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Sing a Song o’ Sixpence Sing a song o’ sixpence, a handful of rye, Four-and-twenty blackbirds baked in a pie; When the pie was opened the birds began to sing, Wasn’t that a dainty dish to set before the King? IF you
have never heard the legend of Gilligren and the King’s pie you will
scarcely
understand the above verse; so 1 will tell you the whole story, and
then you
will be able to better appreciate the rhyme. Gilligren
was an orphan, and lived with an
uncle and aunt who were very unkind to him. They cuffed him and scolded
him
upon the slightest provocation, and made his life very miserable
indeed.
Gilligren never rebelled against this treatment, but bore their cruelty
silently
and with patience, although often he longed to leave them and seek a
home
amongst kinder people. It so
happened that when Gilligren was twelve years
old the King died, and his son was to be proclaimed King in his place,
and
crowned with great ceremony. People were flocking to London from all
parts of
the country, to witness the festivities, and the boy longed to go with
them. One evening
he said to his uncle, “If I had
sixpence I could make my fortune.” “Pooh!
nonsense!” exclaimed his uncle, “a sixpence
is a small thing. How then could you make a fortune from it?” "That I
cannot tell you,” replied
Gilligren, “but if you will give me the sixpence I will go to London,
and not
return until I am a rich man.” “The boy is
a fool!” said his uncle, with
anger; but the aunt spoke up quickly. "Give him
the money and let him go,” she
said, “and then we shall be well rid of him and no longer be obliged to
feed
and clothe him at our expense.” “Well,” said
her husband, after a moment’s
thought, “here is the money; but remember, this is all I shall ever
give you,
and when it is gone you must not come to me for more.” “Never
fear,” replied Gilligren, joyfully, as
he put the sixpence in his pocket, “I shall not trouble you again.” The next
morning he cut a short stick to assist
him in walking, and after bidding good-bye to his uncle and aunt he
started
upon his journey to London. “The money will not last him two days,”
said the man,
as he watched Gilligren go down the turnpike road, “and when it is gone
he will
starve to death.” “Or he may
fall in with people who will treat
him worse than we did,” rejoined the woman, “and then he'll wish he had
never
left us.” But
Gilligren, nothing dismayed by thoughts of the
future, trudged bravely along the London road. The world was before
him, and
the bright sunshine glorified the dusty road and lightened the tips of
the dark
green hedges that bordered his path. At the end of his pilgrimage was
the great
city, and he never doubted he would find therein proper work and proper
pay,
and much better treatment than he was accustomed to receive. So, on he
went, whistling merrily to while away
the time, watching the sparrows skim over the fields, and enjoying to
the full
the unusual sights that met his eyes. At noon he overtook a carter, who
divided
with the boy his luncheon of bread and cheese, and for supper a
farmer’s wife
gave him a bowl of milk. When it grew dark he crawled under a hedge and
slept soundly
until dawn. The next day
he kept steadily upon his way, and
toward evening met a farmer with a wagon loaded with sacks of grain. "Where are
you going, my lad?” asked the
man. “To London,”
replied Gilligren, “to see the
King crowned.” “Have you
any money?” enquired the farmer. "Oh yes,”
answered Gilligren, “I have a sixpence.” "If you will
give me the sixpence,” said
the man, “I will give you a sack of rye for it.” "What could
I do with a sack of rye?” asked
Gilligren, wonderingly. "Take it to
the mill, and get it ground
into flour. With the flour you could have bread baked, and that you can
sell.” "That is a
good idea,” replied Gilligren,
“so here is my sixpence, and now give me the sack of rye.” The farmer
put the sixpence carefully into his pocket,
and then reached under the seat of the wagon and drew out a sack, which
he cast
on the ground at the boy’s feet. "There is
your sack of rye,” he said, with
a laugh. "But the
sack is empty!” remonstrated
Gilligren. "Oh, no;
there is some rye in it.” "But only a
handful!” said Gilligren, when
he had opened the mouth of the sack and gazed within it. "It is a
sack of rye, nevertheless,”
replied the wicked farmer, “and I did not say how much rye there would
be in
the sack I would give you. Let this be a lesson to you never again to
buy grain
without looking into the sack!” and with that he whipped up his horses
and left
Gilligren standing in the road with the sack at his feet and nearly
ready to
cry at his loss. "My sixpence
is gone,” he said to himself,
“and I have received nothing in exchange but a handful of rye! How can
I make
my fortune with that?” He did not despair, however, but picked up the
sack and
continued his way along the dusty road. Soon it became too dark to
travel
farther, and Gilligren stepped aside into a meadow, where, lying down
upon the
sweet grass, he rolled the sack into a pillow for his head and prepared
to
sleep. The rye that
was within the sack, however, hurt
his head, and he sat up and opened the sack. “Why should
I keep a handful of rye?” he thought,
“It will be of no value to me at all.” So he threw
out the rye upon the ground, and rolling
up the sack again for a pillow, was soon sound asleep. When he
awoke the sun was shining brightly over
his head and the twitter and chirping of many birds fell upon his ears.
