Sally Migrundy lived all alone in
a tiny little cottage no larger than a piano box.
This was plenty large enough for Sally Migrundy though,
for she was a tiny little lady herself. Sally
Migrundy’s tiny little cottage stood at the
edge of a stream, a beautiful crystal clear stream
of tinkling water which sang in a continual murmur
all day and all night to Sally Migrundy.
The stream tinkled merrily through
a great forest which lay for miles and miles, a green
mantle over the hills and valleys, and Sally Migrundy’s
tiny little cottage stood in the exact center of the
great whispering forest.
All the wood creatures knew and loved
Sally Migrundy and she knew and loved all of the wood
creatures.
Each morning she would scatter food
upon the surface of the singing stream and the lovely
fish, their sides reflecting rainbow colors, would
leap from the tinkling waters and splash about to show
their pleasure. And she would place food about
her little garden for the birds and they in turn repaid
her by their wonderful melodies.
Even the mama deer brought their little,
wabbly-legged baby deer to introduce to Sally Migrundy;
and she rubbed their sleek sides and talked to them
so they couldn’t but love her.
Now Sally Migrundy had always lived
in her tiny cottage on the bank of the tinkling stream
which ran through the whispering forest. She had
lived there when the largest trees in the forest were
tiny little sprouts. She had lived there long
before that, and even still longer than that, and
that, and that. Ever so much longer!
One day a man who lived on a hill
many, many miles away from the whispering forest said
to his wife: “Mother, wouldn’t you
like to know where the water that flows from our spring
goes to?” And his wife replied: “It
must travel until it reaches the ocean!”
“Yes, I know that, mother”
he replied, “but I mean, wouldn’t it be
interesting to know all of the country through which
the water flows?”
So the more they talked of it, the
more interested they became until the man finally
wrote upon a slip of paper and put the paper into a
tiny bottle. Then he put the bottle upon the
surface of the spring water and watched it float away.
The little bottle floated along, tumbling
over the tiny falls and tinkling ripples and bobbing
up and down in the deep, blue, quiet, places until
finally it floated to Sally Migrundy’s and came
to rest in the mass of pretty flowers where Sally
Migrundy came each morning to dip her tiny bucket
of water.
And so Sally Migrundy found the tiny
bottle and took it into her tiny house to read the
tiny note she saw inside.
It was such a nice, happy-hearted
note Sally Migrundy said: “I will answer
it!” So she wrote a happy-hearted note and asked
whoever read it to come and visit her. Then she
put her note in the tiny bottle and sent it dancing
and bobbing down through the whispering forest, riding
upon the surface of the singing stream. And Sally
Migrundy’s note floated along in the bottle
until a little boy and a little girl saw it and picked
it up.
And when they read Sally Migrundy’s
happy-hearted note asking them to visit her they started
following up the stream until after a long, long time
they came to the tiny little cottage.
Sally Migrundy was very much surprised
to see the two children, for she had almost forgotten
she had written the invitation.
“Howdeedoo!” said Sally
Migrundy, “Where in the world did you children
come from?”
“We found a note in a bottle
and traveled up the stream until we came to your little
cottage,” they answered.
“But won’t your mamás
and daddies be worried because you have been away
from home so long?” Sally Migrundy asked.
“We are orphans,” the children said.
Then Sally Migrundy kissed them and asked them into
her tiny cottage.
The door was so small the children
had to get down upon their hands and knees to crawl
through. But when they got inside they were surprised
to find that the rooms were very large. In fact,
Sally Migrundy’s living room was larger inside
than the whole little cottage was on the outside,
for, as you have probably guessed, Sally Migrundy’s
cottage was a magic house.
And in one corner of the living room
there was a queer stand with a silver stem sticking
up through the center, and the stem curved over and
down towards five or six little crystal glasses.
It was a magic soda fountain, as the
children soon found out, and they could have all the
soda water they wished at any time.
In another room were two little snow
white beds. These belonged to them, Sally Migrundy
told the children. As you have probably guessed,
the magic cottage took care to make everything comfortable
for those who came inside.
And when Sally Migrundy had shown
the children their pretty bed room she took them to
the dining room and there they found a table which
had everything nice to eat upon it. And so the
children ate and ate and ate, for the magic table
knew just what the person wished for who sat at it.
So you may be sure there were plenty of cookies and
ice cream and candies and golden doughnuts and everything.
