546 LITTLE MAJA. now flew down from the tree with her, and placed her upon a daisy, and there she sat and wept at thinking how ugly she must be since the cockchafers would net admit her amongst them, and yet she was the loveliest creature that can be imagined, as delicate and slender as the sweetest rose-leaf. Poor little Maja lived through the whole summer all alone in the wide forest. She wove some blades of grass into a kind of matting to serve for a hammock, and she hung it up under a leaf of clover to protect her from the rain; she gathered sweets from the flowers for her nourishment, and drank the dew that stood on the leaves every morning. Thus summer and autumn passed by pleasantly enough ; but now came winter, cold dreary winter! all the birds that had sung to her so sweetly now flew away; the trees and flowers had withered; the large leaf of clover, under which she had lived, had now rolled itself up like an awning that’s put by; and nothing remained but a yellow withered stalk, and she felt dreadfally cold, for her clothes were in tatters, and so small and so delicate as poor Maja was, there seemed every chance of her being frozen to death, It now began to snow, and every flake that fell upon her was as bad as a shovel-full would be to us Decause we are of the natural size, and she was only an inch high. She then wrapped herself up in a dry leaf, but it cracked in the middle, and could not make her warm ; so she kept shivering with cold. ‘Near the forest where she had taken up her summer quarters, lay a largé corn-field, only the corn had long since beet removed, and nothing remained but the loose dry stubble that stood in rows in the frozen soil; and it was like crossing # huge forest for her to wander through one of these, and she trembled with cold from head to foot. At last, however, sé reached the door of a field-mouse, who had burrowed het