Page 561 - Child's own book
P. 561

offer.  Then  there came  forth a little lady or a tiny gentleman
                          from  every flower;  all  of  them  so  exquisitely  beautiful  that
                          it was a treat to  behold them !  and each brought a present,  the
                          best of all being a handsome  pair of wings, like those of a large
                          white flv;  these were  fastened  to  Maia’s shoulders,  anti  then
                          she could fly from  flower to  flower.  So that there was a  deal
                          of rejoicing, and the  little swallow,  who  sat above in  his nest,
                          was called upon to sing a wedding song, which he performed as
                          well as  he  could, though he felt rather sad.  at heart, as he  was
                          so  foud  of  Maja  that  he would willingly  never  have  parted
                          from her.
                             u Farewell, farewell! "  said the  little swallow, with a heavy
                          heart,  on  leaving  the  warm  lands  to  fly  back  to  Denmark,
                          There he  has a  little  nest  over  the bed-room  window of  the
                          man who  tells  these  stories.  The  bird sang  iC twit, twit ” to
                          him ; and  that is the way he came by the whole story.







                                             THE  WILD  SWANS.



                             F a r  away h^nce, in  the land whither the swans fly when it is
                          cold  winter with  us, there  oncc  lived  a  king who  had  eleven
                          sons, and one daughter named Elise,  The eleven  brothers  were
                          princes, and used to go to school with stare on  their breast, and
                          swords at  their side.    They wrote on gold slates with diamond
                          pencils, and  learned  by  heart  as  easily  as  they  could  read;
                          one  could  immediately  pcrceivc  they  were  princes.         Their
                          sister  Elise  sat  on  a  little  glass  stool,  and  had  a  book  full
                          of prints, that liad cost nearly half the kingdom to purchase*
   556   557   558   559   560   561   562   563   564   565   566