A PICTURE.
[Illustration: A PICTURE.]
What have we here? That kind-looking
old gentleman must have something for these children;
his hand is in his pocket, and they are all gathering
around him. I wonder who he is, and what he is
going to give them?
“He’s their uncle, may be.”
“Or their grandfather.”
“Or somebody else that is kind to children.”
No doubt of it in the world.
He is some one who likes children, you may be sure.
And I suppose he’s got a pocket full of sugar-plums
or nuts for his favorites. The little girl who
has seized his cane, I rather think, will get the
largest share; but I don’t suppose her young
companions will be at all displeased at this, for
no doubt she is a very good girl, and beloved by all.
Indeed, if we may judge by the faces of the children,
not one of them will look at what the other receives,
to see if he has not obtained the largest share.
This is not always so, however.
I know some little boys and girls, who, when their
parents, relatives, or friends give them cakes, candies,
or playthings, immediately look from what they have
themselves to what the others have received, and,
if one thinks his share smaller or inferior, becomes
dissatisfied, and, from a jealous and envious spirit,
sacrifices his own pleasure and that of all the rest.
Because there is a square inch more of cake in his
brother’s piece, that which he has doesn’t
taste good. If he have one sugar-plum less than
the others, they become tasteless, and he throws them
all, perhaps, upon the floor.
How bad all this looks, and how very
bad it really is! The friends of such children
are never encouraged to make them presents. They
rather avoid doing so; for they know that their greedy,
envious, covetous spirit, will turn the good things
they would offer them into causes of strife and unhappiness.