THE LITTLE JACKAL AND
THE
ALLIGATOR
The little Jackal was very
fond of shell-fish. He used to go down by the river and hunt along the
edges
for crabs and such things. And once, when he was hunting for crabs, he
was so
hungry that he put his paw into the water after a crab without looking
first,
-- which you never should do! The minute he put in his paw, snap ! --
the big
Alligator who lives in the mud down there had it in his jaws.
"Oh, dear!"
thought the little Jackal; "the big Alligator has my paw in his mouth!
In
another minute he will pull me down and gobble me up! What shall I do?
what
shall I do?" Then he thought, suddenly, "I'll deceive him!"
So he put on a very cheerful
voice, as if nothing at all were the matter, and he said, --
"Ho! ho! Clever Mr.
Alligator! Smart Mr. Alligator, to take that old bulrush root for my
paw! I
hope you'll find it very tender!"
The old Alligator was hidden
away beneath the mud and bulrush leaves, and he couldn't see anything.
He
thought, "Pshaw ! I've made a mistake." So he opened his mouth and
let the little Jackal go.
The little Jackal ran away
as fast as he could, and as he ran he called out, --
"Thank you, Mr.
Alligator! Kind Mr. Alligator! So kind of you to let me go!"
The old Alligator lashed
with his tail and snapped with his jaws, but it was too late; the
little Jackal
was out of reach.
After this the little Jackal
kept away from the river, out of danger. But after about a week he got
such an
appetite for crabs that nothing else would do at all; he felt that he
must have
a crab. So he went down by the river and looked all around, very
carefully. He
didn't see the old Alligator, but he thought to himself, "I think I'll
not
take any chances." So he stood still and began to talk out loud to
himself. He said, --
"When I don't see any
little crabs on the land I most generally see them sticking out of the
water,
and then I put my paw in and catch them. I wonder if there are any fat
little
crabs in the water to-day?"
The old Alligator was hidden
down in the mud at the bottom of the river, and when he heard what the
little
Jackal said, he thought, "Aha! I'll pretend to be a little crab, and
when
he puts his paw in, I'll make my dinner of him." So he stuck the black
end
of his snout above the water and waited.
The little Jackal took one
look, and then he said, -- "Thank you, Mr. Alligator! Kind Mr.
Alligator!
You are exceedingly kind to show me
where you are! I will have dinner elsewhere." And he ran away like the
wind.
'SMART
MR. ALLIGATOR, TO TAKE THAT OLD BULRUSH ROOT FOR MY PAW!'
The old Alligator foamed at
the mouth, he was so angry, but the little Jackal was gone.
For two whole weeks the
little Jackal kept away from the river. Then, one day, he got a feeling
inside
him that nothing but crabs could satisfy; he felt that he must have at
least
one crab. Very cautiously, he went down to the river and looked all
around. He
saw no sign of the old Alligator. Still, he did not mean to take any
chances.
So he stood quite still and began to talk to himself, -- it was a
little way he
had. He said, --
"When I don't see any
little crabs on the shore, or sticking up out of the water, I usually
see them
blowing bubbles from under the water; the little bubbles go
puff, puff, puff, and then they go pop, pop, pop, and they show
me where the little juicy crabs are, so I can put my paw in and catch
them. I
wonder if I shall see any little bubbles to-day?"
The old Alligator, lying low
in the mud and weeds, heard this, and he thought, "Pooh! That's easy
enough; I'll just blow some little crab-bubbles, and then he will put
his paw
in where I can get it."
So he blew, and he blew, a
mighty blast, and the bubbles rose in a perfect whirlpool, fizzing and
swirling.
The little Jackal didn’t
have to be told who was underneath those bubbles: he took one quick
look, and
off he ran. But as he went, he sang, --
"Thank you, Mr.
Alligator! Kind Mr. Alligator! You are the kindest Alligator in the
world, to
show me where you are, so nicely! I'll breakfast at another part of the
river."
The old Alligator was so
furious that he crawled up on the bank and went after the little
Jackal; but
dear, dear, he couldn’t catch the little Jackal; he ran far too fast.
