The wonderful canary

Baffo was a poorly behaved-little girl. She behaved lightly with her comrades and stubbornly refused to work. Furthermore, she could not see an object without touching it.

Her parents often punished her, but it was a wasted effort: she didn't get any for it.
One day, at the market, Baffo saw little white canaries. She took one in the palm of her hand and asked the nearby merchant: “What is the price of this canary?”
“I don’t know,” the man replied. But, anyway, it's not for sale! »
Without paying attention to these words, Baffo threw twenty coins to the ground and walked away taking the canary. “When the merchant returns,” she said to herself, “he will find the money instead of the canary. »
Now these little white canaries were none other than egrets which, each market day, transformed themselves to live a little among men.
Before Baffo reached his hut, the canary became an egret again. The bird then grabbed the little girl and flew with her to the top of a large tree. Then, placing Baffo on a large branch, he resumed his flight and disappeared.
Baffo cried out, begging passers-by to tell his parents.
They came running, bringing with them their black dog who climbed the tree and came down with Baffo.
The lesson benefited the little girl who corrected her indisciplineAnd, out of gratitude, she never forgot, each time she ate her couscous, to give the first and last handful to the big black dog who had saved her from this predicament.
The wonderful canary - illustration 1

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The boy and the ostriches

The legend of the four beggars

The Moon and the banana tree