“Wife, come out directly; here is a bird singing beauti¬
Then he called his daughter, all his children, and acguaint¬
gold, and its eyes twinkled in its head like stars.
“ Bird,” said the shoemaker, “do sing that piece over again.”
“No,” said the bird, "I may not sing for nothing twice ;
“Wife,” said the man, “ go into the shop; on the top shelf
stands a pair of red shoes; bring them here.”
So the wife went and brought the shoes.
“Now bird,” said the man, “sing us that piece again.”
And the bird came down and took the shoes in his left
claw, and flew up again to the roof, and sang,
**It was my mother who murdered me ;
It was my father who ate of me;
It was my sister Marjory
Who all my bones in pieces found ;
Them in a handkerchief she bound,
And laid them under the almond tree.
Kywitt, kywitt, kywitt, I cry,
Oh what a beautiful bird am I!”
And when he had finished he flew away, with the chain in
us right claw and the shoes in his left claw, and he flew till he
reached a mill, and the mill went “ clip-clap, clip-clap, clip-clap.”
And in the mill sat twenty millers-men hewing a millstone—
“hick-hack, hick-hack, hick-hack,” while the mill was going
‘clip-clap, clip-clap, clip-clap.” And the bird perched on a
inden tree that stood in front of the mill, and sang,
** It was my mother who murdered me ; "
Here one of the men looked up.
"c It was my father who ate of me;”
| Then two more looked up and listened.
‘Tt was my sister Marjory "
Here four more looked up.