le friend a present she did
not value, and so was glad to part with it."
"O mamma!" said Nellie, "you know how I value my dollies, every one,
that my dear aunts and cousins sent me because I was sick. Now I am well
again. To-morrow is New-Year's. Some sick little girls in the hospital
want dollies. Could I, if I knew which one to choose, keep only one
for myself, and send the whole five of them for those poor children who
haven't any?"
Her mamma liked the plan. She gave Nellie a box, and Nellie began
kissing her babies, and laying them, one after another, in the box.
There were two of nearly the same size, that were very dear to this
little mother. She called them twins. They wore white frocks and blue
kid boots. They had real blonde hair and their eyes would open and shut.
These lovely twins Nellie held in her arms a long time before she could
decide which to part with. When she did place one in the box, to be her
own no more, a tear was on the doll's cheek. I do not think the drop
came from dolly's eye.
A few days after the dolls were given Nellie's mamma let her invite
three little girls to play with her. Each girl brought her Christmas or
her New-Year's doll; and the three dolls, with Nellie's, looked sweetly
sitting together in a row.
By and by Nellie's mamma came to her room, which she had given to the
party for its use that afternoon. She told the children she would give
them a little supper of cakes and pears and grapes, and it would be
ready as soon as Biddy could bring the ice-cream from down street.
The smiling child-visitors gathered around the kind lady, saying, "We
thank you, and we love you ever so much."
Nellie said softly, "Mamma dear, I wouldn't take my dollies back if I
could. I love to think they amuse the sick children. But I do wish that
for just a minute we had as many at this party."
Her mamma turned to her dressing-case. It stood low enough for the
smallest child to look into the mirror at the back easily. Moving off
the toilet cushions and cologne-bottles, the lady put the four dolls in
front of the looking-glass. Their reflection in the glass showed four
more.
"Six, seven, eight," cried the girls, delighted. "And all are
twins--four pairs of twins!"
After supper they made, the twins sit, and stand, and dance, bow and
shake hands, before the looking-glass. So they played till dusk, when
the other little girls' mammas sent to take them home, after kissing
Nellie good-nig
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