Little Saint Elizabeth and Other Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 104 pages of information about Little Saint Elizabeth and Other Stories.

Little Saint Elizabeth and Other Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 104 pages of information about Little Saint Elizabeth and Other Stories.

When they went to visit Stumpinghame, they always bathed their feet in the pool of the red berries; and when they returned, they made them small again in the fountain of the nightingales.

They were always great friends with Robin Goodfellow, and he was always very confidential with them about Gauzita, who continued to be as pretty and saucy as ever.

“Some of these days,” he used to say, severely, “I’ll marry another fairy, and see how she’ll like that—­to see someone else basking in my society! I’ll get even with her!”

But he never did.

THE PROUD LITTLE GRAIN OF WHEAT

There once was a little grain of wheat which was very proud indeed.  The first thing it remembered was being very much crowded and jostled by a great many other grains of wheat, all living in the same sack in the granary.  It was quite dark in the sack, and no one could move about, and so there was nothing to be done but to sit still and talk and think.  The proud little grain of wheat talked a great deal, but did not think quite so much, while its next neighbour thought a great deal and only talked when it was asked questions it could answer.  It used to say that when it thought a great deal it could remember things which it seemed to have heard a long time ago.

“What is the use of our staying here so long doing nothing, and never being seen by anybody?” the proud little grain once asked.

“I don’t know,” the learned grain replied.  “I don’t know the answer to that.  Ask me another.”

“Why can’t I sing like the birds that build their nests in the roof?  I should like to sing, instead of sitting here in the dark.”

“Because you have no voice,” said the learned grain.

This was a very good answer indeed.

“Why didn’t someone give me a voice, then—­why didn’t they?” said the proud little grain, getting very cross.

The learned grain thought for several minutes.

“There might be two answers to that,” she said at last.  “One might be that nobody had a voice to spare, and the other might be that you have nowhere to put one if it were given to you.”

“Everybody is better off than I am,” said the proud little grain.  “The birds can fly and sing, the children can play and shout.  I am sure I can get no rest for their shouting and playing.  There are two little boys who make enough noise to deafen the whole sackful of us.”

“Ah!  I know them,” said the learned grain.  “And it’s true they are noisy.  Their names are Lionel and Vivian.  There is a thin place in the side of the sack, through which I can see them.  I would rather stay where I am than have to do all they do.  They have long yellow hair, and when they stand on their heads the straw sticks in it and they look very curious.  I heard a strange thing through listening to them the other day.”

“What was it?” asked the proud grain.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Little Saint Elizabeth and Other Stories from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.