Wednesday, December 4, 2013

So Cute!.Read An Adorable Letter From A 5 year-Old Faith After Breaking a Christmas Bauble From A Store

Adorable: A child, known only as Faith, accidentally knocked a baubel decoration to the ground in Cambridge on Saturday - and wrote a letter to say sorry, attaching two pound coins with a piece of Sellotape
So cute how this unknown little girl called Faith had guilt after breaking a Christmas bauble from john Lewi's store. She had to include a letter of apology with the exact amount of what the light bauble cost. I wish people who Always have this mind of Always coming back to say "I am sorry"when they are at fault.

This is the adorable apology letter sent to John Lewis by a five-year-old girl who owned up to breaking a Christmas bauble in a store. The child, known only as Faith, accidentally knocked the decoration to the ground in Cambridge on Saturday  and wrote a letter to say sorry, attaching two pound coins with a piece of Sellotape.

Dominic Joyce, head of the John Lewis store in Cambridge, posted a picture of the letter on Twitter yesterday just after 2.45pm in a bid to thank Faith, because she did not include a return address.

Her letter to the store said:
‘To John Lewis Cambridge.

I’m sorry I broke a Christmas bauble on Saturday. It cost two pounds. Here is the money for it.
Sorry again.
 Faith.
Aged 5.’

In a tweet sent to the official Twitter account for John Lewis, Mr Joyce said:
 ‘The cutest letter sent to JL Cambridge. There is no address so we wanted to thank Faith on Twitter.
Search: Since the tweet was posted, users have started using the hashtag 'FindFaith' in the hope of identifying Faith and allowing the John Lewis store (pictured) in Cambridge to get in contact with her
Since he posted the tweet, people on Twitter have started using the hashtag ‘FindFaith’ in the hope of identifying Faith and allowing John Lewis to get in contact with her.
The store in Cambridge was formerly known as Robert Sayle, named after the man who owned and ran it, and became an official John Lewis shop in 1940. It moved into its current building in 2007.

1 comment :

Anonymous said...

Nice of her to return the money and a letter.