STORY SECOND.
HOW A ROGUE FEELS WHEN HE IS CAUGHT.
When I was a little boy, as near as
I can recollect, about nine years of age, I went with
my brother one bright Saturday afternoon, when there
was no school, to visit at the house of Captain Perry.
The captain was esteemed one of the kindest and best-natured
neighbors in Willow Lane, where my father lived; and
Julian, the captain’s eldest son, very near my
own age, was, among all the boys at school, my favorite
play-fellow. Captain Perry had two bee-hives
in his garden, where we were all three at play; and
as I watched the busy little fellows at work bringing
in honey from the fields, all at once I thought it
would be a very fine thing to thrust a stick into
a hole which I saw in one of the hives, and bring out
some of the honey. My brother and Julian did
not quite agree with me in this matter. They
thought, as nearly as I can recollect, that there were
three good reasons against this mode of obtaining
honey: first, I should be likely to get pretty
badly stung; secondly, the act would be a very mean
and cowardly piece of mischief; and, thirdly, I should
be found out.
Still, I was bent on the chivalrous
undertaking. I procured a stick of the right
size, and marched up to the hive to make the attack.
While I was deliberating, with the stick already a
little way in the hole, whether I had better thrust
it in suddenly, and then scamper away as fast as my
legs could carry me, or proceed so deliberately that
the bees would not suspect what was the matter, Captain
Perry happened to come into the garden; and I was
so busy with my mischief, that I did not notice him
until he advanced within a rod or two of the bee-hives.
He mistrusted what I was about. “Roderick,”
said he. I looked around. I am sure I would
have given all I was worth in the world, not excepting
my little pony, which I regarded as a fortune, if,
by some magic or other, I could have got out of this
scrape. But it was too late. I hung my
head down, as may be imagined, while the captain went
on with his speech: “Roderick, if I were
in your place (I heartily wished he was in my place,
but I did not say so; I said nothing, in fact), if
I were in your place, I would not disturb those poor,
harmless bees, in that way. If you should put
that stick into the hive, as you were thinking of
doing, it would take the bees a whole week to mend
up their cells. That is not the way we get honey.
I don’t wonder you are fond of honey, though.
Children generally are fond of it; and if you will
go into the house, Mrs Perry will give you as much
as you wish, I am sure.”
This was twenty years ago—perhaps
more. I have met Captain Perry a hundred times
since; yet even now I cannot look upon his frank, honest
countenance, but I distinctly call to mind the Quixotic
adventure with the bees, and I feel almost as much
ashamed as I did when I was detected.