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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Pig Brother and Other Fables and Stories, by
-Laura E. Richards
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Pig Brother and Other Fables and Stories
-
-Author: Laura E. Richards
-
-Release Date: July 28, 2013 [EBook #43336]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PIG BROTHER ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by eagkw, David Edwards and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: THE PIG BROTHER.
- [_Frontispiece._]
-
-
-
-
- THE PIG BROTHER
- AND
- OTHER FABLES AND STORIES
-
- A SUPPLEMENTARY READER
- FOR THE
- FOURTH SCHOOL YEAR
-
- BY
- LAURA E. RICHARDS
- AUTHOR OF "THE GOLDEN WINDOWS," "THE SILVER CROWN,"
- "IN MY NURSERY," "THE JOYOUS STORY
- OF TOTO," ETC., ETC.
-
- ILLUSTRATED
-
- BOSTON
- LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY
- 1932
-
-
-
-
-_Copyright, 1881, 1885, 1890, by Roberts Brothers._
-
-_Copyright, 1891, 1892, 1893, 1894, 1895, by The Century Co._
-
-_Copyright, 1895, by Estes and Lauriat._
-
-_Copyright, 1903, 1906, 1908, by Little, Brown, and Company_
-
-
-_All rights reserved_
-
-
-PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
- THE PIG BROTHER 1
- THE GOLDEN WINDOWS 5
- THE COMING OF THE KING 11
- SWING SONG 15
- THE GREAT FEAST 17
- THE OWL AND THE EEL AND THE WARMING-PAN 20
- THE WHEAT FIELD 21
- ABOUT ANGELS 24
- THE APRON STRING 29
- THE SHADOW 32
- THE SAILOR MAN 34
- "GO" AND "COME" 37
- CHILD'S PLAY 39
- LITTLE JOHN BOTTLEJOHN 42
- A FORTUNE 44
- THE STARS 46
- BUTTERCUP GOLD 48
- THE PATIENT CAT 57
- ALICE'S SUPPER 60
- THE QUACKY DUCK 62
- AT THE LITTLE BOY'S HOME 65
- NEW YEAR 67
- JACKY FROST 71
- THE CAKE 72
- "OH, DEAR!" 75
- THE USEFUL COAL 84
- SONG OF THE LITTLE WINDS 92
- THE THREE REMARKS 93
- HOKEY POKEY 106
- THE TANGLED SKEIN 119
- A SONG FOR HAL 122
- FOR YOU AND ME 125
- THE BURNING HOUSE 127
- THE NAUGHTY COMET 129
- DAY DREAMS 141
-
-
-
-
-THE PIG BROTHER
-
-
-There was once a child who was untidy. He left his books on the floor,
-and his muddy shoes on the table; he put his fingers in the jam-pots,
-and spilled ink on his best pinafore; there was really no end to his
-untidiness.
-
-One day the Tidy Angel came into his nursery.
-
-"This will never do!" said the Angel. "This is really shocking. You
-must go out and stay with your brother while I set things to rights
-here."
-
-"I have no brother!" said the child.
-
-"Yes, you have!" said the Angel. "You may not know him, but he will
-know you. Go out in the garden and watch for him, and he will soon
-come."
-
-"I don't know what you mean!" said the child; but he went out into the
-garden and waited.
-
-Presently a squirrel came along, whisking his tail.
-
-"Are you my brother?" asked the child.
-
-The squirrel looked him over carefully.
-
-"Well, I should hope not!" he said. "My fur is neat and smooth, my
-nest is handsomely made, and in perfect order, and my young ones are
-properly brought up. Why do you insult me by asking such a question?"
-
-He whisked off, and the child waited.
-
-Presently a wren came hopping by.
-
-"Are you my brother?" asked the child.
-
-"No indeed!" said the wren. "What impertinence! You will find no tidier
-person than I in the whole garden. Not a feather is out of place, and
-my eggs are the wonder of all for smoothness and beauty. Brother,
-indeed!" He hopped off, ruffling his feathers, and the child waited.
-
-By and by a large Tommy Cat came along.
-
-"Are you my brother?" asked the child.
-
-"Go and look at yourself in the glass," said the Tommy Cat haughtily,
-"and you will have your answer. I have been washing myself in the sun
-all the morning, while it is clear that no water has come near you for
-a long time. There are no such creatures as you in my family, I am
-humbly thankful to say."
-
-He walked on, waving his tail, and the child waited.
-
-Presently a pig came trotting along.
-
-The child did not wish to ask the pig if he were his brother, but the
-pig did not wait to be asked.
-
-"Hallo, brother!" he grunted.
-
-"I am not your brother!" said the child.
-
-"Oh, yes, you are!" said the pig. "I confess I am not proud of you, but
-there is no mistaking the members of our family. Come along, and have a
-good roll in the barnyard! There is some lovely black mud there."
-
-"I don't like to roll in mud!" said the child.
-
-"Tell that to the hens!" said the pig brother. "Look at your hands,
-and your shoes, and your pinafore! Come along, I say! You may have
-some of the pig-wash for supper, if there is more than I want."
-
-"I don't want pig-wash!" said the child; and he began to cry.
-
-Just then the Tidy Angel came out.
