Carrys Rose | Page 5

Mrs. George Cupples
little girl what
she was looking at so earnestly.
"I'm looking at the pigeons, miss," said little Martha, rising to drop a
courtesy to the young lady from the Hall.
"They seem to be all pure white," said Caroline, sitting down on the

roots of the tree, and bidding Martha take her seat again. "They are
very pretty."
[Illustration: LITTLE MARTHA.]
"Yes, miss, they are pretty," said Martha, looking with pride at her
favourites; "but they are not all white; there be two of them blue, and
I'm so sorry for it."
"Why, what makes you sorry for the blue ones?" said Caroline, smiling.
"Don't you like blue ones?"
"Oh yes, I like them very much," said Martha, "but father doesn't; and
he's going to shoot them to-night."
"Oh, how cruel of him," said Caroline; "you must ask him not to do it,
Martha. They cannot help being blue, you know."
Martha looked a little distressed at the idea of her kind father being
considered cruel by the young lady, but she didn't know very well how
to answer her. "Father doesn't mean to be cruel, miss," said Martha;
"but he likes all the pigeons to be white; and if a blue one comes he
shoots it. I will ask father not to shoot them, and perhaps he won't."
"Oh yes, please do ask him," replied Caroline; "and tell him if he only
could catch them, and send them down to me, I would give him my
new shilling papa gave me on my birth-day. Tell him to be sure and not
to shoot them."
Martha went off at once to look for her father, but as he had gone away
to a distant part of the farm, Caroline had to be content to await his
return, and leaving the matter in Martha's hands for the present,
proceeded on her way homewards.
When she arrived at home, she was very glad to find that her mamma
had not returned from town; so that, unless Caroline told her, she could
not know of Herbert's bad behaviour; and Caroline was determined to
keep it secret.

If Mrs. Ashcroft saw that the children were not such good friends as
they had been that morning, she took no notice of it, and during dinner
spoke more to their papa than to them. But towards the end she turned
to Caroline and said, "Who do you think is coming to pay you a visit of
a few days? Well, I shall tell you, as I see you cannot guess. Your two
cousins, Lizzie and Charles."
Caroline was very much pleased to hear this, for she loved her cousins
very much; but her brother did not, for Charles was a well-behaved boy,
one or two years younger than Herbert, and would never join in any of
his tricks against the girls. When they arrived next morning, they went
off at once to see Caroline's pet hen and chickens; and though Herbert
went with them, he stood aside with his hoop dangling on his arm, and
with a look of contempt on his face at his cousin Charlie's delight at the
sight of the chickens. Living in a town as Charles and Lizzie did,
everything belonging to the country was new and delightful; and it was
not till all the poultry-sheds, and rabbit-hutches, and the very stables
and cow-houses had been visited, that Charles would consent to join
Herbert in a game on the lawn.
[Illustration: CHARLES AND THE CHICKENS.]
"I never saw any one like you, Charles," said Herbert, with a sneer;
"one would think you never had seen a hen or a cow before. If you
were at our school they would call you 'lady;' for you clap your hands
just as a girl does over these things. I like horses and dogs, but who
cares for a hen and chicks?"
"Well, now," said Charles, "can there be a prettier sight than a hen with
her chickens peeping out under her wings?"
Herbert made no reply, and the boys now set about having a game at
cricket, the girls good-naturedly agreeing to join in it, though they ran
some risk of being hurt; for Herbert often tried to strike the ball in their
direction, that he might enjoy the fun of seeing them run out of its way
lest it should hurt them. However, nothing of the kind happened; but
both Lizzie and Caroline were very glad when their brothers proposed
to put away the bat and wickets, and have a game at hide-and-seek

down at the great stack-yard. All that day and the next Herbert made
himself very agreeable, and a very happy time the four children had.
On the third day they paid a visit to old Mary Watkins, who lived in a
little cottage on
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