EDGAR
AND WILLIAM;
OR
HOW TO AVOID A QUARREL.
“Here! lend me your knife, Bill;
I’ve left mine in the house,” said Edgar
Harris to his younger brother. He spoke in a rude
voice, and his manner was imperative.
“No, I won’t! Go
and get your own knife,” replied William, in
a tone quite as ungracious as that in which the request,
or rather command, had been made.
“I don’t wish to go into
the house. Give me your knife, I say. I only
want it for a minute.”
“I never lend my knife, nor
give it, either,” returned William. “Get
your own.”
“You are the most disobliging
fellow I ever saw,” retorted Edgar, angrily,
rising up and going into the house to get his own knife.
“Don’t ever ask me for a favor, for I’ll
never grant it.”
This very unbrotherly conversation
took place just beneath the window near which Mr Harris,
the father of the lads, was seated. He overheard
it all, and was grieved, as may be supposed, that
his sons should treat each other so unkindly.
But he said nothing to them then, nor did he let them
know that he heard the language that had passed between
them.
In a little while Edgar returned,
and as he sat down in the place where he had been
seated before, he said,
“No thanks to you for your old
knife! Keep it to yourself, in welcome. I
wouldn’t use it now, if you were to give it to
me.”
“I’m glad you are so independent,”
retorted William. “I hope you will always
be so.”
And the boys fretted each other for some time.
[Illustration: THE TWO BROTHERS AT PLAY.]
On the next day, Edgar was building
a house with sticks, and William was rolling a hoop.
By accident the hoop was turned from its right course,
and broke down a part of Edgar’s house.
William was just going to say how sorry he was for
the accident, and to offer to repair the damage that
was done, when his brother, with his face red with
passion, cried out—
“Just see what you have done!
If you don’t clear out with your hoop, I’ll
call father. You did it on purpose.”
“Do go and call him! I’ll
go with you,” said William, in a sneering, tantalizing
tone. “Come, come along now.”
For a little while the boys stood
and growled at each other like two ill-natured dogs,
and then Edgar commenced repairing his house, and William
went to rolling his hoop again. The latter was
strongly tempted to repeat, in earnest, what he had
done at first by accident, by way of retaliation upon
his brother for his spiteful manner toward him; but,
being naturally of a good disposition, and forgiving
in his temper, he soon forgot his bad feelings, and
enjoyed his play as much as he had done before.
This little circumstance Mr Harris had also observed.
A day or two afterward, Edgar came
to his father with a complaint against his brother.
“I never saw such a boy,”
he said. “He won’t do the least thing
to oblige me. If I ask him to lend me his knife,
or ball, or any thing he has, he snaps me up short
with a refusal.”
“Perhaps you don’t ask
him right,” suggested the father. “Perhaps
you don’t speak kindly to him. I hardly
think that William is ill-disposed and disobliging
naturally. There must be some fault on your part,
I am sure.”
“I don’t know how I can be in fault, father,”
said Edgar.
“William refused to let you
have his knife, the other day, although he was not
using it himself, did he not?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Do you remember how you asked him for it?”
“No, sir, not now, particularly.”
“Well, as I happened to overhear
you, I can repeat your words, though I hardly think
I can get your very tone and manner. Your words
were, ’Here, lend me your knife, Bill!’
and your voice and manner were exceedingly offensive.
I did not at all wonder that William refused your request.
If you had spoken to him in a kind manner, I am sure
he would have handed you his knife, instantly.
But no one likes to be ordered, in a domineering way,
to do any thing at all. I know you would resent
it in William, as quickly as he resents it in you.
Correct your own fault, my son, and in a little while
you will have no complaint to make of William.”
Edgar felt rebuked. What his father said he saw
to be true.
“Whenever you want William to
do any thing for you,” continued the father,
“use kind words instead of harsh ones, and you
will find him as obliging as you could wish.
I have observed you both a good deal, and I notice
that you rarely ever speak to William in a proper
manner, but are rude and overbearing. Correct
this evil in yourself, and all will be right with him.
Kind words are far more powerful than harsh words,
and their effect a hundred-fold greater.”
On the next day, as Edgar was at work
in the garden, and William standing at the gate, looking
on, Edgar wanted a rake that was in the summer-house.
He was just going to say, “Go and get me that
rake, Bill!” but he checked himself, and made
his request in a different form, and in a better tone
than those words would have been uttered in.
“Won’t you get me the
small rake that lies in the summer-house, William?”
he said. The words and tone involved a request,
not a command, and William instantly replied—
“Certainly;” and bounded
away to get the rake for his brother.
“Thank you,” said Edgar, as he received
the rake.
“Don’t you want the watering-pot?”
asked William.
“Yes, I do; and you may bring
it full of water, if you please,” was the reply.
Off William went for the watering-pot,
and soon returned with it full of water. As he
stood near one of Edgar’s flower-beds, he forgot
himself, and stepped back with his foot upon a bed
of pansies.
“There! just look at you!”
exclaimed Edgar, thrown off his guard.
William, who had felt drawn toward
his brother on account of his kind manner, was hurt
at this sudden change in his words and tone. He
was tempted to retort harshly, and even to set his
foot more roughly upon the pansies. But he checked
himself, and, turning away, walked slowly from the
garden.
Edgar, who had repented of his rude
words and unkind manner the moment he had time to
think, was very sorry that he had been thrown off his
guard, and resolved to be more careful in the future.
And he was more careful. The next time he spoke
to his brother, it was in a kind and gentle manner,
and he saw its effect. Since then, he has been
watchful over himself, and now he finds that William
is one of the most obliging boys any where to be found.
“So much for kind words, my
son,” said his father, on noticing the great
change that had taken place. “Never forget,
throughout your whole life, that kind words are far
more potent than harsh ones. I have found them
so, and you have already proved the truth of what
I say.”
And so will every one who tries them.
Make the experiment, young friends, and you will find
it to succeed in every case.