-
-"I have set everything to rights," she said, "and so it must stay.
-Now, will you go with the Pig Brother, or will you come back with me,
-and be a tidy child?"
-
-"With you, with you!" cried the child; and he clung to the Angel's
-dress.
-
-The Pig Brother grunted.
-
-"Small loss!" he said. "There will be all the more wash for me!" and
-he trotted on.
-
-
-
-
-THE GOLDEN WINDOWS
-
-
-All day long the little boy worked hard, in field and barn and shed,
-for his people were poor farmers, and could not pay a workman; but at
-sunset there came an hour that was all his own, for his father had
-given it to him. Then the boy would go up to the top of a hill and
-look across at another hill that rose some miles away. On this far
-hill stood a house with windows of clear gold and diamonds. They shone
-and blazed so that it made the boy wink to look at them: but after a
-while the people in the house put up shutters, as it seemed, and then
-it looked like any common farmhouse. The boy supposed they did this
-because it was supper-time; and then he would go into the house and
-have his supper of bread and milk, and so to bed.
-
-One day the boy's father called him and said: "You have been a good
-boy, and have earned a holiday. Take this day for your own; but
-remember that God gave it, and try to learn some good thing."
-
-The boy thanked his father and kissed his mother; then he put a piece
-of bread in his pocket, and started off to find the house with the
-golden windows.
-
-It was pleasant walking. His bare feet made marks in the white dust,
-and when he looked back, the footprints seemed to be following him,
-and making company for him. His shadow, too, kept beside him, and
-would dance or run with him as he pleased; so it was very cheerful.
-
-By and by he felt hungry; and he sat down by a brown brook that ran
-through the alder hedge by the roadside, and ate his bread, and drank
-the clear water. Then he scattered the crumbs for the birds, as his
-mother had taught him to do, and went on his way.
-
-After a long time he came to a high green hill; and when he had
-climbed the hill, there was the house on the top; but it seemed that
-the shutters were up, for he could not see the golden windows. He came
-up to the house, and then he could well have wept, for the windows
-were of clear glass, like any others, and there was no gold anywhere
-about them.
-
-A woman came to the door, and looked kindly at the boy, and asked him
-what he wanted.
-
-"I saw the golden windows from our hilltop," he said, "and I came to
-see them, but now they are only glass."
-
-The woman shook her head and laughed.
-
-"We are poor farming people," she said, "and are not likely to have
-gold about our windows; but glass is better to see through."
-
-She bade the boy sit down on the broad stone step at the door, and
-brought him a cup of milk and a cake, and bade him rest; then she
-called her daughter, a child of his own age, and nodded kindly at the
-two, and went back to her work.
-
-The little girl was barefooted like himself, and wore a brown cotton
-gown, but her hair was golden like the windows he had seen, and her
-eyes were blue like the sky at noon. She led the boy about the farm,
-and showed him her black calf with the white star on its forehead,
-and he told her about his own at home, which was red like a chestnut,
-with four white feet. Then when they had eaten an apple together, and
-so had become friends, the boy asked her about the golden windows.
-The little girl nodded, and said she knew all about them, only he had
-mistaken the house.
-
-"You have come quite the wrong way!" she said. "Come with me, and I
-will show you the house with the golden windows, and then you will see
-for yourself."
-
-They went to a knoll that rose behind the farmhouse, and as they went
-the little girl told him that the golden windows could only be seen at
-a certain hour, about sunset.
-
-"Yes, I know that!" said the boy.
-
-When they reached the top of the knoll, the girl turned and pointed;
-and there on a hill far away stood a house with windows of clear gold
-and diamond, just as he had seen them. And when they looked again, the
-boy saw that it was his own home.
-
-Then he told the little girl that he must go; and he gave her his best
-pebble, the white one with the red band, that he had carried for a
-year in his pocket; and she gave him three horse-chestnuts, one red
-like satin, one spotted, and one white like milk. He kissed her, and
-promised to come again, but he did not tell her what he had learned;
-and so he went back down the hill, and the little girl stood in the
-sunset light and watched him.
-
-The way home was long, and it was dark before the boy reached his
-father's house; but the lamplight and firelight shone through the
-windows, making them almost as bright as he had seen them from the
-hilltop; and when he opened the door, his mother came to kiss him, and
-his little sister ran to throw her arms about his neck, and his father
-looked up and smiled from his seat by the fire.
-
-"Have you had a good day?" asked his mother.
-
-Yes, the boy had had a very good day.
-
-"And have you learned anything?" asked his father.
-
-"Yes!" said the boy. "I have learned that our house has windows of
-gold and diamond."
-
-
-
-
-THE COMING OF THE KING
-
-
-Some children were at play in their play-ground one day, when a herald
-rode through the town, blowing a trumpet, and crying aloud, "The King!
-the King passes by this road to-day. Make ready for the King!"
-
-The children stopped their play, and looked at one another.
-
-"Did you hear that?" they said. "The King is coming. He may look over
-the wall and see our playground; who knows? We must put it in order."
-
-The playground was sadly dirty, and in the corners were scraps of
-paper and broken toys, for these were careless children. But now,
-one brought a hoe, and another a rake, and a third ran to fetch the
-wheelbarrow from behind the garden gate. They labored hard, till at
-length all was clean and tidy.
