Fanny, the Flower-Girl - BestLightNovel.com
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Mark began to read, but he could not proceed far; his father got up and went out, without saying a word, and his mother began to remove the dinner-things.
But as soon as the family re-a.s.sembled in the evening, the father said to Mark, "Go on with your reading, Mark, I want to hear the end, for I like the story."
Mark read, and when he came to that part of the tract, in which the Bible is mentioned, the vinedresser looked up to a high shelf on the wall, where were some old books, and said, "wife, had we not once a Bible?"
"Fifteen years ago," she answered, "you exchanged it for a pistol."
The vinedresser blushed, and listened with out farther interruption until Mark had done reading. When the tract was finished, he remained silent, his head leaning on his hands, and his elbows on his knees.
Josephine thought this was the time to speak about the Bible, which she had so long wished to possess, and she went up to her father, and stood for some time by his side without speaking.
Her father perceived her, and raising his head, he said to her, "What do you want, Josephine, tell me, my child, what do you want to ask me?"
"Dear papa," said the child, "I have long desired to read the Bible, would you be so kind as to buy me one?"
"A Bible," cried her mother, "what can _you_ want with a Bible, at _your_ age?"
"Oh! wife, wife," said the vinedresser, much vexed, "when will you help me to do what is right?" "Yes, my child," he added, kissing Josephine's cheek, "I will buy you one to-morrow. Do you think there are any to be had at the pastor's house?"
"Oh! yes, plenty," cried Josephine, "and very large ones too!"
"Very well then," said the father, as he got up, and went out of the house, "you shall have a very large one."
"But," said his wife, calling after him, "you don't know how much it will cost."
"It will not cost so much as the wine I mean no longer to drink!"
replied the father, firmly.
He kept his word. The Bible was purchased on the morrow, and the same evening the father desired Mark to read him a whole chapter. The ale-house saw him no more the whole of that week, and still less the following Sunday. His friends laughed at him, and wanted to get him back. He was at first tempted and almost overcome, but the thought of the Bible restrained him, and he determined to refuse.
"Are you gone mad, then?" said they.
"No," replied he, "but I read the Bible now, and as it says, that drunkards shall not 'inherit the kingdom of G.o.d,' I listen to what it says, and I desire to cease to be a drunkard."
"You see," said Josephine to Mark, as they accompanied each other to church, "how good G.o.d has been to us. We have now a Bible, and it is read by all at home."
_Mark_.--"Have you been able to tell the pastor's son how much good his tract has done us?"
_Josephine_.--"I told his mother."
_Mark_.--"And what did she say?"
_Josephine_.--"She said, 'G.o.d is wonderful in all his ways,'
and that, 'He which hath begun the good work in us, will perform it until the day of Jesus Christ.'"
_Mark_.--(Feelingly.)--"Who could have thought that when I went as a rebel to that Fete, that G.o.d was there waiting to draw me to himself. But, dear Josephine, there is yet much to be done."
"But," said Josephine, "where G.o.d has promised he is also able to perform. He has told us to pray in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ.
Let us do so, and you will see that G.o.d will renew our hearts, and make us wise and good."