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<h1>VERY SHORT STORIES<br/> <small>AND</small><br/> VERSES FOR CHILDREN.<br/> <br/></h1>
<p class="title"><small>BY</small><br/><br/>
<big>MRS. W. K. CLIFFORD,</big><br/></p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</SPAN></span></p>
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<h2><SPAN name="MASTER_WILLIE" id="MASTER_WILLIE"></SPAN>MASTER WILLIE.</h2>
<p>There was once a little boy called Willie. I
never knew his other name, and as he lived
far off behind the mountain, we cannot go to inquire.
He had fair hair and blue eyes, and there was something
in his face that, when you had looked at him,
made you feel quite happy and rested, and think
of all the things you meant to do by-and-by when
you were wiser and stronger. He lived all alone
with the tall aunt, who was very rich, in the big
house at the end of the village. Every morning he
went down the street with his little goat under his
arm, and the village folk looked after him and
said, "There goes Master Willie."</p>
<p>The tall aunt had a very long neck; on the top of
it was her head, on the top of her head she wore a
white cap. Willie used often to look up at her and
think that the cap was like snow upon the mountain.
She was very fond of Willie, but she had lived a
great many years and was always sitting still to think
them over, and she had forgotten all the games she
used to know, all the stories she had read
when she was little, and when Willie asked her
about them, would say, "No, dear, no, I can't<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</SPAN></span>
remember; go to the woods and play." Sometimes
she would take his face between her two hands and
look at him well while Willie felt quite sure that she
was not thinking of him, but of someone else he did
not know, and then she would kiss him, and turn
away quickly, saying, "Go to the woods, dear; it
is no good staying with an old woman." Then he,
knowing that she wanted to be alone, would pick
up his goat and hurry away.</p>
<p>He had had a dear little sister, called Apple-blossom,
but a strange thing had happened to her.
One day she over-wound her very big doll that
talked and walked, and the consequence was quite
terrible. No sooner was the winding-up key out
of the doll's side than it blinked its eyes, talked
very fast, made faces, took Apple-blossom by the
hand, saying, "I am not your doll any longer, but you
are my little girl," and led her right away no one
could tell whither, and no one was able to follow.
The tall aunt and Willie only knew that she had
gone to be the doll's little girl in some strange
place, where dolls were stronger and more
important than human beings.</p>
<p>After Apple-blossom left him, Willie had only his
goat to play with; it was a poor little thing with no
horns, no tail and hardly any hair, but still he
loved it dearly, and put it under his arm every
morning while he went along the street.</p>
<p>"It is only made of painted wood and a little<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</SPAN></span>
hair, Master Willie," said the blacksmith's wife one
day. "Why should you care for it; it is not even
alive."</p>
<p>"But if it were alive, anyone could love it."</p>
<p>"And living hands made it," the miller's wife
said. "I wonder what strange hands they were;—take
care of it for the sake of them, little master."</p>
<p>"Yes, dame, I will," he answered gratefully, and
he went on his way thinking of the hands, wondering
what tasks had been set them to do since they
fashioned the little goat. He stayed all day in the
woods helping the children to gather nuts and
blackberries. In the afternoon he watched them
go home with their aprons full; he looked after
them longingly as they went on their way singing.
If he had had a father and mother, or brothers
and sisters, to whom he could have carried home
nuts and blackberries, how merry he would have
been. Sometimes he told the children how happy
they were to live in a cottage with the door open all
day, and the sweet breeze blowing in, and the cocks
and hens strutting about outside, and the pigs
grunting in the styes at the end of the garden; to
see the mother scrubbing and washing, to know
that the father was working in the fields, and to
run about and help and play, and be cuffed and
kissed, just as it happened. Then they would
answer, "But you have the tall lady for your aunt,
and the big house to live in, and the grand carriage<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</SPAN></span>
to drive in, while we are poor, and sometimes have
little to eat and drink; mother often tells us how
fine it must be to be you."</p>
<p>"But the food that you eat is sweet because you
are very hungry," he answered them, "and no one
sorrows in your house. As for the grand carriage,
it is better to have a carriage if your heart is
heavy, but when it is light, then you can run swiftly
on your own two legs." Ah, poor Willie, how lonely
he was, and yet the tall aunt loved him dearly.
On hot drowsy days he had many a good sleep with
his head resting against her high thin shoulders,
and her arms about him.</p>
<p>One afternoon, clasping his goat as usual, he
sat down by the pond. All the children had gone
home, so he was quite alone, but he was glad to
look at the pond and think. There were so many
strange things in the world, it seemed as if he
would never have done thinking about them, not if
he lived to be a hundred.</p>
<p>He rested his elbows on his knees and sat
staring at the pond. Overhead the trees
were whispering; behind him, in and out of
their holes the rabbits whisked; far off he could
hear the twitter of a swallow; the foxglove was
dead, the bracken was turning brown, the cones
from the fir trees were lying on the ground.
