<h2> Nature's Violet Children </h2>
<p>Once on a sunny hill in the woods grew a little colony of violets. They
had slept quietly through the long winter, tucked up snug and warm in the
soft, white snow-blankets that King Winter had sent Mother Nature for her
flower babies. Jack Frost had gone pouting over the hills because the
little sunbeams would not play with him, and spoiled his fancy pictures.
The tiny raindrops knocked at the door of Mother Nature's great, brown
house; and the birds called to the flowers to wake up.</p>
<p>So the violets raised their strong, hardy leaves, lifted up their dainty
heads, and were glad because spring had come. While they were so happy, a
little girl came to the woods in search of wild flowers. "How pretty those
violets are," she said. "I wish I could stay and watch the buds open, but
I will take some of them with me and keep them in water, and they will
remind me of this sunny hill, and perhaps they will blossom."</p>
<p>Then the violets were frightened and whispered, "Please don't take us!"
But Ruth did not hear them, and she pulled stem after stem till her small
hands were quite filled. Then she said good-by to the pretty place, and
the little violets said good-by, too.</p>
<p>When Ruth got home, she put the buds into a vase of water, and set them in
an open window where they could see the blue sky and feel the kisses of
the sunbeams. But the poor little violets drooped for a time, they were so
homesick, and whispered to each other, "Let us give up and die!" A
beautiful canary in a cage over their heads sang "cheer up! chirrup!" but
they would not listen to him at first.</p>
<p>By and by they said, "Why do you sing that to us? How can we be happy away
from our beautiful home?"</p>
<p>Still the bird sang "cheer up! chirrup! The sun is smiling at you and I am
singing to you. We are trying to make you glad. How nice it would be if
you would only blossom and make some one happy instead of hanging your
heads and trying to die. Do you think I like to be shut up here? If some
one would leave the door of my cage open, I would spread my wings and fly
out of the window, far away to the green woods and the blue sky. But while
I am here, I may as well sing and be glad. Cheer up! chirrup!"</p>
<p>"Perhaps he is right," said the buds, and they lifted up their heads and
began to grow. One bright spring morning Mother Nature passed by the
window and gave them each a lovely violet cap. Then they were, glad, and
Ruth was happy, too, because her buds had blossomed.</p>
<p>The cheery canary sang his sweetest carol to them, and the whole day was
bright because Mother Nature's little violet children had tried their best
to be happy and so had made others happy, too.</p>
<p>As the great red sun went down into the west, he heard the happy bird
still singing "cheer up! chirrup!"</p>
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