hung on him like
a shield, because it rhymed with man. It certainly was a beautiful
rhyme, but it was very inconvenient. Poor Mother Flower was at her
wits' end to know what to do without it, and it was very awkward for
Father Flower to work with it fastened to him.
Flax ran breathlessly into the garden, and threw her arms around her
father's neck and kissed him. She bumped her nose against the milk pan,
but she did not mind that; she was so glad to see him again. Somehow,
she never remembered being so glad to see him as she was now since
she had seen his face in the Pot of Gold.
"Dear father," cried she, "how glad I am to see you! I found the Pot of
Gold at the end of the rainbow!"
Her father stared at her in amazement.
"Yes, I did, truly, father," said she. "But it was not full of gold, after all.
You was in it, and mother and the children and the house and garden
and--everything."
"You were mistaken, dear," said her father, looking at her with his
gentle, sorrowful eyes. "You could not have found the true end of the
rainbow, nor the true Pot of Gold--that is surely full of the most
beautiful gold pieces, with an angel stamped on every one."
"But I did, father," persisted Flax.
"You had better go into your mother, Flax," said her father; "she will be
anxious to see you. I know better than you about the Pot of Gold at the
end of the rainbow."
So Flax went sorrowfully into the house. There was the tea-kettle
singing beside the "skettle," which had some nice smelling soup in it,
the table was laid for supper, and there sat her mother with the baby in
her lap and the others all around her--just as they had looked in the Pot
of Gold.
Flax had never been so glad to see them before--and if she didn't hug
and kiss them all!
"I found the Pot of Gold at the end of the rainbow, mother," cried she,
"and it was not full of gold, at all; but you and father and the children
looked out of it at me, and I saw the house and garden and everything
in it."
Her mother looked at her lovingly. "Yes, Flax dear," said she.
"But father said I was mistaken," said Flax, "and did not find it."
"Well, dear," said her mother, "your father is a poet, and very wise; we
will say no more about it. You can sit down here and hold the baby
now, while I make the tea."
Flax was perfectly ready to do that; and, as she sat there with her
darling little baby brother crowing in her lap, and watched her pretty
little brothers and sisters and her dear mother, she felt so happy that she
did not care any longer whether she had found the true Pot of Gold at
the end of the rainbow or not.
But, after all, do you know, I think her father was mistaken, and that
she had.
THE COW WITH GOLDEN HORNS.
Once there was a farmer who had a very rare and valuable cow. There
was not another like her in the whole kingdom. She was as white as the
whitest lily you ever saw, and her horns, which curved very gracefully,
were of gold.
She had a charming green meadow, with a silvery pool in the middle,
to feed in. Almost all the grass was blue-eyed grass, too, and there were
yellow lilies all over the pool.
The farmer's daughter, who was a milkmaid, used to tend the
gold-horned cow. She was a very pretty girl. Her name was Drusilla.
She had long flaxen hair, which hung down to her ankles in two smooth
braids, tied with blue ribbons. She had blue eyes and pink cheeks, and
she wore a blue petticoat, with garlands of rose-buds all over it, and a
white dimity short gown, looped up with bunches of roses. Her hat was
a straw flat, with a wreath of rose-buds around it, and she always
carried a green willow branch in her hand to drive the cow with.
She used to sit on a bank near the silvery pool, and watch the
gold-horned cow, and sing to herself all day from the time the dew was
sparkling over the meadow in the morning, till it fell again at night.
Then she would drive the cow gently home, with her green willow stick,
milk her, and feed her, and put her into her stable, herself, for the night.
The farmer was feeble and old, so his daughter had to do all this. The
gold-horned cow's stable was a sort of a "lean-to," built
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