So the two little orphan children
lived all the time with Sally Migrundy. And each
morning when they tumbled, laughing and shouting, out
of their little snow white beds, they found underneath
a new present. So each morning they had a new
toy to play with, for the magic beds knew just what
a child would like most each day.
Sally Migrundy was very, very glad
the children had come to live with her, so she wrote
more notes and sent them down the singing stream, and
more and more children came until Sally Migrundy’s
house was very, very large inside, but still the same
tiny little cottage on the outside. The singing
and happy laughter of the children echoed through the
whispering forest all day, and the ground about the
cottage was filled with toys and playthings, merry-go-rounds,
sliding boards, sand piles, hundreds of sand toys,
and play houses filled with beautiful dolls and doll
furniture.
There was a roller coaster which knew
just when to stop and start so that none of the children
could ever hurt themselves upon it, and a little play
grocery, a little play candy store, and a little play
ice cream parlor so that the children could go there
at any time and get cookies and candy and ice cream
whenever they wished. You may be sure it was
a very happy place to live and the children made Sally
Migrundy very happy. At first the creatures who
lived in the whispering forest were surprised to hear
the happy laughter and to see so many children playing
about, but they soon grew accustomed to the children
and came right up to the grocery and candy store and
ice cream parlor to be fed.
Each year Sally Migrundy sends happy-hearted
invitations floating down the stream and more orphan
children come to live with her. However Sally
Migrundy’s tiny cottage is just the same tiny
cottage on the outside. But when once you crawl
through the tiny door, you look upon rows and rows
of little rooms, each having one or more little snow
white beds in it.
And, while Sally Migrundy remains
a tiny little lady only two feet high, she has as
much happiness inside as if she were as large as a
great big mountain, for as you have probably also
guessed, she is a fairy and can have as much room
inside for happiness as the little magic cottage could
have room inside for all the happy children.
One day the man who lived upon the
hill where the spring bubbles up from the ground and
makes the beginning of the singing stream said to his
wife: “Mother, I will follow the stream
and see where it leads to!” So he started down
the stream and walked and walked and walked until the
stream took him down through the whispering forest
clear down to the sea.
Then he turned around and walked back
up the stream from the ocean up through
the whispering forest until he came again to his home
at the top of the hill.
“I followed the stream down
through a great whispering forest, mother,”
he said, “until I came to the sea. Then
I turned around and came back the same way. It
was a beautiful trip and when I came to the center
of the great whispering forest there was a clearing
at the side of the tinkling, singing stream, and the
lovely fish leaped from the crystal waters and showed
me their wonderful coloring, and the clearing was
filled with beautiful flowers and the music of birds.
And it was so beautiful I stopped and watched and
listened.
“It seemed as if hundreds of
children were playing around me, and although I could
not hear them yet it seemed to me that I felt they
were shouting and laughing at their play!”
“How wonderful it must have been!” said
his wife.
“It was indeed very wonderful,
mother. And when I returned I again stopped at
the same place and sat and listened to the singing
of the waters and the birds, and I saw the wild creatures
come down into the clearing and act as if they were
being fed, and all the time I seemed to feel the laughter
and happy shouting of children at play. And a
most delightful feeling of contentment and happiness
came over me as if I sat within the borders of Fairyland!
“Then as I stooped to drink
of the tinkling waters before I started on my way
home, I saw, tied to a flower growing in the water,
the tiny little bottle with the note inside which
I had floated off a long time ago, so I brought it
home with me!”
And from his knapsack the man took
the tiny bottle and placed it on the table before
his wife.
“I wish we knew just who tied
the bottle to the flower!” said the wife as
she picked the bottle up to look at it. And because
the bottle had been used by Sally Migrundy, the two
good people suddenly knew all about Sally Migrundy,
the magic little cottage, and the happy children who
lived there.
Every year the man takes his wife,
and together they walk down the tinkling stream until
they came to the exact center of the great whispering
forest; there they sit for hours at a time, feeling
the happiness that overflows from the hearts of Sally
Migrundy and the children. And while the good
couple have not been able to see the children or Sally
Migrundy, or even the tiny magic cottage, they know
they are all there, for at times they can hear the
laughter and once in a while they feel the touch of
a tiny hand. And when they return to their home
upon the hill they find they have received enough happiness
at the clearing beside the tinkling, singing water
to last them for a whole year.