-
-"Now it is clean!" they said; "but we must make it pretty, too,
-for kings are used to fine things; maybe he would not notice mere
-cleanness, for he may have it all the time."
-
-Then one brought sweet rushes and strewed them on the ground; and
-others made garlands of oak leaves and pine tassels and hung them on
-the walls; and the littlest one pulled marigold buds and threw them
-all about the playground, "to look like gold," he said.
-
-When all was done the playground was so beautiful that the children
-stood and looked at it, and clapped their hands with pleasure.
-
-"Let us keep it always like this!" said the littlest one; and the
-others cried, "Yes! yes! that is what we will do."
-
-They waited all day for the coming of the King, but he never came;
-only, towards sunset, a man with travel-worn clothes, and a kind,
-tired face passed along the road, and stopped to look over the wall.
-
-"What a pleasant place!" said the man. "May I come in and rest, dear
-children?"
-
-The children brought him in gladly, and set him on the seat that they
-had made out of an old cask. They had covered it with the old red
-cloak to make it look like a throne, and it made a very good one.
-
-"It is our playground!" they said. "We made it pretty for the King,
-but he did not come, and now we mean to keep it so for ourselves."
-
-"That is good!" said the man.
-
-"Because we think pretty and clean is nicer than ugly and dirty!" said
-another.
-
-"That is better!" said the man.
-
-"And for tired people to rest in!" said the littlest one.
-
-"That is best of all!" said the man.
-
-He sat and rested, and looked at the children with such kind eyes
-that they came about him, and told him all they knew; about the five
-puppies in the barn, and the thrush's nest with four blue eggs,
-and the shore where the gold shells grew; and the man nodded and
-understood all about it.
-
-By and by he asked for a cup of water, and they brought it to him
-in the best cup, with the gold sprigs on it: then he thanked the
-children, and rose and went on his way; but before he went he laid his
-hand on their heads for a moment, and the touch went warm to their
-hearts.
-
-The children stood by the wall and watched the man as he went slowly
-along. The sun was setting, and the light fell in long slanting rays
-across the road.
-
-"He looks so tired!" said one of the children.
-
-"But he was so kind!" said another.
-
-"See!" said the littlest one. "How the sun shines on his hair! it
-looks like a crown of gold."
-
-
-
-
-SWING SONG
-
-
- As I swing, as I swing,
- Here beneath my mother's wing,
- Here beneath my mother's arm,
- Never earthly thing can harm.
- Up and down, to and fro,
- With a steady sweep I go,
- Like a swallow on the wing,
- As I swing, as I swing.
-
- As I swing, as I swing,
- Honey-bee comes murmuring,
- Humming softly in my ear,
- "Come away with me, my dear!
- In the tiger-lily's cup
- Sweetest honey we will sup."
- Go away, you velvet thing!
- I must swing! I must swing!
-
- As I swing, as I swing,
- Butterfly comes fluttering,
- "Little child, now come away
- 'Mid the clover-blooms to play;
- Clover-blooms are red and white,
- Sky is blue and sun is bright.
- Why then thus, with folded wing,
- Sit and swing, sit and swing?"
-
- As I swing, as I swing,
- Oriole comes hovering.
- "See my nest in yonder tree!
- Little child, come work with me.
- Learn to make a perfect nest,
- That of all things is the best.
- Come! nor longer loitering
- Sit and swing, sit and swing!"
-
- As I swing, as I swing,
- Though I have not any wing,
- Still I would not change with you,
- Happiest bird that ever flew.
- Butterfly and honey-bee,
- Sure 't is you must envy me,
- Safe beneath my mother's wing
- As I swing, as I swing.
-
-
-
-
-THE GREAT FEAST
-
-
-Once the Play Angel came into a nursery where four little children sat
-on the floor with sad and troubled faces.
-
-"What is the matter, dears?" asked the Play Angel.
-
-"We wanted to have a grand feast!" said the child whose nursery it was.
-
-"Yes, that would be delightful!" said the Play Angel.
-
-"But there is only one cooky!" said the child whose nursery it was.
-
-"And it is a very small cooky!" said the child who was a cousin, and
-therefore felt a right to speak.
-
-"Not big enough for myself!" said the child whose nursery it was.
-
-The other two children said nothing, because they were not relations;
-but they looked at the cooky with large eyes, and their mouths went
-up in the middle and down at the sides.
-
-"Well," said the Play Angel, "suppose we have the feast just the same!
-I think we can manage it."
-
-She broke the cooky into four pieces, and gave one piece to the
-littlest child.
-
-"See!" she said. "This is a roast chicken, a Brown Bantam. It is just
-as brown and crispy as it can be, and there is cranberry sauce on one
-side, and on the other a little mountain of mashed potato; it must be
-a volcano, it smokes so. Do you see?"
-
-"Yes!" said the littlest one; and his mouth went down in the middle
-and up at the corners.
-
-The Play Angel gave a piece to the next child.
-
-"Here," she said, "is a little pie! Outside, as you see, it is brown
-and crusty, with a wreath of pastry leaves round the edge and 'For
-You' in the middle; but inside it is all chicken and ham and jelly and
-hard-boiled eggs. Did ever you see such a pie?"
