The Story Hour eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 130 pages of information about The Story Hour.

The Story Hour eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 130 pages of information about The Story Hour.

There she sat in the long May days and warm, still nights:  who but a mamma would be so sweet and kind and patient?—­but she didn’t mind the trouble—­not a bit.  Bless her dear little bird-heart, they were not eggs to her:  she could see them even now as they were going to be, her five cunning, downy, feathery birdlings, chirping and fluttering under her wings; so she never minded the ache in her back or the cramp in her legs, but sat quite still at home, though there were splendid picnics in the strawberry patches and concerts on the fence rails, and all the father birds, and all the mother birds that were not hatching eggs, were having a great deal of fun this beautiful weather.  At last all was over, and I was waked up one morning by such a chirping and singing—­such a fluttering and flying—­I knew in a minute that where the night before there had been two birds and five eggs, now there were seven birds and nothing but egg-shells in the green willow-tree!

The papa oriole would hardly wait for me to dress, but flew on and off the window-sill, seeming to say, “Why don’t you get up? why don’t you get up?  I have five little birds; they came out of the shells this very morning, so hungry that I can’t get enough for them to eat!  Why don’t you get up, I say?  I have five little birds, and I am taking care of them while my wife is off taking a rest!”

They were five scrawny, skinny little things, I must say; for you know birds don’t begin by being pretty like kittens and chickens, but look very bare and naked, and don’t seem to have anything to show but a big, big mouth which is always opening and crying “Yip, yip, yip!”

Now I think you are wondering why I happen to have this nest, and how I could have taken away the beautiful house from the birds.  Ah, that is the sad part of the story, and I wish I need not tell it to you.

When the baby birds were two days old, I went out on a long ride into the country, leaving everything safe and happy in the old green willow-tree; but when I came back, what do you think I found on the ground under the branches?——­A wonderful hang-bird’s nest cut from the tree, and five poor still birdies lying by its side.  Five slender necks all limp and lifeless,—­five pairs of bright eyes shut forever! and overhead the poor mamma and papa twittering and crying in the way little birds have when they are frightened and sorry—­flying here and there, first down to the ground and then up in the tree, to see if it was really true.

While I was gone two naughty boys had come into the garden to dig for angle-worms, and all at once they spied the oriole’s nest.

“O Tommy, here’s a hang-bird’s nest, such a funny one! there’s nobody here, let’s get it,” cried Jack.

Up against the tree they put the step-ladder; and although it was almost out of reach, a sharp jack-knife cut the twigs that held it up, and down it fell from the high tree with a heavy thud on the hard earth, and the five little orioles never breathed again!  Of course the boys didn’t know there were any birdies in the nest, or they wouldn’t have done it for the world; but that didn’t make it any easier for the papa and mamma bird.

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Project Gutenberg
The Story Hour from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.