EMMA LEE AND
HER SIXPENCE.
Emma’s aunt had given her a
sixpence, and now the question was, what should she
buy with it? “I’ll you what I will
do, mother,” she said, changing her mind for
the tenth time.
“Well, dear, what have you determined upon now?”
“I’ll save my sixpence
until I get a good many more, and then I’ll buy
me a handsome wax doll. Wouldn’t you do
that, mother, if you were me?”
“If I were you, I suppose I
would do just as you will,” replied Emma’s
mother, smiling.
“But, mother, don’t you
think that would be a nice way to do? I get a
good many pennies and sixpences, you know, and could
soon save enough to buy me a beautiful wax doll.”
“I think it would be better,”
said Mrs Lee, “for you to save up your money
and buy something worth having.”
“Isn’t a large wax doll worth having?”
“Oh, yes! for a little girl like you.”
“Then I’ll save up my
money, until I get enough to buy me a doll as big as
Sarah Johnson’s.”
In about an hour afterward, Emma came
to her mother, and said—
“I’ve just thought what
I will do with my sixpence. I saw such a beautiful
book at a store, yesterday! It was full of pictures,
and the price was just sixpence. I’ll buy
that book.”
“But didn’t you say, a
little while ago, that you were going to save your
money until you had enough to buy a doll?”
“I know I did, mother; but I
didn’t think about the book then. And it
will take so long before I can save up money enough
to get a new doll. I think I will buy the book.”
“Very well, dear,” replied Mrs Lee.
Not long after, Emma changed her mind again.
On the next day, her mother said to her—
“Your Aunt Mary is quite sick,
and I am going to see her. Do you wish to go
with me?”
“Yes, mother, I should like
to go. I am so sorry that Aunt Mary is sick.
What ails her?”
“She is never very well, and
the least cold makes her sick. The last time
she was here she took cold.”
As they were about leaving the house, Emma said—
“I’ll take my sixpence along, and spend
it, mother.”
“What are you going to buy?” asked Mrs
Lee.
“I don’t know,”
replied Emma. “Sometimes I think I will
buy some cakes; and then I think I will get a whole
sixpence worth of cream candy, I like it so.”
“Have you forgotten the book?”
“Oh, no! Sometimes I think
I will buy the book. Indeed, I don’t know
what to buy.”
In this undecided state of mind, Emma
started with her mother to see her aunt. They
had not gone far before they met a poor woman, with
some very pretty bunches of flowers for sale.
She carried them on a tray. She stopped before
Mrs Lee and her little girl, and asked if they would
not buy some flowers.
“How much are they a bunch?” asked Emma.
“Sixpence,” replied the woman.
“Mother! I’ll tell
you what I will do with my sixpence,” said Emma,
her face brightening with the thought that came into
her mind. “I will buy a bunch of flowers
for Aunt Mary. You know how she loves flowers.
Can’t I do it, mother?”
“Oh, yes, dear! Do it,
by all means, if you think you can give up the nice
cream candy, or the picture book, for the sake of gratifying
your aunt.”
Emma did not hesitate a moment, but
selected a very handsome bunch of flowers, and paid
her sixpence to the woman with a feeling of real pleasure.
Aunt Mary was very much pleased with
the bouquet Emma brought her.
“The sight of these flowers,
and their delightful perfume, really makes me feel
better,” she said, after she had held them in
her hand for a little while; “I am very much
obliged to my niece, for thinking of me.”
That evening, Emma looked up from
a book which her mother had bought her as they returned
home from Aunt Mary’s, and with which she had
been much entertained, and said—
“I think the spending of my
sixpence gave me a double pleasure.”
“How so, dear?” asked Mrs Lee.
“I made aunt happy, and the
flower woman too. Didn’t you notice how
pleased the flower woman looked? I wouldn’t
wonder if she had little children at home, and thought
about the bread that sixpence would buy them when I
paid it to her. Don’t you think she did?”
“I cannot tell that, Emma,”
replied her mother; “but I shouldn’t at
all wonder if it were as you suppose. And so
it gives you pleasure to think you have made others
happy?”
“Indeed it does.”
“Acts of kindness,” replied
Emma’s mother, “always produce a feeling
of pleasure. This every one may know. And
it is the purest and truest pleasure we experience
in this world. Try and remember this little incident
of the flowers as long as you live, my child; and
let the thought of it remind you that every act of
self-denial brings to the one who makes it a sweet
delight.”