OCR Output

6 LITTLE LORD FAUNTLEROY.

stopped their carriages to look at and speak to him, and of how
pleased they were when he talked to them in his cheerful little way,
as if he had known them always. His greatest charm was this
cheerful, fearless, quaint little way of making friends with people.
I think it arose from his having a very confiding nature, and a kind
little heart that sympathized with every one, and wished to make
every one as comfortable as he liked to be himself. It made him
very quick to understand the feelings of those about him. Perhaps
this had grown on him, too, because he had lived so much with his
father and mother, who were always loving and considerate and
tender and well-bred. He had never heard an unkind or uncourt¬
eous word spoken at home; he had always been loved and caressed
and treated tenderly, and so his childish soul was full of kindness
and innocent warm feeling. He had ‘always heard his mamma
called by pretty, loving names, and so he used them himself when
he spoke to her; he had always seen that his papa watched over
her and took great care of her, and so he learned, too, to be careful
of her.

. So when he knew his papa would come back no more, and saw
how very sad his mamma was, there gradually came into his kind
little heart the thought that he must do what he could to make her
happy. He was not much more than a baby, but that thought was
in his mind whenever he climbed upon her knee and kissed her and
put his curly head on her neck, and when he brought his toys and
picture-books to show her, and when he curled up quietly by her
side as she used to lie on the sofa. He was not old enough to know
of anything else to do, so he did what he could, and was more of a
comfort to her than he could have understood.

“Oh, Mary!” he heard her say once to her old servant; “|
am sure he is trying to help me in his innocent way—I know
he is. He looks at me sometimes with a loving, wondering little