<h3><SPAN name="THE_MAPLE_SEED">THE MAPLE SEED</SPAN></h3>
<p>On the topmost twig of a maple tree there
grew a seed. In the springtime the gentle
movement of the sap and the soft rustle of the
leaves whispering among themselves had
awakened him; then, day by day, half sleeping
and half conscious, he had fed upon what the
roots provided, stretching himself lazily in the
sunshine. Presently his wing began to unfold.</p>
<p>“That is very curious,” said he, stirring a
little. “It must be a mistake. I don’t flutter
about like the bees.” That bit of wing, which
seemed his and not his, puzzled him. “It
must belong to something else,” he thought.
And afterward he was always on the lookout
for a bee or a dragon fly with only one wing.
But none came.</p>
<p>The hot summer noons and the long moonlit
nights became sultrier and the leaves dropped.
“How withered I am!” said the seed to his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="Page_319"></SPAN>[319]</span>
most intimate friend, a leaf that hung from a
near bough. “It makes me feel quite brittle.”
But the leaf did not answer, for just then it
fell from the twig with a queer, reluctant
shiver to the ground.</p>
<p>“Ah!” murmured the maple seed, “I understand.”
So he was not surprised when a
rude breeze twisted him off one day, and sent
him spinning into space.</p>
<p>“Here I go,” thought he, “and this is the
end of it.”</p>
<p>“Puff!” said the breeze, who had seen much
of the world, and looked with contempt upon
the untravelled. “Puff! how ignorant!” and
he blew the seed right into a crack in the earth.</p>
<p>“It must be the end, for all that,” insisted
the seed. No wonder he thought so, for it
was cold and dark where he lay. A troubled
cloud leaned down and wept over him. Then
he began to grow amazingly in the warmth
and moisture.</p>
<p>“If this goes on,” he thought, “I shall certainly
burst, and then I must die. How is one
to live, with a crack in his sides?”</p>
<p>But the maple seed was wrong. He did<span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="Page_320"></SPAN>[320]</span>
not die. An unsuspected, mysterious strength
sustained him. His roots found food in the
brown earth, and he lifted up a slender stem
into the pure sunlight and warm air.
Through spring, summer, autumn and winter,
year after year, this lived and grew, until the
tiny sapling had become a beautiful tree, with
spreading branches.</p>
<p>“Ah!” said the tree, “how stupid I was.”</p>
<p>It was very pleasant on the lawn. An old
couple from the house near by came out in
good weather to sit under the tree. They
reminded him of some fragile leaves he had
seen fluttering somewhere in the past. He
was glad to have them come, and he kept his
coolest shade for them. Partly for their sakes,
he liked to have the robins sing in his branches.</p>
<p>The years went by. The old man tottered
out alone to sit in the cool shadow. He was
bent and sorrowful.</p>
<p>“Ah!” sighed the tree, “I know! I know!
He has lost his leaf, and feels brittle. If I
could only tell him this is not the end!”</p>
<p>After this, many sunny days came, but not
the old man, and the tree concluded that he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="Page_321"></SPAN>[321]</span>
had been blown away. “If he only knew that
he would grow again!” he said to himself.
“Unless one knows that, it is so uncomfortable
to lie in the dark.”</p>
<p>A great storm came. The sky blackened,
the winds blew with might, and the heavy rain
fell. The maple was uprooted and broken.
The next day there came men with axes who
cut the tree in pieces, and drew it to the house.</p>
<p>“Is this the end?” he questioned. But no,—the
logs were piled one day in the fireplace
in a large, sunny room. The old man
leaned from his chair to warm his hands by the
cheerful heat the crimson flame gave out. “Is
it the maple?” he said. “Ah! this goes with
the rest.”</p>
<p>The fire grew brighter, burned duller,
turned to embers, smouldered to ashes. The
hearth was cold. The figure was sitting still
in the armchair, but the old man himself had
gone away.</p>
<p>The spirit of the maple whispered, “Does
he know? There is <i>no</i> end.”</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="Page_322"></SPAN>[322]</span></p>
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