Site
Map What's
New Search
Home visits Anne sat at the breakfast
table, eating her cornflakes and reading the print on the cereal box in
front of her. "Tastee Cornflakes - Great New Offer!" the box read. "See
back of box for details."
Anne’s older sister, Mary,
sat across from her, reading the other side of the cereal box. "Hey, Anne,"
she said, "look at this awesome prize - ‘your name in gold’."
As Mary read on, Anne’s interest
in the prize grew. "Just send in one dollar with proof-of-purchase seal
from this box and spell out your first name on the information blank. We
will send you a special pin with your name spelled in gold. (Only one per
family, please.)"
Anne grabbed the box and
looked on the back, her eyes brightening with excitement. The name "Jennifer"
was spelled out in sparkling gold. "That’s a neat idea," she said. "A pin
with my very own name spelled out in gold. I’m going to send in for it."
"Sorry, Anne, I saw it first,"
said Mary, "so I get first dibs on it. Besides,
"But I want a pin like that
so badly," said Anne. "Please let me have it!"
"You always get your way
- just because you’re older than me," said Anne, her lower lip trembling
as her eyes filled with tears. "Just go ahead and send in for it. See if
I care!" She threw down her spoon and ran from the kitchen.
Several weeks passed. One
day the mailman brought a small package addressed to Mary. Anne was dying
to see the pin, but she wouldn’t let Mary know how eager she was. Mary
took the package to her room. Anne casually followed her in and sat on
the bed.
"Well, I guess they sent
you your pin. I sure hope you like it," Anne said in a mean voice. Mary
slowly took the paper off the package. She opened a little white box and
carefully lifted off the top layer of white cotton. "Oh, it’s beautiful!"
Mary said. "Just like the cereal box said, ‘your name in gold’. Four beautiful
letters. Would you like to see it, Anne?"
"No, I don’t care about your
dumb old pin."
Mary put the white box on
the dresser and went downstairs.
Anne was alone in the bedroom.
Soon she couldn’t wait any longer, so she walked over to the dresser. As
she looked in the small white box, she gasped. Mixed feelings of love for
her sister and shame at herself welled up within her, and the pin became
a sparkling gold blur through her tears.
There on the pin were four
beautiful letters - her name in gold: A-N-N-E.
By A. F. Bauman
you don’t have a dollar
to send in, and I do."
"Nope," said her sister.
from Chicken Soup for the
Kid’s Soul
Copyright 1998 by Jack Canfield,
Mark Victor Hansen, Patty Hansen and Irene Dunlap
Enjoy
English Personal
Site
Map What's
New Search
Home visits