and of Master Sweetheart to feed the birds in that
fair garden with such crumbs as they were suffered
to bring with them into the arbor, and at such times
would those birds fly down with grateful twitterings
and eat of those crumbs upon the greensward round
about the arbor. Wit ye well, it was a merry sight
to see those twittering birds making feast upon the
good things which those children brought, and our
little Mistress Merciless and little Master Sweetheart
had sweet satisfaction therein. But, on a day,
whilst thus those twittering birds made great feasting,
lo! on a sudden did that full evil cat whereof I have
spoken steal softly from a thicket, and with one hideous
bound make her way into the very midst of those birds
and seize upon that bird Joyous, that was wont to sing
so merrily from the tree hard by the arbor. Oh,
there was a mighty din and a fearful fluttering, and
the rest flew swiftly away, but Joyous could not do
so, because the full evil cat held him in her cruel
fangs and claws. And I make no doubt that Joyous
would speedily have met his death, but that with a
wrathful cry did our little Mistress Merciless hasten
to his rescue. And our little Mistress belabored
that full evil cat with Master Sweetheart’s
crutch, until that cruel beast let loose her hold
upon the fluttering bird and was full glad to escape
with her aching bones into the thicket again.
So it was that Joyous was recovered from death; but
even then might it have fared ill with him, had they
not taken him up and dressed his wounds and cared
for him until duly he was well again. And then
they released him to do his plaisance, and he returned
to his home in the tree hard by the arbor and there
he sung unto those children more sweetly than ever
before; for his heart was full of gratitude to our
little Mistress Merciless and Master Sweetheart.
Now, of the dolls that she had in goodly number, that
one which was named Beautiful did our little Mistress
Merciless love best. Know well that the doll
Beautiful had come not from oversea, and was neither
of wax nor of china; but she was right ingeniously
constructed of a bed-key that was made of wood, and
unto the top of this bed-key had the Queen of Sheba
superadded a head with a fair face, and upon the body
and the arms of the key had she hung passing noble
raiment. Unto this doll Beautiful was our little
Mistress Merciless vastly beholden, and she did use
to have the doll Beautiful lie by her side at night
whilst she slept, and whithersoever during the day
she went, there also would she take the doll Beautiful,
too. Much sorrow and lamentation, therefore,
made our little Mistress Merciless when on an evil
day the doll Beautiful by chance fell into the fish-pond,
and was not rescued therefrom until one of her beauteous
eyes had been devoured of the envious water; so that
ever thereafter the doll Beautiful had but one eye,
and that, forsooth, was grievously faded. And
on another evil day came a monster ribald dog pup and
seized upon the doll Beautiful whilst she reposed
in the arbor, and bore her away, and romped boisterously
with her upon the sward, and tore off her black-thread
hair, and sought to destroy her wholly, which surely
he would have done but for the Queen of Sheba, who
made haste to rescue the doll Beautiful, and chastise
that monster ribald dog pup.