God thought, "By and by I will
make men, but first I will make a home for them. It shall be very
bright and beautiful. There shall be mountains and prairies and
forests, and about it all shall be the blue waters of the sea."
As God had thought, so he did. He gave the earth a soft cloak of
green. He made the prairies beautiful with flowers. The forests were
bright with birds of many colors, and the sea was the home of
wonderful sea-creatures. "My children will love the prairies, the
forests, and the seas," he thought, "but the mountains look dark and
cold. They are very dear to me, but how shall I make my children go
to them and so learn to love them?"
Long God thought about the mountains. At last, he made many little
shining stones. Some were red, some blue, some green, some yellow,
and some were shining with all the lovely colors of the beautiful
rainbow. "All my children will love what is beautiful," he thought,
"and if I hide the bright stones in the seams of the rocks of the
mountains, men will come to find them, and they will learn to love
my mountains."
When the stones were made and God looked upon their beauty, he said,
"I will not hide you all away in the seams of the rocks. Some of you
shall be out in the sunshine, so that the little children who cannot
go to the mountains shall see your colors." Then the southwind came
by, and as he went, he sang softly of forests flecked with light and
shadow, of birds and their nests in the leafy trees. He sang of long
summer days and the music of waters beating upon the shore. He sang
of the moonlight and the starlight. All the wonders of the night,
all the beauty of the morning, were in his song.
"Dear southwind," said God "here are some beautiful things for you
to bear away with, you to your summer home. You will love them, and
all the little children will love them." At these words of God, all
the stones before him stirred with life and lifted themselves on
many-colored wings. They fluttered away in the sunshine, and the
southwind sang to them as they went.
So it was that the first butterflies came from a beautiful thought
of God, and in their wings were all the colors of the shining stones
that he did not wish to hide away.