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Grimm's Fairy Tales

 The Juniper-Tree 
Page 2 of 3

LITTLE MARLEEN NOW felt as lighthearted and happy as if her brother were still alive, and she went back to the house and sat down cheerfully to the table and ate.
      
      The bird flew away and alighted on the house of a goldsmith and began to sing:
      
      'My mother killed her little son;
      My father grieved when I was gone;
      My sister loved me best of all;
      She laid her kerchief over me,
      And took my bones that they might lie
      Underneath the juniper-tree
      Kywitt, Kywitt, what a beautiful bird am I!'

      
      The goldsmith was in his workshop making a gold chain, when he heard the song of the bird on his roof. He thought it so beautiful that he got up and ran out, and as he crossed the threshold he lost one of his slippers. But he ran on into the middle of the street, with a slipper on one foot and a sock on the other; he still had on his apron, and still held the gold chain and the pincers in his hands, and so he stood gazing up at the bird, while the sun came shining brightly down on the street.
      
      'Bird,' he said, 'how beautifully you sing! Sing me that song again.'
      
      'Nay,' said the bird, 'I do not sing twice for nothing. Give that gold chain, and I will sing it you again.'
      
      'Here is the chain, take it,' said the goldsmith. 'Only sing me that again.'
      
      The bird flew down and took the gold chain in his right claw, and then he alighted again in front of the goldsmith and sang:
      
      'My mother killed her little son;
      My father grieved when I was gone;
      My sister loved me best of all;
      She laid her kerchief over me,
      And took my bones that they might lie
      Underneath the juniper-tree
      Kywitt, Kywitt, what a beautiful bird am I!'

      
      Then he flew away, and settled on the roof of a shoemaker's house and sang:
      
      'My mother killed her little son;
      My father grieved when I was gone;
      My sister loved me best of all;
      She laid her kerchief over me,
      And took my bones that they might lie
      Underneath the juniper-tree
      Kywitt, Kywitt, what a beautiful bird am I!'

      
      The shoemaker heard him, and he jumped up and ran out in his shirt- sleeves, and stood looking up at the bird on the roof with his hand over his eyes to keep himself from being blinded by the sun.
      
      'Bird,' he said, 'how beautifully you sing!' Then he called through the door to his wife: 'Wife, come out; here is a bird, come and look at it and hear how beautifully it sings.' Then he called his daughter and the children, then the apprentices, girls and boys, and they all ran up the street to look at the bird, and saw how splendid it was with its red and green feathers, and its neck like burnished gold, and eyes like two bright stars in its head.
      
      'Bird,' said the shoemaker, 'sing me that song again.'
      
      'Nay,' answered the bird, 'I do not sing twice for nothing; you must give me something.'
      
      'Wife,' said the man, 'go into the garret; on the upper shelf you will see a pair of red shoes; bring them to me.' The wife went in and fetched the shoes.
      
      'There, bird,' said the shoemaker, 'now sing me that song again.'
      
      The bird flew down and took the red shoes in his left claw, and then he went back to the roof and sang:
      
      'My mother killed her little son;
      My father grieved when I was gone;
      My sister loved me best of all;
      She laid her kerchief over me,
      And took my bones that they might lie
      Underneath the juniper-tree
      Kywitt, Kywitt, what a beautiful bird am I!'

      
      When he had finished, he flew away. He had the chain in his right claw and the shoes in his left, and he flew right away to a mill, and the mill went 'Click clack, click clack, click clack.' Inside the mill were twenty of the miller's men hewing a stone, and as they went 'Hick hack, hick hack, hick hack,' the mill went 'Click clack, click clack, click clack.'
      
      The bird settled on a lime-tree in front of the mill and sang:

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