WOODMYTH & FABLE 



t4 



kok-o-hoo ; but it was so utterly lost that 

 he could not hear it himself, and he be- 

 gan to feel small ; and he felt smaller and 

 got smaller and smaller, until he was no 

 bigger than a Sparrow, and his voice, in- 

 stead of being like a great cataract, became 

 like the dropping of water, 



w m 



just a little 



Tink-tank-tink, 

 Tink-tank-tink. 



And this is why the Indians 

 give to this smallest of the 

 ^^p Owls the name of "the 

 ff£^~ water-dropping bird.'* 



A "'m^^^0M When the top is Ji^ider than 



JV^#^?I "^ the root, the tree goes down. 



'J I 







^^ 



Sir * ' 









