Pollyanna by Eleanor Hodgman Porter (most motivational books .TXT) đ
"The little girl will be all ready to start by the time you get this letter; and if you can take her, we would appreciate it very much if you would write that she might come at once, as there is a man and his wife here who are going East very soon, and they would take her with them to Boston, and put her on the Beldingsville train. Of course you would be notified what day and train to expect Pollyanna on. Pollyanna
"Hoping to hear favorably from you soon, I remain, "Respectfully yours, "Jeremiah O. White."
With a frown Miss Polly folded the letter and tucked it into its envelope. She had answered it the day before, and she had said she would take the child, of course. She HOPED she knew her duty well enough for that!--disagreeable as the task would be.
As she sat now, with the letter in her hands, her thoughts went back to her sister, Jennie, who had been this child's mother, and to the time when Jennie, as
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â âBut woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye shut up the kingdom of heaven against men: for ye neither go in yourselves, neither suffer ye them that are entering to go in.â
â âWoe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye devour widowsâ houses, and for a pretence make long prayer: therefore ye shall receive the greater damnation.â
â âWoe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye pay tithe of mint and anise and cummin, and have omitted the weightier matters of the law, judgment, mercy, and faith: these ought ye to have done, and not to leave the other undone.â â
It was a bitter denunciation. In the green aisles of the woods, the ministerâs deep voice rang out with scathing effect. Even the birds and squirrels seemed hushed into awed silence. It brought to the minister a vivid realization of how those words would sound the next Sunday when he should utter them before his people in the sacred hush of the church.
His people!âthey WERE his people. Could he do it? Dare he do it? Dare he not do it? It was a fearful denunciation, even without the words that would followâhis own words. He had prayed and prayed. He had pleaded earnestly for help, for guidance. He longedâoh, how earnestly he longed!âto take now, in this crisis, the right step. But was thisâthe right step?
Slowly the minister folded the papers and thrust them back into his pocket. Then, with a sigh that was almost a moan, he flung himself down at the foot of a tree, and covered his face with his hands.
It was there that Pollyanna, on her way home from the Pendleton house, found him. With a little cry she ran forward.
âOh, oh, Mr. Ford! YouâYOU havenât broken YOUR leg orâor anything, have you?â she gasped.
The minister dropped his hands, and looked up quickly. He tried to smile.
âNo, dearâno, indeed! Iâm justâresting.â
âOh,â sighed Pollyanna, falling back a little. âThatâs all right, then. You see, Mr. Pendleton HAD broken his leg when I found himâbut he was lying down, though. And you are sitting up.â
âYes, I am sitting up; and I havenât broken anythingâthat doctors can mend.â
The last words were very low, but Pollyanna heard them. A swift change crossed her face. Her eyes glowed with tender sympathy.
âI know what you meanâsomething plagues you. Father used to feel like that, lots of times. I reckon ministers doâmost generally. You see thereâs such a lot depends on âem, somehow.â
The Rev. Paul Ford turned a little wonderingly.
âWas YOUR father a minister, Pollyanna?â
âYes, sir. Didnât you know? I supposed everybody knew that. He married Aunt Pollyâs sister, and she was my mother.â
âOh, I understand. But, you see, I havenât been here many years, so I donât know all the family histories.â
âYes, sirâI mean, no, sir,â smiled Pollyanna.
There was a long pause. The minister, still sitting at the foot of the tree, appeared to have forgotten Pollyannaâs presence. He had pulled some papers from his pocket and unfolded them; but he was not looking at them. He was gazing, instead, at a leaf on the ground a little distance awayâand it was not even a pretty leaf. It was brown and dead. Pollyanna, looking at him, felt vaguely sorry for him.
âItâitâs a nice day,â she began hopefully.
For a moment there was no answer; then the minister looked up with a start.
âWhat? Oh!âyes, it is a very nice day.â
âAnd âtisnât cold at all, either, even if âtis October,â observed Pollyanna, still more hopefully. âMr. Pendleton had a fire, but he said he didnât need it. It was just to look at. I like to look at fires, donât you?â
There was no reply this time, though Pollyanna waited patiently, before she tried againâby a new route.
âDo You like being a minister?â
The Rev. Paul Ford looked up now, very quickly.
âDo I likeâWhy, what an odd question! Why do you ask that, my dear?â
âNothingâonly the way you looked. It made me think of my father. He used to look like thatâsometimes.â
âDid he?â The ministerâs voice was polite, but his eyes had gone back to the dried leaf on the ground.
âYes, and I used to ask him just as I did you if he was glad he was a minister.â
The man under the tree smiled a little sadly.
âWellâwhat did he say?â
âOh, he always said he was, of course, but âmost always he said, too, that he wouldnât STAY a minister a minute if âtwasnât for the rejoicing texts.â
âTheâWHAT?â The Rev. Paul Fordâs eyes left the leaf and gazed wonderingly into Pollyannaâs merry little face.
âWell, thatâs what father used to call âem,â she laughed. âOf course the Bible didnât name âem that. But itâs all those that begin âBe glad in the Lord,â or âRejoice greatly,â or âShout for joy,â and all that, you knowâsuch a lot of âem. Once, when father felt specially bad, he counted âem. There were eight hundred of âem.â
âEight hundred!â
âYesâthat told you to rejoice and be glad, you know; thatâs why father named âem the ârejoicing texts.â â
âOh!â There was an odd look on the ministerâs face. His eyes had fallen to the words on the top paper in his handsââBut woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites!â âAnd so your fatherâliked those ârejoicing texts,â â he murmured.
