Tato stránka byla ověřena
Pokračování textu ze strany 69
but it was so utterly lost that he could not hear it himself, and he began to feel small; and he felt smaller and got smaller and smaller, until he was no bigger than a Sparrow, and his voice, instead of being like a great cataract, became like the dropping of water, just a little <img src="https://www.thewoodcraft.org/wiki/crop.php?f=tales_1905.djvu&page=70&width=599&cx=-2&cy=-340&cw=254&ch=530" width="28%" resource="./File:tales 1905.djvu" style="float: left; margin: 15px 15px 15px 0px;" alt="" title="">
Tink-tank-tink,
Tink-tank-tink.
And this is why the Indians give to this smallest of the Owls the name of “the water-dropping bird.”
When the top is wider than the root, the tree goes down.