Power of kindness.
“Tom! Here!”
said a father to his boy, speaking in tones of authority.
The lad was at play. He looked
toward his father, but did not leave his companions.
“Do you hear me, sir?”
spoke the father, more sternly than at first.
With an unhappy face and reluctant
step, the boy left his play and approached his parent.
“Why do you creep along at a
snail’s pace?” said the latter, angrily.
“Come quickly, I want you. When I speak,
I look to be obeyed instantly. Here, take this
note to Mr. Smith, and see that you don’t go
to sleep by the way. Now run as fast as you can
go.”
The boy took the note. There
was a cloud upon his brow. He moved away, but
at a slow pace.
“You, Tom! Is that doing
as I ordered? Is that going quickly?” called
the father, when he saw the boy creeping away.
“If you are not back in half an hour, I will
punish you.”
But the words had but little effect.
The boy’s feelings were hurt by the unkindness
of the parent. He experienced a sense of injustice;
a consciousness that wrong had been done him.
By nature he was like his father, proud and stubborn;
and these qualities of his mind were aroused, and
he indulged in them, fearless of consequences.
“I never saw such a boy,”
said the father, speaking to a friend who had observed
the occurrence. “My words scarcely make
an impression on him.”
“Kind words often prove most
powerful,” said the friend. The father
looked surprised.
“Kind words,” continued
the friend, “are like the gentle rain and the
refreshing dews; but harsh words bend and break like
the angry tempest. The first develop and strengthen
good affections, while the others sweep over the heart
in devastation, and mar and deform all they touch.
Try him with kind words; they will prove a hundred
fold more powerful.”
The latter seemed hurt by the reproof;
but it left him thoughtful. An hour passed away
ere his boy returned. At times during his absence
he was angry at the delay, and meditated the infliction
of punishment. But the words of remonstrance
were in his ears, and he resolved to obey them.
At last the lad came slowly in with a cloudy countenance,
and reported the result of his errand. Having
stayed far beyond his time, he looked for punishment,
and was prepared to receive it with an angry defiance.
To his surprise, after delivering the message he had
brought, his father, instead of angry reproof and
punishment, said kindly, “Very well, my son;
you can go out to play again.”
The boy went out, but was not happy.
He had disobeyed and disobliged his father, and the
thought of this troubled him. Harsh words had
not clouded his mind nor aroused a spirit of reckless
anger. Instead of joining his companions, he
went and sat down by himself, grieving over his act
of disobedience. As he thus sat, he heard his
name called. He listened.
“Thomas, my son,” said
his father, kindly. The boy sprang to his feet,
and was almost instantly beside his parent.
“Did you call, father?”
“I did, my son. Will you take this package
to Mr. Long for me?”
There was no hesitation in the boy’s
manner. He looked pleased at the thought of doing
his father a service, and reached out his hand for
the package. On receiving it, he bounded away
with a light step.
“There is a power in kindness,”
said the father, as he sat musing, after the lad’s
departure. And even while he sat musing over the
incident, the boy came back with a cheerful, happy
face, and said—
“Can I do any thing else for you, father?”
Yes, there is the power of kindness.
The tempest of passion can only subdue, constrain,
and break; but in love and gentleness there is the
power of the summer rain, the dew, and the sunshine.