The Nest of Gold
P
ERCY DALE was a dear pink-and-white little boy, with a
tangle of golden ringlets so long and silky that
strangers often stopped him on the street to admire
them. He wouldn't have cared, only they sometimes
stroked his head and called him a "sweet little girl."
Now Percy loved little girls; but to be called a girl
himself was not at all to his liking. It always sent
him running to his mamma to beg her to cut off the
dreadful curls that made people say he was "a little
girl boy."
"Oh, no, no, darling, mamma can't shear her pet lamb,"
she would answer with a kiss; "but by-and-by we'll ask
Miss Olive to do it."
"By-and-by" was slow in coming, and Percy's fourth
birthday found him with curls longer and lovelier than
ever. That morning, as he stood by the gate, an old
lady, passing, said to him, smilingly: "Won't you sell
me your beautiful, bright curls, little Miss? My little
grand-daughter hasn't any."
"Little Miss, indeed!" The words nearly broke Percy's
heart. He dragged his apron up over the hated ringlets
and held it close till the lady
had gone. Then he
hopped down from the gate, his eyes shining with a
happy thought. He would stop people from calling him
names! He would run across the street all by himself
and ask Miss Olive to cut his hair off so short that
everybody'd know he wasn't a girl! As it happened, his
mamma had lately said to Miss Olive that one of these
days his curls must be clipped; so when the little
fellow told his errand, Miss Olive at once pinned a
towel about his neck, and snip, snip went her big
shears through his wavy mane. She put the longest curls
in a paper box for Percy to carry home; and not being a
very tidy woman she threw the rest of them out of the
back window into the yard. These were spied by two
yellow birds, about to set up housekeeping, and carried
off, tress by tress, to the lilac-tree in the garden.
There the birds wove them into the daintiest golden
nest that ever was seen. In this they reared a thriving
little family; and when the cold winds came, and they
all flitted away to the sunny South, Miss Olive brought
the empty nest to Percy's mamma, who has kept it to
this day.
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