-
-"Never I did!" said the child.
-
-"Now here," said the Angel to the third child, "is a round cake.
-_Look_ at it! the frosting is half an inch thick, with candied
-rose-leaves and angelica laid on in true-lovers' knots; and inside
-there are chopped-up almonds, and raisins, and great slices of citron.
-It is the prettiest cake I ever saw, and the best."
-
-"So it is I did!" said the third child.
-
-Then the Angel gave the last piece to the child whose nursery it was.
-
-"My dear!" she said. "Just look! Here is an ice-cream rabbit. He is
-snow-white outside, with eyes of red barley sugar; see his ears, and
-his little snubby tail! but inside, I _think_ you will find him pink.
-Now, when I clap my hands and count one, two, three, you must eat the
-feast all up. One--two--three!"
-
-So the children ate the feast all up.
-
-"There!" said the Angel. "Did ever you see such a grand feast?"
-
-"No, never we did!" said all the four children together.
-
-"And there are some crumbs left over," said the Angel. "Come, and we
-will give them to the brother birds!"
-
-"But you didn't have any!" said the child whose nursery it was.
-
-"Oh, yes!" said the Angel. "I had it all!"
-
-
-
-
-THE OWL AND THE EEL AND THE WARMING-PAN
-
-
- The owl and the eel and the warming-pan,
- They went to call on the soap-fat man.
- The soap-fat man he was not within:
- He'd gone for a ride on his rolling-pin.
- So they all came back by the way of the town,
- And turned the meeting-house upside down.
-
-
-
-
-THE WHEAT-FIELD
-
-
-Some children were set to reap in a wheat-field. The wheat was yellow
-as gold, the sun shone gloriously, and the butterflies flew hither and
-thither. Some of the children worked better, and some worse; but there
-was one who ran here and there after the butterflies that fluttered
-about his head, and sang as he ran.
-
-By and by evening came, and the Angel of the wheat-field called to the
-children and said, "Come now to the gate, and bring your sheaves with
-you."
-
-So the children came, bringing their sheaves. Some had great piles,
-laid close and even, so that they might carry more; some had theirs
-laid large and loose, so that they looked more than they were; but
-one, the child that had run to and fro after the butterflies, came
-empty-handed.
-
-The Angel said to this child, "Where are your sheaves?"
-
-The child hung his head. "I do not know!" he said. "I had some, but I
-have lost them, I know not how."
-
-"None enter here without sheaves," said the Angel.
-
-"I know that," said the child. "But I thought I would like to see the
-place where the others were going; besides, they would not let me
-leave them."
-
-Then all the other children cried out together. One said, "Dear Angel,
-let him in! In the morning I was sick, and this child came and played
-with me, and showed me the butterflies, and I forgot my pain. Also, he
-gave me one of his sheaves, and I would give it to him again, but I
-cannot tell it now from my own."
-
- [Illustration: THE WHEAT FIELD.
- [_Page 22._]
-
-Another said, "Dear Angel, let him in! At noon the sun beat on my head
-so fiercely that I fainted and fell down like one dead; and this child
-came running by, and when he saw me he brought water to revive me,
-and then he showed me the butterflies, and was so glad and merry that
-my strength returned; to me also he gave one of his sheaves, and
-I would give it to him again, but it is so like my own that I cannot
-tell it."
-
-And a third said, "Just now, as evening was coming, I was weary and
-sad, and had so few sheaves that it seemed hardly worth my while
-to go on working; but this child comforted me, and showed me the
-butterflies, and gave me of his sheaves. Look! it may be that this was
-his; and yet I cannot tell, it is so like my own."
-
-And all the children said, "We also had sheaves of him, dear Angel;
-let him in, we pray you!"
-
-The Angel smiled, and reached his hand inside the gate and brought out
-a pile of sheaves; it was not large, but the glory of the sun was on
-it, so that it seemed to lighten the whole field.
-
-"Here are his sheaves!" said the Angel. "They are known and counted,
-every one." And he said to the child, "Lead the way in!"
-
-
-
-
-ABOUT ANGELS
-
-
-"Mother," said the child; "are there really angels?"
-
-"The Good Book says so," said the mother.
-
-"Yes," said the child; "I have seen the picture. But did you ever see
-one, mother?"
-
-"I think I have," said the mother; "but she was not dressed like the
-picture."
-
-"I am going to find one!" said the child. "I am going to run along the
-road, miles, and miles, and miles, until I find an angel."
-
-"That will be a good plan!" said the mother. "And I will go with you,
-for you are too little to run far alone."
-
-"I am not little any more!" said the child. "I have trousers; I am big."
-
-"So you are!" said the mother. "I forgot. But it is a fine day, and I
-should like the walk."
-
-"But you walk so slowly, with your lame foot."
-
-"I can walk faster than you think!" said the mother.
-
-So they started, the child leaping and running, and the mother
-stepping out so bravely with her lame foot that the child soon forgot
-about it.
-
-The child danced on ahead, and presently he saw a chariot coming
-towards him, drawn by prancing white horses. In the chariot sat a
-splendid lady in velvet and furs, with white plumes waving above her
-dark hair. As she moved in her seat, she flashed with jewels and gold,
-but her eyes were brighter than her diamonds.
