The Blossoming Rod | Page 7

Mary Stewart Doubleday Cutting
could be
bought. If it isn't right--"
"Right? Say, this is the finest present I ever had!" said Langshaw with
glittering eyes and that little crooked smile. "It just beats everything!"
He rose, scattering his adoring family, and, walking to the window,
threw it open to the frosty December air and called across to a
neighbour standing on the walk.
"Want to come over here, Hendon? Got something to show you. Will
you look at this! Present from my wife and the kids--been saving up for
it. It's a peach, I'll tell you that! I'm going to take George off fishing this
spring--What? Well, come over later, when you've got time to take a
good look at it."
"Do you like it, father?" came from three different voices at once.
"Do I like it? You can just bet I do," said Langshaw emphatically. He
bent and kissed the three upturned faces, and leaned toward his wife
afterward to press her sweet waiting lips with his; but his eyes, as if
drawn by a magnet, were only on the rod--not the mere bundle of sticks

he might have bought, but transformed into one blossoming with love.
"And do you know, we hardly saw a thing of him all day!" Clytie
proudly recounted afterward to her sister. "My dear, he would hardly
take time to eat his dinner or speak to any one; he was out in the back
yard with Henry Wickersham and Mr. Hendon until dark, flapping that
rod in circles--the silliest thing! He nearly sent a hook into George's eye
once. George acted as bewitched as he did. Joe kept telling every single
person who came along that it was 'a present from his wife and the
kids.' He certainly showed that he was pleased."
"It's been a pretty nice day, hasn't it?" Langshaw said to his wife that
Christmas night when the children were at last in bed. "Best Christmas
I ever had! To think of you and the kids doing all this for me."
His hand rested lovingly on the rod, now once again swathed in the
gray linen bag. He would have been the last to realize that, in his
humble way, he typified a diviner Fatherhood to the little family who
trusted in his care for them--for all things came of him, and of his own
had they given him.

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