ALL the wood had been blue with violets, but now
they were nearly gone. The birds sang louder and louder to keep them
and to call them back, but soon there was not a violet left in all the
wood from end to end. The snowdrops died, and the primrose faded, the
cowslips and blue-bells vanished, the thorn grew white with blossom,
the wild honeysuckle filled the wood with its fragrance, and soon the
fruit began to ripen.
The blackbirds and the swallows and the
chaffinches, and all the birds they knew, gathered round the garden
trees and bushes, and forgot the woods, until suddenly one day they
espied a little child. She was sitting on a chair under a tree; she had
a little table before her and a pink ribbon round her hat; she was
eating fruit with a large silver spoon. The birds were afraid, and held
aloof until a sparrow chirped and the child looked up, and when they
saw how blue her eyes were, they sang out bravely and fluttered round
her, thinking that she had brought them news from the violets. But she
never looked up again, though the birds crowded on to the branch above
her, and perched upon' the table, and rubbed their little beaks against
her plate. She just held on her hat with one hand, and with the other
went on taking up fruit with a silver spoon.
"Ah, dear child," a swallow twittered,
"perhaps you do not know what is written in your eyes; so many of us
carry secrets that we ourselves know last of all"
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