<h3><SPAN name="THE_FAIRY_FLOWER">THE FAIRY FLOWER</SPAN></h3>
<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Henry Ward Beecher</span></p>
<p>Once there was a little girl whose name was
Clara. She had a very kind heart; but she
was an only child and had been petted so much
that she was becoming very selfish. Too late
the mother lamented that she had indulged
her child, and strove to repair the mischief by
trying to make Clara think of other people’s
happiness, not solely of her own.</p>
<p>On some days, no one could be more charming
than Clara. She was gentle and obliging.
She sang all day long, and made every one
who came near her happy. Then everybody
admired her, and her mother and aunt were
sure that she was cured of her pettish disposition.
But the very next day all her charming
ways were changed. She wore a moody face.
She was no longer courteous, and every one
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="Page_121"></SPAN>[121]</span>who came near her felt the chill of her manner.</p>
<p>One summer’s night, Clara went to her
room. The moon was at its full, and was
shining through the window so brightly that
she needed no other light. Clara sat at the
window feeling very unhappy. She was
thinking over her conduct through the day,
and was trying to imagine how it could be
that on some days she was happy and on
others so wretched.</p>
<p>As she mused, she laid her head back on the
easy chair. No sooner had she shut her
eyes than a strange thing happened. A feeble
old man, carrying a basket, came into the
room. In his basket, which he seemed hardly
able to bear, were a handful of flowers and
two great stones.</p>
<p>“My daughter,” said the old man, “will
you help me for I am too old to carry this
load; please lighten it.” Clara looked at
him, pouting, and exclaimed, “Go away!”</p>
<p>“But I am weak and suffering,” he said;
“will you not lighten my load?” At last
Clara took the flowers out of his basket.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="Page_122"></SPAN>[122]</span>
They were very beautiful and she laid them
in her lap.</p>
<p>“My daughter,” said the old man, “you have
not lightened my basket; you have taken only
the pleasant things out of it, and have left the
heavy stones. Please lift one of them out of
the basket.”</p>
<p>“Go away!” exclaimed Clara angrily. “I
will not touch those dirty stones!”</p>
<p>No sooner had she said this than the old
man began to change before her and to become
so bright and white that he looked like a
column of crystal. He took one of the stones
and cast it out of the window, and it flew and
flew, and fell on the eastern side of a grove
where the sun shone first every morning.</p>
<p>Then the crystal old man took the flowers
out of Clara’s lap. They were wet with dew,
and he shook them over her head and exclaimed,
“Change into a flower! Go and
stand by the stone till your shadow shall be
marked upon it.”</p>
<p>In a second, Clara was growing by the side
of the wide, flat stone, and the moon cast upon
it her shadow,—the shadow of a beautiful<span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="Page_123"></SPAN>[123]</span>
flower with a long and slender stem. All
night she was very wretched. In the morning,
she could not help looking at herself in
a brook which came close up to the stone;
then she recognised the beautiful flower and
knew that her name was now Columbine.</p>
<p>All day her shadow fell upon the stone, but
when the sun went away, the shadow, too,
went away. At night her faint shadow lay
upon the stone but when the moon went away,
her shadow, also, went away. And the stone
lay still all day and all night, and did not care
for the flower nor feel its shadow.</p>
<p>Clara longed to be a little girl again. She
asked the stone to tell her how, but the hard
stone would not answer. She asked the
brook, but the brook whispered, “Ask the
Bobolink!” She asked the Bobolink, but he
merely alighted upon the flower and teetered
up and down. She could not learn from the
Bobolink how to make her shadow stay upon
the stone.</p>
<p>Then she asked a spider and he spun a web
from her bright blossoms, fastened it to the
stone, bent her over, and tied her up, till she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="Page_124"></SPAN>[124]</span>
feared she could never get loose. But all his
nice films did her no good; her shadow
would not stay upon the stone.</p>
<p>She asked the wind to help her. The wind
swept away the spider’s web, and blew so hard
that the flower lay its whole length upon the
stone; but when the wind left her and she
rose up, there was no shadow marked upon
the stone.</p>
<p>“What is beauty worth,” thought Clara, “if
it grows by the side of a stone that does not
feel it, nor care for it?”</p>
<p>She asked the dew to help her. And the
dew said, “How can I help you! I live contentedly
in darkness, I put on my beauty only
to please others. I let the sun come through
my drops, though I know it will consume me.”</p>
<p>“I wish I were dew,” said Clara, “for then,
I, too, could do some good. Now my beauty
does no good, and I am wasting it every day
upon a stone.” When Clara breathed this
kind wish, there were glad flutters and whispers
all around.</p>
<p>The next day a beautiful child came that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="Page_125"></SPAN>[125]</span>
way. She was gathering ferns, and mosses,
and flowers. Whenever she saw a tuft of
moss, she would ask, “Please, dear moss, may
I take you?” And when she saw a beautiful
branch with scarlet leaves, she would ask,
“Dear bush, may I take these leaves?”</p>
<p>When she saw the beautiful columbine
growing by the side of a stone, she asked,
“Oh, sweet Columbine, may I pluck you?”
And the fairy flower said, gently, “I must not
go till my shadow is fastened upon the stone.”</p>
<p>Then the girl took from her case a pencil
and in a moment traced the shadow of the
columbine upon the stone. When she had
done this, she reached out her hand, took the
stem low down, and broke it off.</p>
<p>At that moment Clara sprang up from her
chair by the window, and there stood her
mother saying, “My dear daughter, you should
not fall asleep by an open window, not even
in summer. How damp you are! Come,
hasten to bed.”</p>
<p>It was many days before Clara could persuade
herself that she had only dreamed. It<span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="Page_126"></SPAN>[126]</span>
was months before she told the dream to her
mother. And when she told it, her mother
said:</p>
<p>“Ah, Clara, would that all little girls might
dream, if only it made them as good as your
dream has made you.”</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="Page_127"></SPAN>[127]</span></p>
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