<h3><SPAN name="THE_WIND_A_HELPER">THE WIND, A HELPER</SPAN></h3>
<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Mary Stewart</span></p>
<p>A little girl was once standing in a dark,
narrow street playing with some bits of
coloured paper she had found in an ash-can.
Suddenly a gust of wind came around the
street-corner. It blew the coloured scraps
right out of the child’s hand and carried them
up over her head, then higher still, over the
house-tops, until they were out of sight.</p>
<p>Janie, that was the little girl’s name,
watched them fly away, with tears in her eyes.
Her busy mother had given her this day for a
holiday, she had no toys to play with, and she
loved those gay bits of paper. As she looked
after the scraps up into the little patch of blue
sky, which was all she could see between the
high houses, she saw a small, white cloud scudding
along, just the way the papers had flown.</p>
<p>“What makes the cloud fly so fast?” thought
Janie, and as if in answer another gust of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="Page_197"></SPAN>[197]</span>
wind came blowing down the street. “Oh,
wind, blow me, too,” cried Janie, “take me up
in the sky with the cloud,” and she held out her
little petticoat.</p>
<p>The wind filled it and blew her—well, it
didn’t quite blow her into the sky, but it did a
kinder thing. It blew her down the dark,
narrow street, through other streets, each getting
wider and cleaner, until at last it blew
her right into the country. There she found
herself racing over green fields, with the sky
overhead so big and so blue that the clouds
looked like a flock of little sheep. There for
a moment the wind left her—he had other
things to do—and Janie stood looking around
her happy and surprised. It was a spring
day and the grass, which was waving in the
wind, was soft and green and full of buttercups
and daisies. “Far prettier than my scraps
of paper,” thought Janie. The trees were
covered with new, green leaves, some of them
were dressed in pink and white blossoms, and
their branches swayed in the wind as if they
were waving a welcome to the little girl. But
she didn’t have long to stand and look. Back<span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="Page_198"></SPAN>[198]</span>
came the wind, bringing new scents of blossoms
and other sweet spring things with him,
and off the child ran again.</p>
<p>Presently she saw in front of her a shining
blue line, and when she reached it she found
it was the sea. If any one of us has ever seen
the sea on a clear windy day we can never forget
it, and that is just the way Janie felt. The
waves were high and blue, but they wore great
white caps which broke against the wind, and
he scattered them into splendid foamy bits of
spray, while the waves came dashing over the
beach.</p>
<p>It was all so beautiful that Janie took a
long, deep breath of wind, and suddenly her
cheeks grew pink and her eyes bright, and you
never would have known she was the pale,
sad little Janie who stood in the dark street
watching her scraps of paper blow away.</p>
<p>She was standing on the beach gazing out
to sea in astonishment. For there, on the blue
water, was something which looked like a
great bird with its wings outspread, only it
was far bigger than any bird, and as it
skimmed over the water she saw men moving<span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="Page_199"></SPAN>[199]</span>
upon it. Can you guess what it was? It was
a splendid ship; but as Janie had never seen
one before, except in pictures, she was much
puzzled. “What makes it fly so fast?” she
wondered, and for an answer the wind blew
her along the beach, through a garden, and
almost into a little white cottage, where a
woman was standing with a baby in her arms.</p>
<p>She didn’t seem to mind a bit when she saw
a strange little girl come flying down the garden
path to her house. She just laughed and
cried, “This is another trick of my friend the
wind.” Then she laid the baby down in a
cradle and took both Janie’s hands, making
her sit on the door step where the wind had
dropped her.</p>
<p>“Please, ma’am,” said Janie, when she could
get her breath, “can you tell me what makes
the boat sail?” The woman laughed again
and answered, “Why, this beautiful wind
blows her along, of course; that is only one of
the hundreds of things the wind does for us.
He can blow so hard that the great ships are
just driven before him, and he can blow so
softly that my baby is rocked to sleep. Look<span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="Page_200"></SPAN>[200]</span>
at the cradle now.” Janie looked, and there
in the light wind which seemed to be full of
the scent of blossoms, the cradle was rocking
so gently that the baby had fallen asleep.
Then the mother brought Janie a bowl of
bread and milk, and while she ate it they
talked about the wind.</p>
<p>“He blows away the dead leaves with such
fury,” said the mother, “that they tear along
in front of my window like a flock of frightened
birds. But when he finds a little flower
beneath the leaves he blows on its petals so
softly that it feels as if its mother were kissing
it.</p>
<p>“Sometimes, when it comes from the North,
it brings snow and hail and the beautiful frosts
of winter. But when it comes from the South
it brings sweet scents and soft, warm air. The
East Wind often brings rain and mist, and some
people don’t like it, but the ground needs the
rain, the flowers love it, and the East Wind is a
gift from God, just as the others are. The
West Wind is blowing to-day, and that is why
the world looks so fresh and shining.”</p>
<p>So they talked most of the afternoon, the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="Page_201"></SPAN>[201]</span>
mother and Janie, until when the sun began to
sink and the ship came sailing homeward,
Janie turned again toward the city.</p>
<p>Very gently this time the wind blew her
along, beside orchards where the trees were
rustling their leaves like lullabies, and through
meadows where, like sleepy children, the flowers
were nodding their heads for good-night
to the dear West Wind.</p>
<p>And although she was leaving it all, Janie
was very happy. The woman in the cottage
by the sea had told her to come back on her
next holiday. And she knew that although
she could not always see the dancing trees and
flowers and waves and ships, she would remember
that they were waiting for her every
time she heard the wind rattling the window
or blowing among the chimneys.</p>
<p>Just before she went to sleep she looked out
of her tiny window through which a patch of
sky could be seen. It was a dark, cloudy
patch, and Janie was just turning away from
it when the clouds began to move. The wind
was still at work, in an instant the clouds had
been blown away, and through that tiny window<span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="Page_202"></SPAN>[202]</span>
Janie saw a bright, clear star shining
down upon her. “Thank you, dear wind,”
she whispered. And then, as she cuddled
down to sleep she seemed to hear the wind, or
was it the star, singing softly, “Thank God,
thank God.”</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="Page_203"></SPAN>[203]</span></p>
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