Miss Elliot's Girls / Stories of Beasts, Birds, and Butterflies
Ruth called to him. She was sitting in the vine-shaded
t there a field of tobac
; two
cco plants and find me a large green w
y gr
mer," he said. "Pat Heeley hires me to smash
on the leaf where he is feeding
rning Ruth Elliot had her fi
ice on you. See that horn on his tail? When you wa
is nice little house I have got ready for him, and give him all the
ammy met Roy Tyler, and told him (as a secret) that the lame lady at the minister's house kept worms
ld tin basin, eight worms of various sizes, from a tiny baby worm just hatched, to a great, ugly creature, jet black, and spotted and
Greeny," the boy said; and by
he next morning, and watched
y make their great jaws go like
and butter 't would cost a lot to
delicate green, shaded to white, on his back, and that row of spots down his sides looking like buttons! I call him Sl
t is, that look
looked so strangely that I thought he was going to die; b
what is he goin
heir food with them, and did not mind. Then she tipped their house upside down, and brushed out every stick and
e parsonage, three flower-pots of moi
ing at them; "and it's about time for my tenants to move in. Gree
m turn
eed; look
is back had changed to gray-white
ully; is he g
his afternoon and s
. Their summer residence, empty and uncovered, stood out in
th said; "they were in such haste to
to get out. Soon he began to burrow. Straight down, head first, he went into the ground. Now he was half under, now three quarters, now
he have to st
inter,
r fe
ly to lie snug and quiet under the ground a while; then wake and come up to the sunshine s
s like-it
it like
olks, Miss Ruth?
my wings
e mor
." Then glancing at her crutch, re
the door-yard yellow, the flower-pots were removed to the warm
een worm,
by-a
all
so
the
ened, and one day Miss Ruth took from a box and laid in
little brown j
se your hand gently an
; and then: "Oh! oh! he
as climbing to the top of the box. Soon he hung by his feet to the netting, rested motionless a while, and then slowly, slowly unfolded his wings to the sun. They were brown and white and pink, beautifully shaded, and his body was covered wi
olded wings, in the open window. Up from the garden came a soft breeze sweet with the breath of t
s "took their wings and flew away