<h3>MORAL COURAGE.</h3>
<br/>
<p>Annie Lovejoy had not been gone
fifteen minutes, when there was a
sharp ringing of Mrs. Parlin's doorbell,
and a little boy gave Norah the
red scarf of Susy's, and a note for Mrs.
Parlin.</p>
<p>Norah suspected they both came
from Mrs. Lovejoy, and she could see
that lady from the opposite window,
looking toward the house with a very
defiant expression.</p>
<p>Mrs. Parlin opened the note with
some surprise, for she had been engaged
with visitors in the parlor, and
did not know what had been going on
up stairs.</p>
<p>Whatever Mrs. Lovejoy's other
accomplishments might be, she could
not write very elegantly. The ink
was hardly dry, and the words were
badly blotted, as well as incorrectly
spelled.</p>
<blockquote><p>"Mrs. Parlin.</p>
</blockquote>
<blockquote><p>"Madam: If my own <i>doughter</i> is a
<i>theif</i> and a <i>lier</i>, I beg to be informed.
She has no <i>knowlidg</i> of the cake,
<i>whitch</i> was so <i>dryed</i> up, a <i>begar woold</i>
not touch it. Will Miss Susan Parlin
come over here, and take back her
words?</p>
</blockquote>
<blockquote><p>"SERENA LOVEJOY."</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Mrs. Parlin was at a loss to understand
this, for she had quite forgotten
the fact, that the children had any
cake to use at their play of housekeeping.
She supposed that Susy must
have accused Annie of prying into the
china-closet, where the cakes and
jellies were kept. She sent for Susy
at once.</p>
<p>"My daughter," said she, in her
usual quiet tones, "did you ever have
any reason to suppose that Annie
Lovejoy went about meddling with
our things, and peeping into the
closets?"</p>
<p>"Why, no, mother," replied Susy,
much surprised; "she never saw the
closets, that I know of. Why, mother,
what do you mean?"</p>
<p>"Never ate cake, did she, without
leave?"</p>
<p>"O, now I know what you mean,
mother! Yes'm, she ate some of that
fruit-cake you gave us to play with;
and when I told her of it, she got
angry, and said she was going right
home, and would tell her mother how
I treated my company; but I don't
see how you found that out!"</p>
<p>"Never mind yet how I found it
out, my dear. I want to know if you
are sure that Annie ate the cake?"</p>
<p>"Yes, mother: just as certain sure
as I can be! You know Dotty can't
reach that high shelf in the nursery-closet,
and I can't, without getting
into a chair; and Prudy can't walk
a step; and Flossy despises cake."</p>
<p>"But," said Mrs. Parlin, smiling, "I
don't see that you have proved Annie
to be the guilty one."</p>
<p>"Guilty? O, I don't know as she is
<i>guilty</i>, mamma; but she ate the cake!
She ate it right before my face and
eyes; but I told her it was just as
well, she was perfectly welcome, and
tried to be as polite as if she was a
grown-up lady, mother. But, O, dear,
it didn't make a speck of difference
how much I said; for the more I said,
the more angry she grew, and I
couldn't make her believe I didn't
think she was a thief and a liar!