-
-"Are you an angel?" asked the child, running up beside the chariot.
-
-The lady made no reply, but stared coldly at the child: then she spoke
-a word to her coachman, and he flicked his whip, and the chariot
-rolled away swiftly in a cloud of dust, and disappeared.
-
-The dust filled the child's eyes and mouth, and made him choke and
-sneeze. He gasped for breath, and rubbed his eyes; but presently his
-mother came up, and wiped away the dust with her blue gingham apron.
-
-"That was not an angel!" said the child.
-
-"No, indeed!" said the mother. "Nothing like one!"
-
-The child danced on again, leaping and running from side to side of
-the road, and the mother followed as best she might.
-
-By and by the child met a most beautiful maiden, clad in a white
-dress. Her eyes were like blue stars, and the blushes came and went in
-her face like roses looking through snow.
-
-"I am sure you must be an angel!" cried the child.
-
-The maiden blushed more sweetly than before. "You dear little child!"
-she cried. "Some one else said that, only last evening. Do I really
-look like an angel?"
-
-"You _are_ an angel!" said the child.
-
-The maiden took him up in her arms and kissed him, and held him
-tenderly.
-
-"You are the dearest little thing I ever saw!" she said. "Tell me what
-makes you think so!" But suddenly her face changed.
-
-"Oh!" she cried. "There he is, coming to meet me! And you have soiled
-my white dress with your dusty shoes, and pulled my hair all awry. Run
-away, child, and go home to your mother!"
-
-She set the child down, not unkindly, but so hastily that he stumbled
-and fell; but she did not see that, for she was hastening forward to
-meet her lover, who was coming along the road. (Now if the maiden had
-only known, he thought her twice as lovely with the child in her arms;
-but she did not know.)
-
-The child lay in the dusty road and sobbed, till his mother came along
-and picked him up, and wiped away the tears with her blue gingham apron.
-
-"I don't believe that was an angel, after all," he said.
-
-"No!" said the mother. "But she may be one some day. She is young yet."
-
-"I am tired!" said the child. "Will you carry me home, mother?"
-
-"Why, yes!" said the mother. "That is what I came for."
-
-The child put his arms round his mother's neck, and she held him tight
-and trudged along the road, singing the song he liked best.
-
-Suddenly he looked up in her face.
-
-"Mother," he said; "I don't suppose _you_ could be an angel, could you?"
-
-"Oh, what a foolish child!" said the mother. "Who ever heard of an
-angel in a blue gingham apron?" and she went on singing, and stepped
-out so bravely on her lame foot that no one would ever have known she
-was lame.
-
-
-
-
-THE APRON-STRING
-
-
-Once upon a time a boy played about the house, running by his mother's
-side; and as he was very little, his mother tied him to the string of
-her apron.
-
-"Now," she said, "when you stumble, you can pull yourself up by the
-apron-string, and so you will not fall."
-
-The boy did that, and all went well, and the mother sang at her work.
-
-By and by the boy grew so tall that his head came above the
-window-sill; and looking through the window, he saw far away green
-trees waving, and a flowing river that flashed in the sun, and rising
-above all, blue peaks of mountains.
-
-"Oh, mother," he said; "untie the apron-string and let me go!"
-
-But the mother said, "Not yet, my child! only yesterday you stumbled,
-and would have fallen but for the apron-string. Wait yet a little,
-till you are stronger."
-
-So the boy waited, and all went as before; and the mother sang at her
-work.
-
-But one day the boy found the door of the house standing open, for it
-was spring weather; and he stood on the threshold and looked across
-the valley, and saw the green trees waving, and the swift-flowing
-river with the sun flashing on it, and the blue mountains rising
-beyond; and this time he heard the voice of the river calling, and it
-said "Come!"
-
-Then the boy started forward, and as he started, the string of the
-apron broke.
-
-"Oh! how weak my mother's apron-string is!" cried the boy; and he ran
-out into the world, with the broken string hanging beside him.
-
-The mother gathered up the other end of the string and put it in her
-bosom, and went about her work again; but she sang no more.
-
-The boy ran on and on, rejoicing in his freedom, and in the fresh
-air and the morning sun. He crossed the valley, and began to climb
-the foothills among which the river flowed swiftly, among rocks and
-cliffs. Now it was easy climbing, and again it was steep and craggy,
-but always he looked upward at the blue peaks beyond, and always the
-voice of the river was in his ears, saying "Come!"
-
-By and by he came to the brink of a precipice, over which the river
-dashed in a cataract, foaming and flashing, and sending up clouds of
-silver spray. The spray filled his eyes, so that he did not see his
-footing clearly; he grew dizzy, stumbled, and fell. But as he fell,
-something about him caught on a point of rock at the precipice-edge,
-and held him, so that he hung dangling over the abyss; and when he
-put up his hand to see what held him, he found that it was the broken
-string of the apron, which still hung by his side.
-
-"Oh! how strong my mother's apron-string is!" said the boy: and
-he drew himself up by it, and stood firm on his feet, and went on
-climbing toward the blue peaks of the mountains.
-
-
-
-
-THE SHADOW
-
-
-An Angel heard a child crying one day, and came to see what ailed it.
