A GARDEN OVERRUN
WITH WEEDS.
“Father, I don’t like
to go to school,” said Harry Williams, one morning.
“I wish you would let me always stay at home.
Charles Parker’s father don’t make him
go to school.”
Mr Williams took his little boy by
the hand, and said kindly to him, “Come, my
son, I want to show you something in the garden.”
Harry walked into the garden with
his father, who led him along until they came to a
bed in which peas were growing, the vines supported
by thin branches that had been placed in the ground.
Not a weed was to be seen about their roots, nor even
disfiguring the walk around the bed in which they
had been planted.
“See how beautifully these peas
are growing, my son,” said Mr Williams.
“How clean and healthy the vines look. We
shall have an abundant crop. Now let me show
you the vines in Mr Parker’s garden. We
can look at them through a great hole in his fence.”
Mr Williams then led Harry through
the garden gate and across the road, to look at Mr
Parker’s pea vines through the hole in the fence.
The bed in which they were growing was near to the
road; so they had no difficulty in seeing it.
After looking into the garden for a few moments, Mr
Williams said—
“Well, my son, what do you think
of Mr Parker’s pea vines?”
“Oh, father!” replied
the little boy; “I never saw such poor looking
peas in my life! There are no sticks for them
to run upon, and the weeds are nearly as high as the
peas themselves. There won’t be half a crop!”
“Why are they so much worse than ours, Harry?”
“Because they have been left
to grow as they pleased. I suppose Mr Parker
just planted them, and never took any care of them
afterward. He has neither taken out the weeds,
nor helped them to grow right.”
“Yes, that is just the truth,
my son. A garden will soon be overrun with weeds
and briars, if it is not cultivated with the greatest
care. And just so it is with the human garden.
This precious garden must be trained and watered,
and kept free from weeds, or it will run to waste.
Children’s minds are like garden beds; and they
must be as carefully tended, and even more carefully,
than the choicest plants. If you, my son, were
never to go to school, nor have good seeds of knowledge
planted in your mind, it would, when you become a
man, resemble the weed-covered, neglected bed we have
just been looking at, instead of the beautiful one
in my garden. Would you think me right to neglect
my garden as Mr Parker neglects his?”
“Oh, no, father; your garden
is a good garden, but Mr Parker’s is all overrun
with weeds and briars. It won’t yield half
as much as yours will.”
“Or, my son, do you think I
would be right if I neglected my son as Mr Parker
neglects his son, allowing him to run wild, and his
mind, uncultivated, to become overgrown with weeds?”
Little Harry made no reply; but he
understood pretty clearly what his father meant.
“I send you to school,”
Mr Williams continued, “in order that the garden
of your mind may have good seeds sown in it, and that
these seeds may spring up and grow, and produce plentifully.
Now which would you prefer, to stay at home from school,
and so let the garden of your mind be overrun with
weeds, or go to school, and have this garden cultivated?”
“I would rather go to school,”
said Harry. “But, father, is Charles Parker’s
mind overrun with weeds?”
“I am afraid that it is.
If not, it certainly will be, if his father does not
send him to school. For a little boy not to be
sent to school, is a great misfortune, and I hope
you will think the privilege of going to school a
very great one indeed.”
Harry Williams listened to all his
father said, and, what was better, thought about it,
too. He never again asked to stay home from school.