After this, the little
Jackal did not like to risk going near the water, so he ate no more
crabs. But
he found a garden of wild figs, which were so good that he went there
every
day, and ate them instead of shell-fish.
Now the old Alligator found
this out, and he made up his mind to have the little Jackal for supper,
or to
die trying. So he crept, and crawled, and dragged himself over the
ground to
the garden of wild figs. There he made a huge pile of figs under the biggest
of the wild fig trees, and hid
himself in the pile.
After a while the little
Jackal came dancing into the garden, very happy and care-free, -- but
looking
all around. He saw the huge pile of figs under the big fig tree.
"H-m," he thought,
"that looks singularly like my friend, the Alligator. I'll investigate
a
bit."
He stood quite still and
began to talk to himself, -- it was a little way he had. He said, --
"The little figs I like
best are the fat, ripe, juicy ones that drop off when the breeze blows;
and
then the wind blows them about on the ground, this way and that; the
great heap
of figs over there is so still that I think they must be all bad figs."
The old Alligator,
underneath his fig pile, thought -- "Bother the suspicious little
Jackal!
I shall have to make these figs roll about, so that he will think the
wind
moves them." And straightway he humped himself up and moved, and sent
the
little figs flying, -- and his back showed through.
The little Jackal did not
wait for a second look. He ran out of the garden like the wind. But as
he ran
he called back, --
"Thank you, again, Mr.
Alligator; very sweet of you to show me where you are; I can't stay to
thank
you as I should like: good-by!"
At this the old Alligator
was beside himself with rage. He vowed that he would have the little
Jackal for
supper this time, come what might. So he crept and crawled over the
ground till
he came to the little Jackal's house. Then he crept and crawled inside,
and hid
himself there in the house, to wait till the little Jackal should come
home.
By and by the little Jackal
came dancing home, happy and care-free, -- but looking all around.
Presently,
as he came along, he saw that the ground was all scratched up as if
something
very heavy had been dragged over it. The little Jackal stopped and
looked.
"What's this? what's
this?" he said.
Then he saw that the door of
his house was crushed at the sides and broken, as if something very big
had
gone through it.
"What's this? What's
this?" the little Jackal said. "I think I'll investigate a
little!"
So he stood quite still and
began to talk to himself (you remember, it was a little way he had),
but
loudly. He said, --
"How strange that my
little House doesn’t speak to me! Why don't you speak to me, little
House? You
always speak to me, if everything is all right, when I come home. I
wonder if
anything is wrong with my little House?"
The old Alligator thought to
himself that he must certainly pretend to be the little House, or the
little
Jackal would never come in. So he put on as pleasant a voice as he
could (which
is not saying much) and said --
"Hullo, little
Jackal!"
Oh! when the little Jackal
heard that, he was frightened enough for once.
"'It's the old
Alligator," he said, "and if I don't make an end of him this time he
will certainly make an end of me. What shall I do?"
He thought very fast. Then
he spoke out pleasantly.
"Thank you, little
House," he said, "it's good to hear your pretty voice, dear little
House, and I will be in with you in a minute; only first I must gather
some
firewood for dinner."
Then he went and gathered
firewood, and more firewood, and more firewood; and he piled it all up
solid
against the door and round the house; and then he set fire to it!
And it smoked and burned
till it smoked that old Alligator to smoked herring!
THE LITTLE FIR TREE
Once there was a Little Fir
Tree, slim and pointed, and shiny, which stood in the great forest in
the midst
of some big fir trees, broad, and tall, and shadowy green. The Little
Fir Tree
was very unhappy because he was not big like the others. When the birds
came
flying into the woods and lit on the branches of the big trees and
built their
nests there, he used to call up to them, --
"Come down, come down,
rest in my branches."
But they always said, --
"Oh, no, no; you are
too little!"
And when the splendid wind
came blowing and singing through the forest, it bent and rocked and
swung the
tops of the big trees, and murmured to them. Then the Little Fir Tree
looked
up, and called, --
"Oh, please, dear wind,
come down and play with me!"
But he always said, --
"Oh, no; you are too
little, you are too little!"
And in the winter the white
snow fell softly, softly, and covered the great trees all over with
wonderful
caps and coats of white. The Little Fir Tree, close down in the cover
of the
others, would call up, --
"Oh, please, dear snow,
give me a cap, too! I want to play, too!"
