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PAGE 4

The Fairy Who Judged Her Neighbors
by [?]

Off they set together; but what was their surprise to find the poor little brown Lark sitting on them with rumpled feathers, drooping head, and trembling limbs.

“Ah, my pretty eggs!” said the Lark, as soon as she could speak, “I am so miserable about them–they will be trodden on, they will certainly be found.”

“What is the matter?” asked the Grasshopper. “Perhaps we can help you.”

“Dear Grasshopper,” said the Lark, “I have just heard the farmer and his son talking on the other side of the hedge, and the farmer said that to-morrow morning he should begin to cut this meadow.”

“That is a great pity,” said the Grasshopper. “What a sad thing it was that you laid your eggs on the ground!”

“Larks always do,” said the poor little brown bird; “and I did not know how to make a fine nest such as those in the hedges. Oh, my pretty eggs!–my heart aches for them! I shall never hear my little nestlings chirp!”

So the poor Lark moaned and lamented, and neither the Grasshopper nor the Fairy could do anything to help her. At last her mate dropped down from the white cloud where he had been singing, and when he saw her drooping, and the Grasshopper and the Fairy sitting silently before her, he inquired in a great fright what the matter was.

So they told him, and at first he was very much shocked; but presently he lifted first one and then the other of his feet, and examined his long spurs.

“He does not sympathize much with his poor mate,” whispered the Fairy; but the Grasshopper took no notice of the speech.

Still the Lark looked at his spurs, and seemed to be very deep in thought.

“If I had only laid my eggs on the other side of the hedge,” sighed the poor mother, “among the corn, there would have been plenty of time to rear my birds before harvest time.”

“My dear,” answered her mate, “don’t be unhappy.” And so saying, he hopped up to the eggs, and laying one foot upon the prettiest, he clasped it with his long spurs. Strange to say, it exactly fitted them.

“Oh, my clever mate!” cried the poor little mother, reviving; “do you think you can carry them away for me?”

“To be sure I can,” replied the Lark, beginning slowly and carefully to hop on with the egg in his right foot; “nothing more easy. I have often thought it was likely that our eggs would be disturbed in this meadow; but it never occurred to me till this moment that I could provide against this misfortune. I have often wondered what my spurs could be for, and now I see.” So saying, he hopped gently on till he came to the hedge, and then got through it, still holding the egg, till he found a nice little hollow place in among the corn, and there he laid it and came back for the others.

“Hurrah!” cried the Grasshopper, “Larkspurs forever!”

The Fairy said nothing, but she felt heartily ashamed of herself. She sat looking on till the happy Lark had carried the last of his eggs to a safe place, and had called his mate to come and sit on them. Then, when he sprang up into the sky again, exulting and rejoicing and singing to his mate that now he was quite happy, because he knew what his long spurs were for, she stole gently away, saying to herself, “Well, I could not have believed such a thing. I thought he must be a quarrelsome bird as his spurs were so long; but it appears that I was wrong, after all.”