How to Tell Stories to Children, And Some Stories to Tell by Sara Cone Bryant
page 127 of 209 (60%)
page 127 of 209 (60%)
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very warm, but I can keep the wind off because I am big and strong."
So the little bird fluttered up into the warm branch of the spruce, and the pine-tree kept the wind off his house; then the juniper-tree saw what was going on, and said that she would give the little bird his dinner all the winter, from her branches. Juniper berries are very good for little birds. The little bird was very comfortable in his warm nest sheltered from the wind, with juniper berries to eat. The trees at the edge of the forest remarked upon it to each other: "I wouldn't take care of a strange bird," said the birch. "I wouldn't risk my acorns," said the oak. "I would not speak to strangers," said the willow. And the three trees stood up very tall and proud. That night the North Wind came to the woods to play. He puffed at the leaves with his icy breath, and every leaf he touched fell to the ground. He wanted to touch every leaf in the forest, for he loved to see the trees bare. "May I touch every leaf?" he said to his father, the Frost King. "No," said the Frost King, "the trees which were kind to the bird with the broken wing may keep their leaves." |
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