But the snow always said, --
"Oh no, no, no; you are
too little, you are too little!"
The worst of all was when
men came into the wood, with sledges and teams of horses. They came to
cut the
big trees down and carry them away. And when one had been cut down and
carried
away the others talked about it, and nodded their heads. And the Little
Fir
Tree listened, and heard them say that when you were carried away so
you might
become the mast of a mighty ship, and go far away over the ocean, and
see many
wonderful things; or you might
be part of a fine house in a
great city, and see much of life. The Little Fir Tree wanted greatly to
see
life, but he was always too little; the men passed by him.
But by and by, one cold
winter's morning, men came with a sledge and horses, and after they had
cut
here and there they came to the circle of trees round the Little Fir
Tree, and
looked all about.
"There are none little
enough," they said.
Oh! how the Little Fir Tree
pricked up his needles!
"Here is one,"
said one of the men, "it is just little enough." And he touched the
Little Fir Tree.
The Little Fir Tree was
happy as a bird, because he knew they were about to cut him down. And
when he
was being carried away on the sledge he lay wondering, so contentedly,
whether
he should be the mast of a ship or part of a fine city house. But when
they
came to the town he was taken out and set upright in a tub and placed
on the
edge of a sidewalk in a row of other fir trees, all small, but none so
little
as he. And then the Little Fir Tree began to see life.
People kept coming to look
at the trees and to take them away. But always when they saw the Little
Fir
Tree they shook their heads and said, "It is too little, too little."
Until, finally, two children
came along, hand in hand, looking carefully at all the small trees.
When they
saw the Little Fir Tree they cried out, --
"We'll take this one;
it is just little enough!" They took him out of his tub and carried him
away, between them. And the happy Little Fir Tree spent all his time
wondering
what it could be that he was just little enough for; he knew it could
hardly be
a mast or a house, since he was going away with children. He kept
wondering,
while they took him in through some big doors, and set him up in
another tub,
on the table, in a bare little room. Pretty soon they went away, and
came back
again with a big basket, carried between them. Then some pretty ladies,
with
white caps on their heads and white aprons over their blue dresses,
came
bringing little parcels. The children took things out of the basket and
began
to play with the Little Fir Tree, just as he had often begged the wind
and the
snow and the birds to do. He felt their soft little touches on his head
and his
twigs and his branches. And when he looked down at himself, as far as
he could
look, he saw that he was all hung with gold and silver chains! There
were
strings of white fluffy stuff drooping around him; his twigs held
little gold
nuts and pink, rosy balls and silver stars; he had pretty little pink
and white
candles in his arms; but last, and most wonderful of all, the children
hung a
beautiful white, floating doll-angel over his head! The Little Fir Tree
could
not breathe, for joy and wonder. What was it that he was, now? Why was
this
glory for him?
After a time every one went
away and left him. It grew dusk, and the Little Fir Tree began to hear
strange
sounds through the closed doors. Sometimes he heard a child crying. He
was
beginning to be lonely. It grew more and more shadowy.
All at once, the doors
opened and the two children came in. Two of the pretty ladies were with
them.
They came up to the Little Fir Tree and quickly lighted all the little
pink and
white candles. Then the two pretty ladies took hold of the table with
the
Little Fir Tree on it and pushed it, very smoothly and quickly, out of
the
doors, across a hall, and in at another door.
The Little Fir Tree had a
sudden sight of a long room with many little white beds in it, of
children propped
up on pillows in the beds, and of other children in great wheeled
chairs, and
others hobbling about or sitting in little chairs. He wondered why all
the
little children looked so white and tired; he did not know that he was
in a
hospital. But before he could wonder any more his breath was quite
taken away
by the shout those little white children gave.
"Oh! oh! m-m!
m-m!" they cried.
"How pretty! How
beautiful! Oh isn’t it lovely!" He knew they must mean him, for all
their
shining eyes were looking straight at him. He stood as straight as a
mast, and
quivered in every needle, for joy. Presently one little weak
child-voice called
out, "It 's the nicest Christmas tree I ever saw!"
