The Diary of a Goose Girl by Kate Douglas Smith Wiggin
page 26 of 65 (40%)
page 26 of 65 (40%)
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CHAPTER VII July 12th. O the pathos of a poultry farm! Catherine of Aragon, the black Spanish hen that stole her nest, brought out nine chicks this morning, and the business-like and marble-hearted Phoebe has taken them away and given them to another hen who has only seven. Two mothers cannot be wasted on these small families--it would not be profitable; and the older mother, having been tried and found faithful over seven, has been given the other nine and accepted them. What of the bereft one? She is miserable and stands about moping and forlorn, but it is no use fighting against the inevitable; hens' hearts must obey the same laws that govern the rotation of crops. Catherine of Aragon feels her lot a bitter one just now, but in time she will succumb, and lay, which is more to the point. We have had a very busy evening, beginning with the rats' supper--delicate sandwiches of bread-and-butter spread with Paris green. We have a new brood of seventeen ducklings just hatched this afternoon. When we came to the nest the yellow and brown bunches of down and fluff were peeping out from under the hen's wings in the prettiest fashion in the world. "It's a noble hen!" I said to Phoebe. |
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