As he watched, a strange thing happened. Slowly
and slowly the pond lengthened out and out,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</SPAN></span>
stretching away and away until it became a river—a
long river that went on and on, right down
the woods, past the great black firs, past the little
cottage that was a ruin and only lived in now and
then by a stray gipsy or a tired tramp, past the
setting sun, till it dipped into space beyond.
Then many little boats came sailing towards
Willie, and one stopped quite close to where
he sat, just as if it were waiting for him. He
looked at it well; it had a snow-white sail and
a little man with a drawn-sword for a figure-head.
A voice that seemed to come from nowhere
asked—</p>
<p>"Are you ready, Willie?" Just as if he understood
he answered back—</p>
<p>"Not yet,—not quite, dear Queen, but I shall be
soon. I should like to wait a little longer."</p>
<p>"No, no, come now, dear child; they are all
waiting for you." So he got up and stepped into
the boat, and it put out before he had even time to
sit down. He looked at the rushes as the boat cut
its way through them; he saw the hearts of the
lilies as they lay spread open on their great wide
leaves; he went on and on beneath the crimson
sky towards the setting sun, until he slipped into
space with the river.</p>
<p>He saw land at last far on a-head, and as he
drew near it he understood whither the boat was
bound. All along the shore there were hundreds<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</SPAN></span>
and hundreds of dolls crowding down to the
water's edge, looking as if they had expected
him. They stared at him with their shining
round eyes; but he just clasped his little goat
tighter and closer, and sailed on nearer and nearer
to the land. The dolls did not move; they stood
still, smiling at him with their painted lips, then
suddenly they opened their painted mouths and
put out their painted tongues at him; but still he
was not afraid. He clasped the goat yet a little
closer, and called out, "Apple-blossom, I am
waiting; are you here?" Just as he had expected,
he heard Apple-blossom's voice answering from
the back of the toy-town—</p>
<p>"Yes, dear brother, I am coming." So he
drew close to the shore, and waited for her. He
saw her a long way off, and waved his hand.</p>
<p>"I have come to fetch you," he said.</p>
<p>"But I cannot go with you unless I am bought,"
she answered, sadly, "for now there is a wire spring
inside me; and look at my arms, dear brother;"
and pulling up her pink muslin sleeves, she showed
him that they were stuffed with sawdust. "Go
home, and bring the money to pay for me," she
cried, "and then I can come home again." But
the dolls had crowded up behind, so that he might
not turn his boat round. "Straight on," cried
Apple-blossom, in despair; "what does it matter
whether you go backwards or forwards if you only<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</SPAN></span>
keep straight when you live in a world that is
round?"</p>
<p>So he sailed on once more beneath the sky that
was getting grey, through all the shadows that
gathered round, beneath the pale moon, and the
little stars that came out one by one and watched
him from the sky.</p>
<p>I saw him coming towards the land of story-books.
That was how I knew about him, dear
children. He was very tired and had fallen asleep,
but the boat stopped quite naturally, as if it knew
that I had been waiting for him. I stooped, and
kissed his eyes, and looked at his little pale face,
and lifting him softly in my arms, put him into this
book to rest. That is how he came to be here for
you to know. But in the toy-land Apple-blossom
waits with the wire spring in her breast and the
sawdust in her limbs; and at home, in the big
house at the end of the village, the tall aunt
weeps and wails and wonders if she will ever see
again the children she loves so well.</p>
<p>She will not wait very long, dear children. I
know how it will all be. When it is quite dark to-night,
and she is sitting in the leather chair with the
high back, her head on one side, and her poor long
neck aching, quite suddenly she will hear two voices
shouting for joy. She will start up and listen,
wondering how long she has been sleeping, and
then she will call out<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</SPAN></span>—</p>
<p>"Oh, my darlings, is it you?" And they will
answer back—</p>
<p>"Yes, it is us, we have come, we have come!" and
before her will stand Willie and Apple-blossom. For
the big doll will have run down, and the wire spring
and the sawdust will have vanished, and Apple-blossom
will be the doll's little girl no more. Then
the tall aunt will look at them both and kiss them;
and she will kiss the poor little goat too, wondering
if it is possible to buy him a new tail. But though
she will say little, her heart will sing for joy. Ah,
children, there is no song that is sung by bird or
bee, or that ever burst from the happiest lips, that
is half so sweet as the song we sometimes sing in
our hearts—a song that is learnt by love, and sang
only to those who love us.</p>
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