And then, at last, the
Little Fir Tree knew what he was; he was a Christmas tree! And from his
shiny
head to his feet he was glad, through and through, because he was just
little
enough to be the nicest kind of tree in the world!
WHO KILLED THE OTTER'S
BABIES?
Once the Otter came to the
Mouse-deer and said,
"Friend Mouse-deer,
will you please take care of my babies while I go to the river, to
catch
fish?"
"Certainly," said
the Mouse-deer, "go along." But when the Otter came back from the
river, with a string of fish, he found
his babies crushed flat. "What does this mean, Friend Mouse-deer?" he
said. "Who killed my children while you were taking care of them?"
"I am very sorry,"
said the Mouse-deer, "but you know I am Chief Dancer of the War-dance,
and
the Woodpecker came and sounded the war-gong, so I danced. I forgot
your children,
and trod on them."
"I shall go to King
Solomon," said the Otter, "and you shall be punished."
Soon the Mouse-deer was
called before King Solomon.
"Did you kill the
Otter's babies?" said the king.
"Yes, your
Majesty," said the Mouse-deer, "but I did not mean to."
"How did it
happen?" said the king.
"Your Majesty
knows," said the Mouse-deer, "that I am Chief Dancer of the
War-dance. The Woodpecker came and sounded the war-gong, and I had to
dance;
and as I danced I trod on the Otter's children."
"Send for the
Woodpecker," said King Solomon. And when the Woodpecker came, he said
to
him, "Was it you who sounded the war-gong?"
"Yes, your
Majesty," said the Woodpecker, "but I had to."
"Why?" said the
king.
"Your Majesty
knows," said the Woodpecker, that I am Chief Beater of the War-gong,
and I
sounded the gong because I saw the Great Lizard wearing his sword."
"Send for the Great
Lizard," said King Solomon.
When the Great Lizard came,
he asked him, "Was it you who were wearing your sword?"
"Yes, your Majesty,"
said the Great Lizard; "but I had to."
"Why?" said the
king.
"Your Majesty
knows," said the Great Lizard, "that I am Chief Protector of the
Sword. I wore my sword because the Tortoise came wearing his coat of
mail."
So the Tortoise was sent
for.
"Why did you wear your
coat of mail?" said the king.
"I put it on, your
Majesty," said the Tortoise, "because I saw the King-crab trailing
his three-edged pike."
Then the King-crab was sent
for.
"Why were you trailing
your three-edged pike?" said King Solomon.
"Because, your
Majesty," said the King-crab, "I saw that the Crayfish had shouldered
his lance."
Immediately the Crayfish was
sent for.
"Why did you shoulder
your lance?" said the king.
"Because, your
Majesty," said the Crayfish, "I saw the Otter coming down to the
river to kill my children."
"Oh," said King
Solomon, "if that is the case, the Otter killed the Otter's children.
And
the Mouse-deer cannot be held, by the law of the land!"
THE NIGHTINGALE
A long, long time ago, as
long ago as when there were fairies, there lived an emperor in China,
who had a
most beautiful palace, all made of crystal. Outside the palace was the
loveliest garden in the whole world, and farther away was a forest
where the
trees were taller than any other trees in the world, and farther away,
still,
was a deep wood. And in this wood lived a little Nightingale. The
Nightingale
sang so beautifully that everybody who heard her remembered her better
than
anything else that he heard or saw. People came from all over the world
to see
the crystal palace and the wonderful garden and the great forest; but
when they
went home and wrote books about these things they always wrote, "But
the
Nightingale is the best of all."
At last it happened that the
Emperor came upon a book which said this, and he at once sent for his
Chamberlain.
"Who is this
Nightingale?" said the Emperor. "Why have I never heard him
sing?"
The Chamberlain, who was a
very important person, said, "There cannot be any such person; I have
never heard his name."
"The book says there is
a Nightingale," said the Emperor. "I command that the Nightingale be
brought here to sing for me this evening."
The Chamberlain went out and
asked all the great lords and ladies and pages where the Nightingale
could be
found, but not one of them had ever heard of him. So the Chamberlain
went back
to the Emperor and said, "There is no such person."