Only think, a thief and a liar! But
I never said those words at all,
mother!"</p>
<p>"Very well, my dear; I am sure
you did not. It is a great comfort to
me, Susy, that I can always rely on
your word. You have done nothing
wrong, and need not be unhappy;
but Mrs. Lovejoy sends for you to go
over and tell her just what you mean
about the cake; are you willing to
go?"</p>
<p>Susy was not willing; indeed, she
was very much frightened, and begged
her mother to excuse her in some way
to Mrs. Lovejoy, or, if that would not
do, to go herself and explain the matter
for her.</p>
<p>But, as it was Susy's own affair,
Mrs. Parlin wished to have as little to
do with it as possible. Besides, she
considered it a good opportunity to
teach Susy a lesson in moral courage.</p>
<p>Susy started very reluctantly.</p>
<p>"I'm afraid Mrs. Lovejoy will scold
real sharp," said she. " What shall I
do? O, mother, I didn't see Annie eat
<i>all</i> the cake; I didn't watch. How do
I know but she gave some crumbs to
the cat? Can't I—can't I say, I <i>guess</i>
the cat ate it?"</p>
<p>"Susy!" said Mrs. Parlin, sternly,
"are you more afraid of displeasing
Mrs. Lovejoy than you are of displeasing
God? All that is required of you
is the simple truth. Merely say to
Annie's mother just what you have
said to me; that you saw Annie eating
cake several times, though there
was no harm in it, and you did <i>not</i>
call her either a thief or a liar. Speak
respectfully, but decidedly; and when
you have said all that is necessary,
leave her politely, and come home."</p>
<p>Susy called up all her courage when
she entered Mrs. Lovejoy's house, and
saw that lady sitting very erect on a
sofa, with a bleak face, which looked
somehow as if a north-east wind had
blown over it, and frozen it.</p>
<p>"Well, little girl," said she, without
waiting for ceremony, "so you call
my Annie all the bad names you can
think of, it seems. Is that the way
you are brought up?"</p>
<p>"I didn't call her names, ma'am;
she ate the cake, but I was willing,"
replied Susy, calmly and respectfully,
though she trembled from head to
foot. There was one thought which
sustained Susy; she was telling the
truth, and that was just what God
wanted her to do.</p>
<p>"Well," said Mrs. Lovejoy, "I must
say you're a dignified little piece! Do
you know you've done the same thing
as to tell me I lie?"</p>
<p>This was just the way <i>Annie</i> had
spoken; warping innocent words, and
making them the occasion of a quarrel.</p>
<p>Susy could think of nothing which
seemed exactly right to say to Mrs.
Lovejoy in reply; so she wisely held
her peace.</p>
<p>"Yes, miss, you've insulted my
child, and, as if that were not enough,
you come over here, deliberately, and
insult <i>me</i>, in my own house!"</p>
<p>Tears sprang to Susy's eyes, but she
resolutely crushed them back. There
was, in her childish mind, a certain
sense of self-respect, which made her
unwilling to cry in the presence of
such a person as Mrs. Lovejoy. She
felt instinctively that the woman was
not a lady. Susy was too young to
reason about the matter; but she was
quite sure her own mother was a
model of good manners; and never,
never had she known her mother to
raise her voice to such a high key, or
speak such angry words!</p>
<p>Mrs. Lovejoy said a great many
things which were both severe and
unjust; but Susy managed to keep
up a respectful manner, as her mother
had directed. Mrs. Lovejoy was disappointed.
She had expected Susy
would quail before her presence
and make the most humble confessions.</p>
<p>"I always knew," cried Mrs. Lovejoy,
becoming more and more exasperated,—"I
always knew Mrs. Parlin
held her head pretty high! She is a
proud, stuck-up woman, your mother
is; she has taught you to look down
on my little girl! O, yes, I understand
the whole story! You're a
beautiful family for neighbors!"</p>
<p>Poor Susy was fairly bewildered.</p>
<p>"Now you may go home as straight
as you can go! But remember one
thing: never, while we live in this
city, shall my daughter Annie darken
your doors again!"</p>
<p>Susy walked home with downcast
head and overflowing eyes. Her heart
was very heavy, for she felt she had
been disgraced for life, and could
never be respected any more. Here
was a trial so terrible that it caused
the death of little Dandy to seem
almost a trifle by comparison.</p>
<p>It was strange, Susy thought, how
people could live through such severe
troubles as had fallen to her lot to-day.
She was a little girl of quick and
sensitive feelings, and a sharp word
always wounded her more than a
blow. How that angry woman had
talked about her mother!</p>
<p>Susy decided, upon the whole, that
this was the sting—this was the "pin
in the lash," which had hurt her more
than the lash. How <i>dared</i> Mrs. Lovejoy
say a word about her own mother,
who was certainly the best woman
that ever lived, always excepting the
good people in the Bible!</p>
<p>By the time she entered the house,
her indignation had risen like a blaze,
and burned away all her tears. But
should she tell her mother what Mrs.
