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THE BROWNIES
Amongst the roots of the gra.s.s in the lawn lay hundreds of tiny eggs.
One by one they hatched out as the sun warmed the earth and the soft showers moistened it, and soon the gra.s.s roots were alive with tiny grubs. They crawled about, cutting the poor gra.s.s roots and stems with their hard little jaws, and at once beginning to grow fat on the pieces they bit out and swallowed. All day and every day they ate, for their one aim in life was to be big and strong. "Then by and by our wings will grow and we shall fly," they thought. They were not as brown now as they would be when their wings had grown. Only their heads and jaws were brown as yet; their soft ringed bodies and curled-up tails and six jointed legs were all grey-green.
They had a lazy time under the ground, for they had nothing to do but to burrow and eat; but that just suited them. They made such good use of their time that the master of the garden looked with despair at the brown patches in his lawn. "Those dreadful grubs!" he said. "They are spoiling my beautiful lawn."
They lived there for three or four years. Then one by one they all stopped eating. They were so fat that they could hardly move, and so drowsy that they didn't want to. So they curled themselves up and went to sleep, and did not wake for many a day.
As they slept their skins grew hard and transparent, and new ones grew underneath. Two wings grew along their sides, though there was not yet room for them to open out, and two brown shields grew to cover them.
One by one the Brownies woke up. "Our wings have come! We must go out and fly!" they said.
They stretched their dried outside skins till they cracked open down the middle of the back. Then they pushed themselves out of the opening, and crawled out under the gra.s.s blades to dry themselves in the sun. Slowly and carefully they stretched out their fine new wings, tried their feelers, and lifted their strong brown shields till they hardened in the air.
They were brown beetles now, and they felt proud of themselves. They crept about to show themselves and to look at one another, and they chattered together and made plans for flying off when they were ready.
Just as evening came they were all ready to go. They lifted their wings again and again to let the air into their bodies, then up they flew, out into the wide garden-world.
Away at the back of the house there was a patch of growing potatoes.
They soon found it out. They alighted on the leaves and began at once to eat them, for they were hungry after their long sleep.
They feasted all night, but when the daylight came they slipped under the leaves and hung there out of sight. They had been so long used to the darkness under the earth that now they preferred shady corners to open daylight.
"Those dreadful brown beetles have been here and spoilt my potato plants," said the master of the garden. "I wish I could catch them."
He did not know that they were hiding under the leaves quite close to him.
BRAVE ROSE-PINK
Autumn was pa.s.sing, and Jack Frost was frightening all the flowers away. Even the seeds could not bear to stay above the ground, but crept underneath out of the cold. The tiny underground elves gathered them and carried them away to the Earth-mother's warm nurseries, and tucked them into soft cradles till it should be time to return them to the garden for the spring growth.
But a sweet-pea seed refused to come down. "No," she said; "I do not wish to lie in a cradle all the winter. I wish to stay here and grow.
I am already sprouting, and I intend to go on." She would not be moved.
The elves went to the Earth-mother.
"There is a sweet-pea seed above the ground, Rose-Pink by name, who refuses to come below," they said. "What shall we do with her?"
"Tell her that Jack Frost will nip her with his cruel fingers if she stays there," said the Earth-mother.
The elves took the message, but soon returned.
"She says she is strong and hardy, and will laugh at Jack Frost," they reported.
"Tell her the Storm-king will beat her down with his great winds, and break her back," said the Earth-mother.
They went again, but returned and said: "She says she will grow little tendrils with which to hold tightly to the fence, so that the great winds cannot tear her down."
"Tell her that the Snow-queen will bury her in her cold white snowflakes," said the Earth-mother.
"She says she will not die, but will push her head through the cold white snowflakes," they said when they came back.
"Then leave her alone," said the Earth-mother. "She is brave, and perhaps her courage will carry her safely through the winter. If it does her reward will come in the summer."
So Rose-Pink was left alone, and went on growing quietly by the fence, taking advantage of every little bit of sunshine that came her way.
Jack Frost nipped her with his cruel fingers, but she only laughed at him; the Storm-king tried to beat her down with his great winds, but she clung to the fence with her little tendrils; the Snow-queen buried her in her cold white snowflakes, but she pushed her head through and lived on.
At last the winter pa.s.sed, and the soft spring air blew over the garden. The elves brought back the seeds and set them in their places.
"Rose-Pink must be dead," they said, and they ran to look.
"I am alive and well, and very happy," sang Rose-Pink from half-way up the fence.
She grew fast now, and soon reached the top of the fence. Then came her reward; for while the other sweet-peas were only half grown, her little buds came and her flowers opened out. Such glorious flowers they were, flushed like the sunrise sky. Rose-Pink sang for joy, and breathed out scented happiness on every breeze.
"You have come long before your sisters," said the Bees. "Nothing in all the garden is so sweet and beautiful as you."
SWEET-PEA LAND
Oh, have you been to Sweet-pea Land, Where little brown seeds once lay?
And have you seen the tall green swings That cover that Land to-day?
And have you seen in Sweet-pea Land The dear wee ladies who swing?
They've blowing frocks of blue and pink As light as a silken wing.
And have you smelt in Sweet-pea Land The scent the wee ladies throw From each to each, as up and down The wonderful green swings go?
And have you heard in Sweet-pea Land The question-song of the bee?
"Dear Lady Pink, Dear Lady Blue, Have you some honey for me?"
Oh, come with me to Sweet-pea Land, Where little brown seeds once lay; Where green swings rock in the summer wind.
And pretty wee ladies play.
MRS. FROG, MR. FROG, AND THE LITTLE FROG
"Do you mean to say I was ever like that?" asked Mrs. Frog.
"Of course you were. We all were," said Mr. Frog.
"I don't believe you," said Mrs. Frog. "Why, it is nothing but a little ball of jelly with a spot in it. How can it grow into a frog?"