-He found the little one sitting on the ground, with the sun at its
-back (for the day was young), looking at its own shadow, which lay on
-the ground before it, and weeping bitterly.
-
-"What ails you, little one?" asked the Angel.
-
-"The world is so dark!" said the child. "See, it is all dusky gray,
-and there is no beauty in it. Why must I stay in this sad, gray world?"
-
-"Do you not hear the birds singing, and the other children calling at
-their play?" asked the Angel.
-
-"Yes," said the child; "I hear them, but I do not know where they are.
-I cannot see them, I see only the shadow. Moreover, if they saw it,
-they would not sing and call, but would weep as I do."
-
-The Angel lifted the child, and set it on its feet, with its face to
-the early sun.
-
-"Look!" said the Angel.
-
-The child brushed away the tears from its eyes and looked. Before them
-lay the fields all green and gold, shining with dewdrops, and the
-other children were running to and fro, laughing and shouting, and
-crowning one another with blossoms.
-
-"Why, there are the children!" said the little one.
-
-"Yes," said the Angel; "there they are."
-
-"And the sun is shining!" cried the child.
-
-"Yes," said the Angel; "it was shining all the time."
-
-"And the shadow is gone!"
-
-"Oh, no!" said the Angel; "the shadow is behind you, where it belongs.
-Run, now, and gather flowers for the littlest one, who sits in the
-grass there!"
-
-
-
-
-THE SAILOR MAN
-
-
-Once upon a time two children came to the house of a sailor man, who
-lived beside the salt sea; and they found the sailor man sitting in
-his doorway knotting ropes.
-
-"How do you do?" asked the sailor man.
-
-"We are very well, thank you," said the children, who had learned
-manners, "and we hope you are the same. We heard that you had a boat,
-and we thought that perhaps you would take us out in her, and teach us
-how to sail, for that is what we wish most to know."
-
- [Illustration: THE SAILOR MAN.
- [_Page 34._]
-
-"All in good time," said the sailor man. "I am busy now, but by and
-by, when my work is done, I may perhaps take one of you if you are
-ready to learn. Meantime here are some ropes that need knotting; you
-might be doing that, since it has to be done." And he showed them
-how the knots should be tied, and went away and left them.
-
-When he was gone the first child ran to the window and looked out.
-
-"There is the sea," he said. "The waves come up on the beach, almost
-to the door of the house. They run up all white, like prancing horses,
-and then they go dragging back. Come and look!"
-
-"I cannot," said the second child. "I am tying a knot."
-
-"Oh!" cried the first child, "I see the boat. She is dancing like a
-lady at a ball; I never saw such a beauty. Come and look!"
-
-"I cannot," said the second child. "I am tying a knot."
-
-"I shall have a delightful sail in that boat," said the first child.
-"I expect that the sailor man will take me, because I am the eldest
-and I know more about it. There was no need of my watching when he
-showed you the knots, because I knew how already."
-
-Just then the sailor man came in.
-
-"Well," he said, "my work is over. What have you been doing in the
-meantime?"
-
-"I have been looking at the boat," said the first child. "What a beauty
-she is! I shall have the best time in her that ever I had in my life."
-
-"I have been tying knots," said the second child.
-
-"Come, then," said the sailor man, and he held out his hand to the
-second child. "I will take you out in the boat, and teach you to sail
-her."
-
-"But I am the eldest," cried the first child, "and I know a great deal
-more than she does."
-
-"That may be," said the sailor man; "but a person must learn to tie a
-knot before he can learn to sail a boat."
-
-"But I have learned to tie a knot," cried the child. "I know all about
-it!"
-
-"How can I tell that?" asked the sailor man.
-
-
-
-
-"GO" AND "COME"
-
-
-"Little boy," said the nurse one day, "you would be far better at work.
-Your garden needs weeding sadly; go now and weed it, like a good child!"
-
-But the little boy did not feel like weeding that day.
-
-"I can't do it," he said.
-
-"Oh! yes, you can," said the nurse.
-
-"Well, I don't want to," said the little boy.
-
-"But you must!" said the nurse. "Don't be naughty, but go at once and
-do your work as I bid you!"
-
-She went away about her own work, for she was very industrious; but
-the little boy sat still, and thought himself ill-used.
-
-By and by his mother came into the room and saw him.
-
-"What is the matter, little boy?" she asked; for he looked like a
-three-days' rain.
-
-"Nurse told me to weed my garden," said the little boy.
-
-"Oh," said his mother, "what fun that will be! I love to weed, and it
-is such a fine day! Mayn't I come and help?"
-
-"Why, yes," said the little boy. "You may." And they weeded the garden
-beautifully, and had a glorious time.
-
-
-
-
-CHILD'S PLAY
-
-
-Once a child was sitting on a great log that lay by the roadside,
-playing; and another child came along, and stopped to speak to him.
-
-"What are you doing?" asked the second child.
-
-"I am sailing to the Southern Seas," replied the first, "to get a
-cargo of monkeys, and elephant tusks, and crystal balls as large as
-oranges. Come up here, and you may sail with me if you like."
-
-So the second child climbed upon the log.
-
-"Look!" said the first child. "See how the foam bubbles up before the
-ship, and trails and floats away behind! Look! the water is so clear
-that we can see the fishes swimming about, blue and red and green.
