LITTLE MAJA. 545 and at last alighted on the leaf. Maja pleased him, and she was glad of it; for now the toad could not possibly reach her, and the country she sailed through was So beautiful, the sun, too, was shining on the waters, making them sparkle like liquid gold. She took off her sash and tied one end round the butterfly, while she fastened the other end to the leaf, which now glided on much faster, and she with it, as she stood upon its surface. A large cockchafer, who happened to pass, no soonor saw her than he pounced upon her delicate form with his claws, and flew away with her toa tree; the green leaf floated down the stream, and the butterfly with it, for he was bound fast to the leaf, aud could not disentangle himself. Oh! how frightened was poor Maja when the cockchafer flew off with her to the tree, but she was principally grieved on account of the white butterfly, whom she had fastened to the leaf, and who would die of hunger if unable to loosen his bonds. But the cock- chafer did not trouble himself about that. He sat down by her side on the largest green leaf of the tree, gave her some honey from the flowers to eat, and told her that she was very pretty, though so unlike a cockchafer. After a while all the cockchafers that inhabited the tree came to pay them a vi After staring at Maja the cockchafer misses turned up their feelers contemptuously, saying, “She has only two legs ; how pitiful to be sure!” “She has no feclers,” observed another. “She is so thin in the waist—faugh! she is like a human being.” “ How ugly she is!” said all the female cockchafers, although Maja was so remarkably pretty.” The cockchafer who had run away with her had at first appreciated her beauty, but when all his female friends pronounced her to be so ugly, he finished by thinking so, and declared he would not have her, and that she might go whenever she liked. So they NN