Page:The art of story-telling, with nearly half a hundred stories, y Julia Darrow Cowles .. (IA artofstorytellin00cowl).pdf/155

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

and caught the cat, with luckless Tip-Top in her mouth.

Tip-Top was not dead, but some of his pretty feathers were gone, and one of his wings was broken.

"Oh, what shall we do for him!" cried the children. "Poor Tip-Top!"

"We will put him back into the nest, children," said mamma. "His mother will know best what to do for him."

So a ladder was brought, and papa climbed up and put poor Tip-Top safely into the nest. The cat had shaken all the nonsense well out of him, and he was a dreadfully humbled young robin.

And when the time came for all the other little birds to learn to fly, poor Tip-Top was still confined to the nest with his broken wing.


The Good King[1]

Once upon a time there was a King in Spain who had only one leg. He was a Good King, and he had a big Animal Farm where he kept all the animals who had lost one or more of their legs.

  1. By Margaret and Clarence Weed, in St. Nickolas. By permission of the authors and publishers.