-There goes a parrot-fish; my father told me about them. I should not
-wonder if we saw a whale in about a minute."
-
-"What are you talking about?" asked the second child, peevishly.
-"There is no water here, only grass; and anyhow this is nothing but a
-log. You cannot get to islands in this way."
-
-"But we _have_ got to them," cried the first child. "We are at them
-now. I see the palm-trees waving, and the white sand glittering. Look!
-there are the natives gathering to welcome us on the beach. They have
-feather cloaks, and necklaces, and anklets of copper as red as gold.
-Oh! and there is an elephant coming straight toward us."
-
-"I should think you would be ashamed," said the second child. "That is
-Widow Slocum."
-
-"It's all the same," said the first child.
-
-Presently the second child got down from the log.
-
-"I am going to play stick-knife," he said. "I don't see any sense in
-this. I think you are pretty dull to play things that aren't really
-there." And he walked slowly away.
-
-The first child looked after him a moment.
-
-"I think _you_ are pretty dull," he said to himself, "to see nothing
-but what is under your nose."
-
-But he was too well-mannered to say this aloud; and having taken in
-his cargo, he sailed for another port.
-
-
-
-
-LITTLE JOHN BOTTLEJOHN
-
-
- Little John Bottlejohn lived on the hill,
- And a blithe little man was he.
- And he won the heart of a pretty mermaid
- Who lived in the deep blue sea.
- And every evening she used to sit
- And sing on the rocks by the sea,
- "Oh! little John Bottlejohn, pretty John Bottlejohn,
- Won't you come out to me?"
-
- Little John Bottlejohn heard her song,
- And he opened his little door.
- And he hopped and he skipped, and he skipped and he hopped,
- Until he came down to the shore.
- And there on the rocks sat the little mermaid,
- And still she was singing so free,
- "Oh! little John Bottlejohn, pretty John Bottlejohn,
- Won't you come out to me?"
-
- Little John Bottlejohn made a bow,
- And the mermaid, she made one too,
- And she said, "Oh! I never saw any one half
- So perfectly sweet as you!
- In my lovely home 'neath the ocean foam,
- How happy we both might be!
- Oh! little John Bottlejohn, pretty John Bottlejohn,
- Won't you come down with me?"
-
- Little John Bottlejohn said, "Oh yes!
- I'll willingly go with you.
- And I never shall quail at the sight of your tail,
- For perhaps I may grow one too."
- So he took her hand, and he left the land,
- And plunged in the foaming main.
- And little John Bottlejohn, pretty John Bottlejohn,
- Never was seen again.
-
-
-
-
-A FORTUNE
-
-
-One day a man was walking along the street, and he was sad at heart.
-Business was dull; he had set his desire upon a horse that cost a
-thousand dollars, and he had only eight hundred to buy it with. There
-were other things, to be sure, that might be bought with eight hundred
-dollars, but he did not want those; so he was sorrowful, and thought
-the world a bad place.
-
-As he walked, he saw a child running toward him; it was a strange
-child, but when he looked at it, its face lightened like sunshine, and
-broke into smiles. The child held out its closed hand.
-
-"Guess what I have!" it cried gleefully.
-
-"Something fine, I am sure!" said the man.
-
-The child nodded and drew nearer; then opened its hand.
-
-"Look!" it said; and the street rang with its happy laughter. The man
-looked, and in the child's hand lay a penny.
-
-"Hurrah!" said the child.
-
-"Hurrah!" said the man.
-
-Then they parted, and the child went and bought a stick of candy, and
-saw all the world red and white in stripes.
-
-The man went and put his eight hundred dollars in the savings-bank,
-all but fifty cents, and with the fifty cents he bought a hobby-horse
-for his own little boy, and the little boy saw all the world brown,
-with white spots.
-
-"Is this the horse you wanted so to buy, father?" asked the little boy.
-
-"It is the horse I have bought!" said the man.
-
-"Hurrah!" said the little boy.
-
-"Hurrah!" said the man. And he saw that the world was a good place
-after all.
-
-
-
-
-THE STARS
-
-
-A little dear child lay in its crib and sobbed, because it was afraid
-of the dark. And its father, in the room below, heard the sobs, and
-came up, and said,
-
-"What ails you, my dearie, and why do you cry?"
-
-And the child said, "Oh, father, I am afraid of the dark. Nurse says I
-am too big to have a taper; but all the corners are full of dreadful
-blackness, and I think there are Things in them with eyes, that would
-look at me if I looked at them; and if they looked at me I should die.
-Oh, father, why is it dark? why is there such a terrible thing as
-darkness? why cannot it be always day?"
-
-The father took the child in his arms and carried it downstairs and
-out into the summer night.
-
-"Look up, dearie!" he said, in his strong, kind voice. "Look up, and
-see God's little lights!"
-
-The little one looked up, and saw the stars, spangling the blue veil
-of the sky; bright as candles they burned, and yellow as gold.
-
-"Oh, father," cried the child; "what are those lovely things?"
-
-"Those are stars," said the father. "Those are God's little lights."
-
-"But why have I never seen them before?"
-
-"Because you are a very little child, and have never been out in the
-night before."