Lovejoy had said about her ownself,
about her being "stuck up," and holding
her head pretty high? Susy could
not decide whether she ought to tell
her, and risk the danger of almost
breaking her heart! But before she
had time to decide, she had poured out
the whole story in a torrent.</p>
<p>Strange to say, Mrs. Parlin listened
with perfect calmness, and even said,
when Susy had finished,—</p>
<p>"Very well, my dear; now you
may go and hang up your hood and
cloak."</p>
<p>"But, mother," said Susy, rushing
up stairs again, quite out of breath,
"now I've taken care of my things;
but did you understand what I said,
mother? Annie will never come into
this house, never again! Her mother
forbids it!"</p>
<p>"That is quite fortunate for me,
Susy, as it saves me the trouble of forbidding
it myself!"</p>
<p>"Why, mother, you wouldn't do
such a thing as that! Why, mother,
I never heard of your doing such a
thing in my life!"</p>
<p>"I should regret the necessity very
much, my child; but wouldn't it be
better, on the whole, to have a little
moral courage, and put an end to all
intercourse between the two families,
than to live in a constant broil?"</p>
<p>"Why, yes, mother, I suppose so."</p>
<p>Susy was beginning to feel more
composed. She saw that her mother
understood the whole story, yet her
heart was far from being broken!</p>
<p>"What is moral courage, mother?"</p>
<p>"The courage to do right."</p>
<p>"Did I have moral courage when I
told Mrs. Lovejoy the truth?"</p>
<p>"Yes, dear. It was hard for you,
wasn't it? If it had been easy, there
would have been no moral courage
about it."</p>
<p>"I am glad I had moral courage!"
said Susy with animation. "I knew I
did something <i>right</i>, but I didn't know
what you called it."</p>
<p>"Now," continued Mrs. Parlin, "I
have this very day been talking with
a lady, who once lived next door to
Mrs. Lovejoy; and she tells me enough
about her to convince me that she is
not a person I wish for a neighbor.
And I have heard enough about Annie,
too, to feel very sure she is not a safe
companion for my little daughter."</p>
<p>"But, mother," said Susy, "you are
not—you don't feel 'stuck up' above
Mrs. Lovejoy?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Parlin smiled.</p>
<p>"That is not a very proper expression,
Susy; but I think I do not feel
<i>stuck-up</i> above her in the least. I am
only anxious that my little daughter
may not be injured by bad examples.
I don't know what sort of a little girl
Annie might be with proper influences,
but—"</p>
<p>"Now, mamma, I don't want to
say anything improper," said Susy,
earnestly; "but wouldn't it be the
<i>piousest</i> for me to play with Annie,
and try to make her go to Sabbath
school, and be better?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Parlin did not answer at once.
She was thinking of what she had
said to Susy about people who are
"home missionaries," and do a great
deal of good by a beautiful example.</p>
<p>"If you were older, dear, it would
be quite different. But, instead of
improving Annie, who is a self-willed
child, I fear you would only grow
worse yourself. She is bold, and you
are rather timid. She wants to lead,
and not to follow. I fear she will set
you bad examples."</p>
<p>"I didn't know, mamma; but I
thought I was almost old enough to
set my <i>own</i> examples! I'm the oldest
of the family."</p>
<p>Susy said no more about becoming
a home-missionary to Annie; for,
although she could not quite see the
force of her mother's reasoning, she
believed her mother was always right.</p>
<p>"But what does she mean by calling
me <i>timid</i>? She has blamed me a
great deal for being <i>bold</i>."</p>
<p>Yes, bold Susy certainly was, when
there was a fence to climb, a pony to
ride, or a storm to be faced; but she
was, nevertheless, a little faint-hearted
when people laughed at her. But
Susy was learning every day, and this
time it had been a lesson in moral
courage. She did not fully understand
her mother, however, as you
will see by and by.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<SPAN name="CHAPTER_X"></SPAN><h2>CHAPTER X.</h2>
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