Gilligren opened his eyes and saw a large flock of blackbirds feeding
upon the
rye he had scattered upon the ground. So intent were they upon their
feast they
never noticed Gilligren at all. He carefully unfolded the sack, and
spreading
wide its opening threw it quickly over the flock of blackbirds. Some escaped
and flew away, but a great many were
caught, and Gilligren put his eye to the sack and found he had captured
four
and twenty. He tied the mouth of the sack with a piece of twine that
was in his
pocket, and then threw the sack over his shoulder and began again his
journey
to London. "I have made
a good exchange, after all,”
he thought, “for surely four and twenty blackbirds are worth more than
a
handful of rye, and perhaps even more than a sixpence, if I can find
anyone who
wishes to buy them.” He now
walked rapidly forward, and about noon entered
the great city of London. Gilligren wandered about the streets until he
came to
the King’s palace, where there was a great concourse of people and many
guards
to keep intruders from the gates. Seeing he
could not enter from the front, the
boy walked around to the rear of the palace and found himself near the
royal
kitchen, where the cooks and other servants were rushing around to
hasten the
preparation of the King’s dinner. Gilligren
sat down upon a stone where he could watch
them, and laying the sack at his feet was soon deeply interested in the
strange
sight. Presently a
servant in the King’s livery saw
him and came to his side. "What are
you doing here?” he asked,
roughly. "I am
waiting to see the King,” replied
Gilligren. “The King!
The King never comes here,” said the
servant; “and neither do we allow idlers about the royal kitchen. So
depart at
once, or I shall be forced to call a guard to arrest you.” Gilligren
arose obediently and slung his sack
over his shoulder. As he did so the birds that were within began to
flutter. "What have
you in the sack?” asked the
servant. "Blackbirds,”
replied Gilligren. "Blackbirds!”
echoed the servant, in
surprise, “well, that is very fortunate indeed. Come with me at once!”
He
seized the boy by the arm and drew him hastily along until they entered
the
great kitchen of the palace. “Here,
Mister Baker!” the man called, excitedly,
“I have found your blackbirds!” A big, fat
man who was standing in the middle of
the kitchen with folded arms and a look of despair upon his round,
greasy face,
at once came toward them and asked eagerly, “The
blackbirds? are you sure you can get them?” “They are
here already; the boy has a bag full
of them.” "Give them
to me,” said the cook, who wore
a square cap, that was shaped like a box, upon his head. “What do you
want with them?” asked Gilligren. "I want them
for a pie for the King’s
dinner,” answered Mister Baker; “His Majesty ordered the dish, and I
have
hunted all over London for the blackbirds, but could not find them. Now
that
you have brought them, however, you have saved me my position as cook,
and
perhaps my head as well.” "But it
would be cruel to put the
beautiful birds in a pie,” remonstrated Gilligren, “and I shall not
give them
to you for such a purpose.” “Nonsense!”
replied the cook, “the King has ordered
it; he is very fond of the dish.” "Still, you
cannot have them,” declared
the boy stoutly, “the birds are mine, and I will not have them killed.” “But what
can I do?” asked the cook, in
perplexity; “the King has ordered a blackbird pie, and your birds are
the only
blackbirds in London.” Gilligren
thought deeply for a moment, and
conceived what he thought to be a very good idea. If the sixpence was
to make
his fortune, then this was his great opportunity. “You can
have the blackbirds on two
conditions,” he said. “What are
they?” asked the cook. "One is that
you will not kill the birds.
The other condition is that you secure me a position in the King’s
household.” “How can I
put live birds in a pie?” enquired the
cook. “Very
easily, if you make the pie big enough to
hold them. You can serve the pie after the King has satisfied his
hunger with
other dishes, and it will amuse the company to find live birds in the
pie when they
expected cooked ones.” “It is a
risky experiment,” exclaimed the cook,
“for I do not know the new King’s temper. But the idea may please His
Majesty,
and since you will not allow me to kill the birds, it is the best thing
I can do.
As for your other condition, you seem to be a very bright boy, and so I
will
have the butler take you as his page, and you shall stand back of the
King’s
chair and keep the flies away while he eats.” The butler being called,
and his
consent secured, Spence the cook fell to making the crusts for his
novel pie, while
Gilligren was taken to the servants’ hall and dressed in a gorgeous
suit of the
King’s livery. When the
dinner was served, the King kept
looking for the blackbird pie, but he said nothing, and at last the pie
was
placed before him, its crusts looking light and brown, and sprigs of
myrtle
being stuck in the four corners to make it look more inviting. Although
the
King had already eaten heartily, he smacked his lips when he saw this
tempting
dish, and picking up the carving-fork he pushed it quickly into the pie. At once the
crust fell in, and all the four and
twenty blackbirds put up their heads and began to look about them. And
coming
from the blackness of the pie into the brilliantly lighted room they
thought they
were in the sunshine, and began to sing merrily, while some of the
boldest
hopped out upon the table or began flying around the room. At first the
good King was greatly surprised;
but soon, appreciating the jest, he lay back in his chair and laughed
long and
merrily. And his courtiers and the fine ladies present heartily joined
in the
laughter, for they also were greatly amused. Then the
King called for the cook, and when Mister
Baker appeared, uncertain of his reception, and filled with many
misgivings,
His Majesty cried, “Sirrah! how came you to think of putting live birds
in the
pie?” The cook,
fearing that the King was angry,
answered, “May it please your Majesty, it was not my thought, but the
idea of
the boy who stands behind your chair.” The King
turned his head, and seeing Gilligren,
who looked very well in his new livery, he said, “You are a clever
youth, and
deserve a better position than that of a butler’s lad! Hereafter you
shall be
one of my own pages, and if you serve me faithfully I will advance your
fortunes with your deserts.” And
Gilligren did serve the King faithfully,
and as he grew older acquired much honor and great wealth. “After all,” he used to say, “that sixpence made my fortune. And it all came about through such a small thing as a handful of rye!" |