"The book says there is
a Nightingale," said the Emperor; "if the Nightingale is not here to
sing for me this evening I will have the court trampled upon,
immediately after
supper."
The Chamberlain did not want
to be trampled upon, so he ran out and asked everybody in the palace
about the
Nightingale. At last, a little girl who worked in the kitchen to help
the
cook's helper, said, "Oh, yes, I
know the Nightingale very well. Every night when I go to carry scraps
from the
kitchen to my mother, who lives in the wood beyond the forest, I hear
the
Nightingale sing."
The Chamberlain asked the
little cook-maid to take him to the Nightingale's home, and many of the
lords
and ladies followed after. When they had gone a little way, they heard
a cow
moo.
"Ah!" said the
lords and ladies, "that must be the Nightingale; what a large voice for
so
small a creature!"
"Oh, no," said the
little girl, "that is just a cow, mooing."
A little farther on they
heard some bullfrogs, in a swamp.
"Surely that is the
Nightingale," said the courtiers; "it really sound like churchbells!"
"Oh, no," said the
little girl, "those are bullfrogs, croaking."
At last they came to the
wood where the Nightingale was. "
Hush!" said the little
girl, "she is going to sing." And, sure enough, the little
Nightingale began to sing. She sang so beautifully that you have never
in all
your life heard anything like it.
"Dear, dear," said
the courtiers, "that is very pleasant; does that little gray bird
really
make all that noise? She is so pale that I think she has lost her color
for
fear of us."
The Chamberlain asked the
little Nightingale to come and sing for the Emperor. The little
Nightingale
said she could sing better in her own greenwood, but she was so sweet
and kind
that she came with them.
That evening the palace was
all trimmed with the most beautiful flowers you can imagine, and rows
and rows
of little silver bells, that tinkled when the wind blew in, and
hundreds and
hundreds and hundreds of wax candles, that shone like tiny stars. In
the great
hall there was a gold perch for the Nightingale, beside the Emperor's
throne.
When all the people were
there, the Emperor asked the Nightingale to sing. Then the little gray
Nightingale
filled her throat full, and sang. And, my dears, she sang so
beautifully that
the Emperor's eyes filled up with tears! And, you know, emperors do not
cry at
all easily. So he asked her to sing again, and this time she sang so
marvelously that the tears came out of his eyes and ran down his
cheeks. That
was a great success. They asked the little Nightingale to sing, over
and over
again, and when they had listened enough the Emperor said that she
should be
made "Singer in Chief to the Court." She was to have a golden perch
near the Emperor's bed, and a little gold cage, and was to be allowed
to go out
twice every day. But there were twelve servants appointed to wait on
her, and
those twelve servants went with her every time she went out, and each
of the
twelve had hold of the end of a silken string which was tied to the
little
Nightingale's leg! It was not so very much fun to go out that way!
For a long, long time the
Nightingale sang every evening to the Emperor and his court, and they
liked her
so much that the ladies all tried to sound like her; they used to put
water in
their mouths and then make little sounds like this: glu-glu-glug.
And when the courtiers met each other in the halls,
one would say "Night," and the other would say "ingale,"
and that was conversation.
At last, one day, there came
a little package to the Emperor, on the outside of which was written,
"The
Nightingale." Inside was an artificial bird, something like a
nightingale,
only it was made of gold, and silver, and rubies, and emeralds, and
diamonds.
When it was wound up it played a waltz tune, and as it played it moved
its
little tail up and down. Everybody in the court was filled with delight
at the
music of the new nightingale. They made it sing that same tune
thirty-three
times, and still they had not had enough. They would have made it sing
the tune
thirty-four times, but the Emperor said, "I should like to hear the
real
Nightingale sing, now."
But when they looked about
for the real little Nightingale, they could not find her anywhere! She
had
taken the chance, while everybody was listening to the waltz tune, to
fly away
through the window to her own greenwood.
"What a very ungrateful
bird!" said the lords and ladies. "But it does not matter; the new
nightingale is just as good."
So the artificial
nightingale was given the real Nightingale's little gold perch, and
every night
the Emperor wound her up, and she sang her waltz tune to him. The
people in the
court liked her even better than the old Nightingale, because they
could all
whistle her tune, -- which you can't do with real nightingales.
