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| THE CHILDREN IN THE
WOOD
As soon as ever the
gentleman’s brother heard this news, he made all the haste he could to the
bedside where the father and mother were lying sick. ‘Ah! brother,’ said the
dying man, ‘you see how short a time I can expect to live: yet neither death,
nor pain, can give me half so much grief as I feel at the thought of what these
dear babes will do without a parent’s care. Brother, brother,’ continued the
gentleman, putting out his hand as well as he could, and pointing to the
children, ‘they will have none but you to be kind to them; none but you to see
them clothed and fed, and teach them to be good and happy.’ — ‘Dear, dear
brother,’ said the dying lady, ‘you must be father, mother, and uncle too, to
these lovely little lambs. First let William be taught to read; and then he
should be told how good his father was. And little Jane, — Oh! brother, it
wrings my heart to talk of her: think of the gentle usage she will stand in
need of, and take her fondly on your knee, brother, and she and William too
will repay your care with love.’ The
uncle then
answered, ‘Oh! how it grieves my heart to see you, my dearest
brother and
sister, in this sad state! but take comfort, there may still be hope of
your
getting well: yet if we should happen to lose you, I will do all you
can desire
for your darling children. In me they shall find a father, mother, and
uncle.
William shall learn to read; and shall be often told how good his
father was,
that he may turn out as good himself when he grows up to be a man. Jane
shall
be used with the most tender care, and shall be kindly fondled on my
knee. But,
dear brother, you have said nothing of the riches you must leave
behind. I am
sure you know my heart too well to think that I speak of this for any
other
reason than your dear children’s good, and that I may be able
to make use of
all your money only for their sake.’ —
‘Pray, brother,’ said the dying man, ‘do
not grieve me with talking of any such thing; for how could you, who
will be
their father, mother and uncle too, once think of wronging them? Here,
here,
brother, is my will. You will see how I have done the best I could for
my
babes.’ A few moments after the gentleman had said these
words, he pressed his
cold lips to his children; the lady did the same, and in a short time
they both
died. The uncle shed a few tears at this sad sight, and then broke open
the
will; in which he found that his brother had left the little boy,
William, the
sum of three hundred pounds a year, when he should be twenty-one years
old, and
to Jane, the girl, the sum of five hundred pounds in gold, to be paid
her the
day of her being married. But if the children should happen to die
before
coming of age, then all the money was to belong to their uncle. The
will of the
gentleman next ordered that he and his dear wife should be buried side
by side
in the same grave. The two little
children were now taken home to the house of their uncle; who, for some time,
did just as their parents had so lately told him upon their deathbed; and so he
used them with great kindness. But when he had kept them about a year, he
forgot by degrees to think how their father and mother looked when they gave
their children to his care, and how he himself had made a promise to be their
father, mother, and uncle all in one. After a little more time had passed, the
uncle could not help thinking that he wished the little boy and girl would die,
for then he should have all their money for himself; and when he had once begun
to think this he went on till he could hardly think of any thing else. At last
he said to himself: ‘It would not be very hard for me to kill them so as for
nobody to know any thing about the matter, and then the money will be mine at
once.’ When the cruel uncle had once brought his mind to kill the helpless
little creatures, he was not long in finding a way to bring it about. He hired
two sturdy ruffians, who had already killed many travellers, in a dark thick
wood, some way off, for the sake of robbing them of their money. These two
wicked creatures now agreed with the uncle, for a large sum of money, to do the
most cruel deed that ever yet was heard of; and so the uncle began to get every
thing ready for them. He told an artful story to his wife, of what good it
would do the children to put them forward in their learning; and how he had a
friend in London who would take care of them. He then said to the poor little
things: ‘Should you not like, my pretty ones, to see the famous town of London;
where you, William, can buy a fine wooden horse to ride upon all day long, and
a whip to make him gallop, and a fine sword to wear by your side? And you,
Jane, shall have pretty frocks, and dolls, and many other pretty play-things;
and a nice gilded coach shall be got to take you there.’ — ‘Oh yes, I will go,
uncle,’ said William: ‘Oh yes, I will go, uncle,’ said Jane: and the uncle,
with a heart as hard as stone, soon got them ready for the journey. The
harmless little creatures were put into a fine coach a few days after; and
along with them the two cruel wretches, who were soon to put an end to their
merry prattle, and turn their smiles into tears. One of them drove the coach,
and the other sat inside between little William and little Jane.
Thus were these two
pretty harmless babes murdered; and as no one knew of their death, so there was
no one to dig a grave and bury them. In the mean time the wicked uncle thought
they had been killed as he ordered, so he told all the folks who asked him
about them, an artful tale of their having died in London of the small-pox; and
he then took all their fortune to himself, and lived upon it as if it had been
his own by good right. But all this did him very little service; for soon after
his wife died; and as he could not help being very unhappy, and was always
thinking too that he saw the bleeding children before his eyes, he did not
attend at all to his affairs; so that, instead of growing richer, he grew
poorer every day. Besides this, his two sons had gone on board a ship to try
their fortune abroad, but they both were drowned at sea, and he became quite
wretched, so that his life was a burden to him. When things had
gone on in this manner for some years, the ruffian, who took pity on the
children and would not kill them, robbed some person in that very wood; and
being pursued, he was laid hold of and brought to prison, and soon after was
tried before a judge and was found guilty; so that he was condemned to be
hanged for the crime. As soon as he found what his death must be, he sent for
the keeper of the prison, and owned to him all the crimes he had been guilty of
in his whole life. Thus he made known the story of the two children; and, at the same time, told what part of the wood he had left them to starve in. The news of this matter soon reached the uncle’s ears, who was already broken‑hearted for the many ills that had happened to himself, and could not bear the load of public shame that he knew must now fall upon him, so he lay down upon his bed and died that very day. As soon as ever the tidings of the death of the two children were made public, proper persons were sent to search the wood for them; and, after a great deal of trouble, the pretty babes were at last found stretched in each other’s arms; with William’s arm round the neck of Jane, his face turned close to hers, and his frock pulled over her body. They were quite covered with leaves, which in all that time had never withered; and on a bush near this cold grave, there sat a robin red-breast, watching and chirping: so that many gentle hearts still think it was this kind bird that did bring the leaves and cover the little babes over with them. |