FINDING FRIENDS
Oh! ask not, hope thou not
too much
Of sympathy below;
Few are the hearts whence
one same touch
Bids the sweet fountains flow.
--Mrs. Hemans.
The first morning
for Edwin in his mother's home dawned clear and bright, and as
the soft gleams of brilliant sunlight shone in upon the
coverlet of his bed, he, who had been a poorhouse waif, opened
his eyes and in bewilderment gazed about the place. Suddenly
he remembered some of the events of the previous day, and
especially the form of the "big man" and that of the "woman,"
who, he had been told, was his mother. He remembered, too, his
decision to do all in his power to please both.
His heavenly
Father understood his heart if his earthly parent did not, and
this all-wise guardian, knowing how very hard it was going to
be for the child in this new home, enabled him to find
friendship that was really warm and true.
Slipping
noiselessly from beneath the covers--for the night had been
cold--Edwin went to the window through which the morning sun
was streaming, and there he saw a scene that thrilled him with
delight. Lying asleep upon the walk in the warmest spot that
could be found was a large Newfoundland dog. Clad in his heavy
coat of shaggy fur and surrounded by a bed of green, he was
indeed a pleasing picture. There had been several dogs at the
poorhouse of which Edwin had been especially fond, but there
had been none so beautiful as the one upon the walk below. The
bees, too, were busy gathering among the flowers the honey for
their winter's supply, and hopping about here and there over
the lawn were the little "jumper-men."
As Edwin from his
elevation beheld the part of God's creation that he had
already chosen for his friends, his loneliness was quite
forgotten. He was still gazing down upon the scene when his
mother appeared in the doorway and with cruel words ordered
him to hasten below to the kitchen. Little did she know that
her child was finding in the animal kingdom the friendship
that she had denied him, and she would not have cared had she
known.
During the day and
those that followed, Edwin endeavored in every possible way to
help his mother, but his understanding so little about her
ways and the names and uses of the simplest articles about the
house seemed only to increase his troubles and hardships. And
as slaps and bruises such as the dog had not known were his
portion, the unfortunate child endeavored, whenever it was
possible to do so, to hide from sight, but he always tried to
be ready to give heed to the slightest order. But even this
faithfulness, as well as the fact that he had so much
difficulty in comprehending her meaning, made the mother still
more unkind.
One duty that was
assigned him as a daily task was sweeping the crumbs from
beneath the dining-table, and when he had learned how, so
thoroughly did he do this work that he never stopped brushing
until he had found every particle of dust or lint in sight
that had settled under other articles of furniture.
Another duty was
carrying food to the dog, and he soon found that the
well-filled plate of scraps contained far better food in many
instances than he was allowed to share at the table. Whenever
this happened, as it often did, and there was plenty of other
food for the dog, Edwin ate a portion, but never without
feeling confident that he was not robbing his friend. As the
dog usually looked very wise, Edwin took it for granted that
his motive was understood as right and just, and in this way
the child was able to get some of the food that he would
otherwise have been denied, and the dog's allowance was still
sufficient. Rather than rob the dog, he would always have
gladly done without.
When Edwin was
given the care of his little baby cousin, who was just
beginning to walk, he felt that this work was very hard
indeed, but he did his best to understand just what was
expected of him. Having been the youngest child at the
almshouse and having spent so much of his time apart from the
others, Edwin was unable to think of many ways in which he
could amuse the little fellow, and sometimes it seemed that
all of his efforts to please had been in vain.
A few weeks after
Edwin's arrival in his mother's home the children--Edwin and
his three cousins, Elmer, Jennie, and the baby--were playing
in the yard with Perry the dog. Elmer, a lad scarcely a year
younger than Edwin, was tossing a stick for the dog to return
to him, and Edwin was astonished to find that his friend Perry
was so very wise. The baby, who was in Edwin's charge, was
barely able to keep upon his feet, but Edwin was doing his
best to protect him from falling and to keep his eyes upon
both the child and the dog at once.
Suddenly above his
head in a large apple-tree Edwin heard a rustling of the
leaves and a chattering of little birds, and he realized that
his feathered friends had returned with a breakfast for the
little ones. As he gazed upward endeavoring to locate the
nest, he was just pointing to the spot when whiz went the
stick with which Elmer had been amusing the group. So
dangerously near to the nest did the missile go that Edwin,
crying out with terror and anxiety, for the moment forgot all
about his baby cousin. Running toward the tree as though
hoping to protect the nest, he was just in time to see the
stick miss the mark and then fall upon the ground alarmingly
near the baby's foot. Although unhurt, the baby screamed, and
a moment later Mrs. Fischer came rushing from the house and
demanded a reason for the little one's crying.
Elmer, ever
willing to justify himself at any cost, said hurriedly: "It
was all Ed's fault! I just tried to throw that little stick up
there in the tree, and when it came down it struck the baby's
foot. If Ed had been minding his work, the baby wouldn't have
been there." But Elmer failed to tell that he was throwing at
the little nest with the intention of knocking it out of the
tree and that the stick had done no harm to the baby's foot.
Accepting the
explanation without any further details, Mrs. Fischer became
furious, and, picking up the stick, she struck Edwin time and
again upon the head and shoulders. Then, after calling him
many hard and cruel names, she said, "I'll teach you how to
attend to your business if there's any sense in you at all!"
After looking at
the baby's foot and finding that there was nothing wrong with
it at all, the woman, without a word of apology or sympathy
for her suffering child, returned to the house.
Once again when
the poor boy was so much alone, as far as a human friend was
concerned, his heavenly Father understood and supplied his
need. Perry at once left his former master and, going close to
Edwin, did all within his power to soothe the little sufferer,
and his sympathy was as balm to the wounded, troubled spirit
of the child. Casting aside his grief and reserve, he caressed
the noble animal, and when comforted he arose and was soon
able to care for the little child that had been placed in his
charge. And thus the afternoon slipped slowly away.
So thoroughly
seasoned with bitterness and grief had the day been that Edwin
was glad when he saw the shadows lengthening, for he knew that
it would soon be dark. The sweet quiet and rest of the night
were inviting. He thought of the pattering of tiny feet upon
his coverlet and wondered if the rats and mice would call
again. He hoped that they would, for they too were his
friends. But after supper another surprize and disappointment
was awaiting him. At bedtime he was told that he need not go
to the attic to sleep any more, as there was room for him in
Elmer's bed, and that thereafter the two would sleep in his
mother's room. Edwin would have preferred the attic, but he
submissively did as he was told, and as he slept the Lord kept
vigil and watched tenderly over the sleeping child, for "his
eye seeth every precious thing" (Job 28:10).