with dainty care. She sat down by the child and began a movement towards undressing her.
|
"Shall I say my prayers to you," said Tina, "before I go to bed?"
|
"Certainly," said Miss Mehitable; "by all means."
|
"They are rather long," said the child, apologetically, "that is, if I say all that Harry does. Harry said mamma wanted us to say them all every night. It takes some time."
|
"O, by all means say all," said Miss Mehitable.
|
Tina kneeled down by her and put her hands in hers, and said the Lord's Prayer, and the psalm, "The Lord is my shepherd." She had a natural turn for elocution, this little one, and spoke her words with a grace and an apparent understanding not ordinary in childhood.
|
"There's a hymn, besides," she said. "It belongs to the prayer."
|
"Well, let us have that," said Miss Mehitable.
|
| | "One there is above all others Well deserves the name of Friend; His is love beyond a brother's, Costly, free, and knows no end."
|
She had an earnest, half-heroic way of repeating, and as she gazed into her listener's eyes she perceived, by a subtile-in-stinct, that what she was saying affected her deeply. She stopped, wondering.
|
"Go on, my love," said Miss Mehitable.
|
Tina continued, with enthusiasm, feeling that she was making an impression on her auditor:
|
| | "Which of all our friends, to save us, Could or would have shed his blood? But the Saviour died to have us Reconciled in him to God.
|
| | "When he lived on earth abaséd, Friend of sinners was his name; Now, above all glory raiséd, He rejoiceth in the same."
|
|