Once upon a time there was a good
old woman who lived in a little house. She had in her garden a
bed of beautiful striped tulips.
One night she was wakened by the sounds of sweet singing and of
babies laughing. She looked out at the window. The
sounds seemed to come from the tulip bed, but she could see nothing.
The next morning she walked among her flowers, but there were no
signs of any one having been there the night before.
On the following night she was again wakened by sweet singing and
babies laughing. She rose and stole softly through her garden.
The moon was shining brightly on the tulip bed, and the flowers were
swaying to and fro. The old woman looked closely and she saw,
standing by each tulip, a little Fairy mother who was crooning and
rocking the flower like a cradle, while in each tulip-cup lay a
little Fairy baby laughing and playing.
The good old woman stole quietly back to her house, and from that
time on she never picked a tulip, nor did she allow her neighbors to
touch the flowers.
The tulips grew daily brighter in color and larger in size, and they
gave out a delicious perfume like that of roses. They began,
too, to bloom all the year round. And every night the little
Fairy mothers caressed their babies and rocked them to sleep in the
flower-cups.
The day came when the good old woman died, and the tulip-bed was
torn up by folks who did not know about the Fairies, and parsley was
planted there instead of the flowers. But the parsley
withered, and so did all the other plants in the garden, and from
that time nothing would grow there.
But the good old woman's grave grew beautiful, for the Fairies sang
above it, and kept it green; while on the grave and all around it
there sprang up tulips, daffodils, and violets, and other lovely
flowers of spring.