamma allowed him to take his pet into the lake for
a bath.
Nurse, laughing at his delight, dressed
Harry in his red flannel bathing suit; and then, with
his lamb in his arms, he waded into the water.
Hatty was a little afraid; but even
in those few hours that she had been with her young
master, she had learned that he would not allow her
to be injured.
When the lamb’s soft wool was
dry, as it soon was in the hot sun, his father left
his reading in the parlor to help him find a basket
large enough for the lamb’s bed.
In the morning, when his mother went
into his chamber, she laughed to see that he had taken
his pet to share his own bed, and was lying with his
arms around her neck, kissing her with demonstrative
affection.
“Pretty little Hatty!”
he exclaimed, again and again; “I do love you
so dearly!”
Minnie had scarcely alighted from
the carriage, when Harry cried out, “Please
come and see my lamb.”
The child smilingly followed him to
the field, where the little creature was learning
to graze in the rich clover. As soon as she heard
his voice, she ran toward him, bleating and showing
every mark of strong affection. She was a pretty
lamb, with long, silky wool, gentle eyes, and a meek,
loving expression.
During the day, the two children were
scarcely a moment away from Hatty; for Harry’s
heart was moved by her cries for him, and he was so
fond of her he could not endure a separation.
Sometimes they would sit down on the clean, sweet
grass, the boy laying his head on Hatty’s neck;
but more commonly they were running over the lawn,
with the lamb close at their heels, sharing their
happiness.
“O, mamma,” he exclaimed,
when they went in to dinner, “we have had such
a funny time! Hatty knows Minnie now quite well;
but she does not love her, of course, as she does
me. She cries for me whenever she cannot see
me.”
His mother smiled, and then asked,
“Have you told Minnie about Una, and what Hatty
does while you are learning your lessons?”
“O, no, mamma! I quite forgot to tell her.”
“Will you please tell me about
Una?” urged Minnie, with great earnestness.
“Yes, dear. Una was the
name of a lamb I once saw. She was not gentle
and loving, as Harry’s lamb is; she was more
lively, and full of tricks. She had a bad habit
of browsing the trees, so that her mistress one day
told a servant to tie her to a stake in the orchard,
or she would destroy the young plants.
“Una had a little companion
that was very quiet and inoffensive, but was sometimes
led by her into mischief. The next morning after
she had been tied, when the man went with the leather
strap and string to lead her to the orchard again,
Una was nowhere to be found. All day long she
and her companion were off out of sight; but at night
they came timidly back, watching to see that the man
did not catch them.”
Minnie laughed heartily. “I
suppose,” she exclaimed, “that she ran
away to escape being tied, as our Leo used to when
he wanted to go to church.”
“Yes; and she repeated the trick
for several days. She was a very cunning lamb,
and would watch her chance, standing on her hind feet,
to eat the bark from the young trees, and pull the
slender twigs down toward the ground with her fore
leg.”
“Can you remember any thing
more about her?” timidly inquired Minnie.
“Dinner is ready,” answered
the lady, smiling. “We shall not have time
now; but Harry may tell you about Hatty.”
Harry stood up very straight, his
bright eyes sparkling with pleasure; then, with a
motion peculiar to him, tossing the curls from his
forehead, and turning to Minnie, he said, in an animated
tone, “Every morning I have my lessons with
mamma; but Hatty doesn’t like me to study, because
she wants to be playing, you know. At first, she
cried so much that I couldn’t get on at all
well, until mamma put my stool close to the door.
You see it is glass, and she could look through the
panes. So she lies on the piazza outside, with
her nose as close as she can get it to me.”
“And her loving eyes fixed on
his face,” added mamma, smiling at Minnie’s
earnest gaze.
“Isn’t it funny,”
cried the boy, leaning toward his young visitor, “for
her to sit still till my lessons are learned, so that
I can say them all by heart?
“O, mamma!” he shouted, “there’s
Hatty now.”
And, true enough, the affectionate
creature had followed them around the house to the
dining room, and there she stood butting against the
glass, to get to her dear little master.
“I do think,” cried Minnie,
enthusiastically, “that Hatty is the very best
lamb I ever saw.”