PDF chapter test TRY NOW

Listen to the audio and fill in the blanks using the words from the box:
 
 
boring
large
faint
woodpecker
small
scarlet
human
Saint Peter
cottage
Phoebe Cary
lesson
provoked
 
"The Legend of Northland" is a poem written by . It is a ballad that narrates a legend from the Northland where greed and selfishness in a human were adequately punished.
 

The speaker begins her narrative by claiming that the story she is about to narrate is famous in the Northland, where the nights are considerably longer and colder during the winters. To keep the kids warm and engaged, the adults tell them the story. The speaker observes that the story is unlikely to be true but believes that it has got a good  to impart. Having said this, she begins with her narrative.
 

Once upon a time, when  was travelling across the world preaching and teaching, he came across a  where a woman was baking cakes. Since the saint was too weak and hungry and felt  due to the fasting he had observed, he requested the woman to give him a cake. Though she had a pile of freshly baked cakes, she couldn't choose one from them because they seemed too  to be given away. Hence, she decided to bake a smaller one. She took a  piece of dough, but she decided it was too large to be given away as it rose in the oven. She tried twice more with less dough each time, but she couldn't make a cake small enough. As a result, she refused to hand over anything to the famished Saint Peter. Eventually, her actions  the saint, and he turned her into a  as she was too selfish and undeserving of having the comforts of a .
 

The speaker concludes the narrative by saying that the bird with a black body and  head can be still seen in the wood where she keeps "" for food.