<h3><SPAN name="THE_STORY_OF_TWO_LITTLE_SEEDS">THE STORY OF TWO LITTLE SEEDS</SPAN></h3>
<p class="center"><span class="smcap">George MacDonald</span></p>
<p>Long, long ago, two seeds lay beside each
other in the earth, waiting. It was cold, and
rather wearisome and, to beguile the time,
the one found means to speak to the other.</p>
<p>“What are you going to be?” said the one.</p>
<p>“I don’t know,” answered the other.</p>
<p>“For me,” rejoined the first, “I mean to be
a rose. There is nothing like a splendid rose.
Everybody will love me then.”</p>
<p>“It’s all right,” whispered the second; and
that was all he could say; for somehow when
he had said that, he felt as if all the words in
the world were used up. So they were silent
again for a day or two.</p>
<p>“Oh, dear!” cried the first, “I have had some
water. I never knew till it was inside me.
I’m growing! I’m growing! Good-bye!”</p>
<p>“Good-bye!” repeated the other, and lay
still; and waited more than ever.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="Page_105"></SPAN>[105]</span></p>
<p>The first grew and grew, pushing itself
straight up, till at last it felt that it was in the
open air, for it could breathe. And what a
delicious breath that was! It was rather cold,
but so refreshing. The flower could see nothing,
for it was not quite a flower yet, only a
plant; and they never see till their eyes come,
that is, till they open their blossoms,—then
they are flowers quite. So it grew and grew,
and kept its head up very steadily, meaning to
see the sky the first thing, and leave the earth
quite behind as well as beneath it. But somehow
or other, though why it could not tell,
it felt very much inclined to cry. At length
it opened its eye. It was morning, and the
sky <i>was</i> over its head but, alas! itself was no
rose,—only a tiny white flower. It felt more
inclined to hang down its head and to cry
but it still resisted, and tried hard to open its
eye wide, and to hold its head upright, and to
look full at the sky.</p>
<p>“I will be a star of Bethlehem, at least!” said
the flower to itself.</p>
<p>But its head felt very heavy and a cold
wind rushed over it, and bowed it down towards<span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="Page_106"></SPAN>[106]</span>
the earth. And the flower saw that the
time of the singing of birds was not come,
that the snow covered the whole land, and that
there was not a single flower in sight but itself.
And it half-closed its leaves. But that
instant it remembered what the other flower
used to say; and it said to itself, “It’s all right;
I will be what I can.” And thereon it yielded
to the wind, dropped its head to the earth, and
looked no more on the sky, but on the snow.
And straightway the wind stopped, and the
cold died away, and the snow sparkled like
pearls, and diamonds; and the flower knew
that it was the holding of its head up that had
hurt it so; for that its body came of the snow,
and that its name was Snow-drop. And so it
said once more, “It’s all right!” and waited in
perfect peace. All the rest it needed was to
hang its head after its nature.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="Page_107"></SPAN>[107]</span></p>
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