McGuffey's Fourth Eclectic Reader eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 252 pages of information about McGuffey's Fourth Eclectic Reader.

McGuffey's Fourth Eclectic Reader eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 252 pages of information about McGuffey's Fourth Eclectic Reader.

3.  “I don’t know what you mean,” was the simple answer.

4.  “Your Honor,” said the counsel, addressing the judge, “it is evident that this witness should be rejected.  She does not understand the nature of an oath.”

5.  “Let us see,” said the judge.  “Come here, my daughter.”

6.  Assured by the kind tone and manner of the judge, the child stepped toward him, and looked confidingly in his face, with a calm, clear eye, and in a manner so artless and frank that it went straight to the heart.

7.  “Did you ever take an oath?” inquired the judge.

8.  The little girl stepped back with a look of horror; and the red blood rose and spread in a blush all over her face and neck, as she answered, “No, sir.”  She thought he intended to ask if she had ever used profane language.

9.  “I do not mean that,” said the judge, who saw her mistake; “I mean were you ever a witness?”

10.  “No, sir; I never was in court before,” was the answer.

11.  He handed her the Bible open.  “Do you know that book, my daughter?”

12.  She looked at it and answered, “Yes, sir; it is the Bible.”

13.  “Do you ever read in it?” he asked.

14.  “Yes, sir; every evening.”

15.  “Can you tell me what the Bible is?” inquired the judge.

16.  “It is the word of the great God,” she answered.

17.  “Well,” said the judge, “place your hand upon this Bible, and listen to what I say;” and he repeated slowly and solemnly the following oath:  “Do you swear that in the evidence which you shall give in this case, you will tell the truth, and nothing but the truth; and that you will ask God to help you?”

18.  “I do,” she replied.

19.  “Now,” said the judge, “you have been sworn as a witness; will you tell me what will befall you if you do not tell the truth?”

20.  “I shall be shut up in the state prison,” answered the child.

21.  “Anything else?” asked the judge.

22.  “I shall never go to heaven,” she replied.

23.  “How do you know this?” asked the judge again.

24.  The child took the Bible, turned rapidly to the chapter containing the commandments, and, pointing to the one which reads, “Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor,” said, “I learned that before I could read.”

25.  “Has anyone talked with you about being a witness in court here against this man?” inquired the judge.

26.  “Yes, sir,” she replied, “my mother heard they wanted me to be a witness; and last night she called me to her room, and asked me to tell her the Ten Commandments; and then we kneeled down together, and she prayed that I might understand how wicked it was to bear false witness against my neighbor, and that God would help me, a little child, to tell the truth as it was before him.

27.  “And when I came up here with father, she kissed me, and told me to remember the Ninth Commandment, and that God would hear every word that I said.”

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McGuffey's Fourth Eclectic Reader from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.