About a year after the
artificial nightingale came, the Emperor was listening to her waltz
tune, when
there was a snap and whir-r-r inside
the bird, and the music stopped. The Emperor ran to his doctor, but he
could
not do anything. Then he ran to his clockmaker, but he could not do
much.
Nobody could do much. The best they could do was to patch the gold
nightingale
up so that it could sing once a year; even that was almost too much,
and the
tune was pretty shaky. Still, the Emperor kept the gold nightingale on
the
perch in his own room.
A long time went by, and
then, at last, the Emperor grew very ill, and was about to die. When it
was
sure that he could not live much longer, the people chose a new emperor
and
waited for the old one to die. The poor Emperor lay, quite cold and
pale, in
his great big bed, with velvet curtains, and tall candlesticks all
about. He
was quite alone, for all the courtiers had gone to congratulate the new
emperor, and all the servants had gone to talk it over.
When the Emperor woke up, he
felt a terrible weight on his chest. He opened his eyes, and there was
Death,
sitting on his heart. Death had put on the Emperor's gold crown, and he
had the
gold sceptre in one hand, and the silken banner in the other; and he
looked at
the Emperor with his great hollow eyes. The room was full of shadows,
and the
shadows were full of faces. Everywhere the Emperor looked, there were
faces.
Some were very, very ugly, and some were sweet and lovely; they were
all the
things the Emperor had done in his life, good and bad. And as he looked
at them
they began to whisper. They whispered, "Do you remember
this?" "Do you remember that?" The Emperor
remembered so much that he cried out loud, "Oh, bring the great drum!
Make
music, so that I may not hear these dreadful whispers!"
But there was nobody there
to bring the drum.
Then the Emperor cried,
"You little gold nightingale, can you not sing something for me? I
have
given you gifts of gold and jewels, and kept you always by my side;
will you
not help me now?" But there was nobody to wind the little gold
nightingale
up, and of course it could not sing.
The Emperor's heart grew
colder and colder where Death crouched upon it, and the dreadful
whispers grew
louder and louder, and the Emperor's life was almost gone. Suddenly,
through
the open window, there came a most lovely song. It was so sweet and so
loud
that the whispers died quite away. Presently the Emperor felt his heart
grow
warm, then he felt the blood flow through his limbs again; he listened
to the
song until the tears ran down his cheeks; he knew that it was the
little real
Nightingale who had flown away from him when the gold nightingale came.
Death was listening to the
song, too; and when it was done and the Emperor begged for more. Death,
too,
said, "Please sing again, little Nightingale!"
"Will you give me the
Emperor's gold crown for a song?" said the little Nightingale.
"Yes," said Death;
and the little Nightingale bought the Emperor's crown for a song.
"Oh, sing again, little
Nightingale," begged Death.
"Will you give me the
Emperor's sceptre for another song? " said the little gray Nightingale.
"Yes," said Death;
and the little Nightingale bought the Emperor's sceptre for another
song. Once
more Death begged for a song, and this time the little Nightingale got
the
banner for her singing. Then she sang one more song, so sweet and so
sad that,
it made Death think of his garden in the churchyard, where he always
liked best
to be. And he rose from the Emperor's heart and floated away through
the
window.
When Death was gone, the
Emperor said to the little Nightingale, "Oh, dear little Nightingale,
you
have saved me from Death! Do not leave me again. Stay with me on this
little
gold perch, and sing to me always!"
"No, dear
Emperor," said the little Nightingale, "I sing best when I am free; I
cannot live in a palace. But every night when you are quite alone, I
will come
and sit in the window and sing to you, and tell you everything that
goes on in
your kingdom: I will tell you where the poor people are who ought to be
helped,
and where the wicked people are who ought to be punished. Only, dear
Emperor,
be sure that you never let anybody know that you have a little bird who
tells
you everything."
After the little Nightingale
had flown away, the Emperor felt so well and strong that he dressed
himself in
his royal robes and took his gold sceptre in his hand. And when the
courtiers
came in to see if he were dead, there stood the Emperor with his sword
in one
hand and his sceptre in the other, and said, "Good-morning!" |