âOh, yes,â nodded Pollyanna, emphatically. âHe said he felt better right away, that first day he thought to count âem. He said if God took the trouble to tell us eight hundred times to be glad and rejoice, He must want us to do itâSOME. And father felt ashamed that he hadnât done it more. After that, they got to be such a comfort to him, you know, when things went wrong; when the Ladiesâ Aiders got to fightâI mean, when they DIDNâT AGREE about something,â corrected Pollyanna, hastily. âWhy, it was those texts, too, father said, that made HIM think of the gameâhe began with ME on the crutchesâbut he said âtwas the rejoicing texts that started him on it.â
âAnd what game might that be?â asked the minister.
âAbout finding something in everything to be glad about, you know. As I said, he began with me on the crutches.â And once more Pollyanna told her storyâthis time to a man who listened with tender eyes and understanding ears.
A little later Pollyanna and the minister descended the hill, hand in hand. Pollyannaâs face was radiant. Pollyanna loved to talk, and she had been talking now for some time: there seemed to be so many, many things about the game, her father, and the old home life that the minister wanted to know.
At the foot of the hill their ways parted, and Pollyanna down one road, and the minister down another, walked on alone.
In the Rev. Paul Fordâs study that evening the minister sat thinking. Near him on the desk lay a few loose sheets of paperâhis sermon notes. Under the suspended pencil in his fingers lay other sheets of paper, blankâhis sermon to be. But the minister was not thinking either of what he had written, or of what be intended to write. In his imagination he was far away in a little Western town with a missionary minister who was poor, sick, worried, and almost alone in the worldâbut who was poring over the Bible to find how many times his Lord and Master had told him to ârejoice and be glad.â
After a time, with a long sigh, the Rev. Paul Ford roused himself, came back from the far Western town, and adjusted the sheets of paper under his hand.
âMatthew twenty-third; 13â14 and 23,â he wrote; then, with a gesture of impatience, he dropped his pencil and pulled toward him a magazine left on the desk by his wife a few minutes before. Listlessly his tired eyes turned from paragraph to paragraph until these words arrested them:
âA father one day said to his son, Tom, who, he knew, had refused to fill his motherâs woodbox that morning: âTom, Iâm sure youâll be glad to go and bring in some wood for your mother.â And without a word Tom went. Why? Just because his father showed so plainly that he expected him to do the right thing. Suppose he had said: âTom, I overheard what you said to your mother this morning, and Iâm ashamed of you. Go at once and fill that woodbox!â Iâll warrant that woodbox, would be empty yet, so far as Tom was concerned!â
On and on read the ministerâa word here, a line there, a paragraph somewhere else:
âWhat men and women need is encouragement. Their natural resisting powers should be strengthened, not weakened. . . . Instead of always harping on a manâs faults, tell him of his virtues. Try to pull him out of his rut of bad habits. Hold up to him his better self, his REAL self that can dare and do and win out! . . . The influence of a beautiful, helpful, hopeful character is contagious, and may revolutionize a whole town. . . . People radiate what is in their minds and in their hearts. If a man feels kindly and obliging, his neighbors will feel that way, too, before long. But if he scolds and scowls and criticizesâhis neighbors will return scowl for scowl, and add interest! . . . When you look for the bad, expecting it, you will get it. When you know you will find the goodâyou will get that. . . . Tell your son Tom you KNOW heâll be glad to fill that woodboxâthen watch him start, alert and interested!â
The minister dropped the paper and lifted his chin. In a moment he was on his feet, tramping the narrow room back and forth, back and forth. Later, some time later, he drew a long breath, and dropped himself in the chair at his desk.
âGod helping me, Iâll do it!â he cried softly. âIâll tell all my Toms I KNOW theyâll be glad to fill that woodbox! Iâll give them work to do, and Iâll make them so full of the very joy of doing it that they wonât have TIME to look at their neighborsâ woodboxes!â And he picked up his sermon notes, tore straight through the sheets, and cast them from him, so that on one side of his chair lay âBut woe unto you,â and on the other, âscribes and Pharisees, hypocrites!â while across the smooth white paper before him his pencil fairly flewâafter first drawing one black line through Matthew twenty-third; 13â14 and 23.â
Thus it happened that the Rev. Paul Fordâs sermon the next Sunday was a veritable bugle-call to the best that was in every man and woman and child that heard it; and its text was one of Pollyannaâs shining eight hundred:
âBe glad in the Lord and rejoice, ye righteous, and shout for joy all ye that are upright in heart.â
CHAPTER XXIII. AN ACCIDENT
At Mrs. Snowâs request, Pollyanna went one day to Dr. Chiltonâs office to get the name of a medicine which Mrs. Snow had forgotten. As it chanced, Pollyanna had never before seen the inside of Dr. Chiltonâs office.
âIâve never been to your home before! This IS your home, isnât it?â she said, looking interestedly about her.
The doctor smiled a little sadly.
âYesâsuch as âtis,â
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