-
-"Can I see the stars only at night, father?"
-
-"Only at night, my child!"
-
-"Do they only come then, father?"
-
-"No; they are always there, but we cannot see them when the sun is
-shining."
-
-"But, father, the darkness is not terrible here, it is beautiful!"
-
-"Yes, dearie; the darkness is always beautiful, if we will only look
-up at the stars, instead of into the corners."
-
-
-
-
-BUTTERCUP GOLD
-
-
-Oh! the cupperty-buts! and oh! the cupperty-buts! out in the meadow,
-shining under the trees, and sparkling over the lawn, millions and
-millions of them, each one a bit of purest gold from Mother Nature's
-mint. Jessy stood at the window, looking out at them, and thinking, as
-she often had thought before, that there were no flowers so beautiful.
-"Cupperty-buts," she had been used to call them, when she was a wee
-baby-girl and could not speak without tumbling over her words and
-mixing them up in the queerest fashion; and now that she was a very
-great girl, actually six years old, they were still cupperty-buts to
-her, and would never be anything else, she said. There was nothing
-she liked better than to watch the lovely golden things, and nod to
-them as they nodded to her; but this morning her little face looked
-anxious and troubled, and she gazed at the flowers with an intent and
-inquiring look, as if she had expected them to reply to her unspoken
-thoughts. What these thoughts were I am going to tell you.
-
-Half an hour before, she had called to her mother, who was just going
-out, and begged her to come and look at the cupperty-buts.
-
-"They are brighter than ever, Mamma! Do just come and look at them!
-golden, golden, golden! There must be fifteen thousand million
-dollars' worth of gold just on the lawn, I should think."
-
-And her mother, pausing to look out, said, very sadly,--
-
-"Ah, my darling! if I only had this day a little of that gold, what a
-happy woman I should be!"
-
-And then the good mother went out, and there little Jessy stood,
-gazing at the flowers, and repeating the words to herself, over and
-over again,--
-
-"If I only had a little of that gold!"
-
-She knew that her mother was very, very poor, and had to go out to
-work every day to earn food and clothes for herself and her little
-daughter; and the child's tender heart ached to think of the sadness
-in the dear mother's look and tone. Suddenly Jessy started, and the
-sunshine flashed into her face.
-
-"Why!" she exclaimed, "why shouldn't I get some of the gold from
-the cupperty-buts? I believe I could get some, perfectly well. When
-Mamma wants to get the juice out of anything, meat, or fruit, or
-anything of that sort, she just boils it. And so, if I should boil the
-cupperty-buts, wouldn't all the gold come out? Of course it would! Oh,
-joy! how pleased Mamma will be!"
-
-Jessy's actions always followed her thoughts with great rapidity. In
-five minutes she was out on the lawn, with a huge basket beside her,
-pulling away at the buttercups with might and main. Oh! how small they
-were, and how long it took even to cover the bottom of the basket. But
-Jessy worked with a will, and at the end of an hour she had picked
-enough to make at least a thousand dollars, as she calculated. That
-would do for one day, she thought; and now for the grand experiment!
-Before going out she had with much labor filled the great kettle with
-water, so now the water was boiling, and she had only to put the
-buttercups in and put the cover on. When this was done, she sat as
-patiently as she could, trying to pay attention to her knitting, and
-not to look at the clock oftener than every two minutes.
-
-"They must boil for an hour," she said; "and by that time all the gold
-will have come out."
-
-Well, the hour did pass, somehow or other, though it was a very long
-one; and at eleven o'clock, Jessy, with a mighty effort, lifted the
-kettle from the stove and carried it to the open door, that the fresh
-air might cool the boiling water. At first, when she lifted the cover,
-such a cloud of steam came out that she could see nothing; but in a
-moment the wind blew the steam aside, and then she saw,--oh, poor
-little Jessy!--she saw a mass of weeds floating about in a quantity
-of dirty, greenish water, and that was all. Not the smallest trace of
-gold, even in the buttercups themselves, was to be seen. Poor little
-Jessy! she tried hard not to cry, but it was a bitter disappointment;
-the tears came rolling down her cheeks faster and faster, till at
-length she sat down by the kettle, and, burying her face in her apron,
-sobbed as if her heart would break.
-
-Presently, through her sobs, she heard a kind voice saying, "What
-is the matter, little one? Why do you cry so bitterly?" She looked
-up and saw an old gentleman with white hair and a bright, cheery
-face, standing by her. At first, Jessy could say nothing but "Oh!
-the cupperty-buts! oh! the cupperty-buts!" but, of course, the old
-gentleman didn't know what she meant by that, so, as he urged her
-to tell him about her trouble, she dried her eyes, and told him the
-melancholy little story: how her mother was very poor, and said she
-wished she had some gold; and how she herself had tried to get the gold
-out of the buttercups by boiling them. "I was so sure I could get it
-out," she said, "and I thought Mamma would be so pleased! And now--"
-
-Here she was very near breaking down again; but the gentleman patted
-her head and said, cheerfully, "Wait a bit, little woman! Don't give
-up the ship yet. You know that gold is heavy, very heavy indeed, and
-if there were any it would be at the very bottom of the kettle, all
-covered with the weeds, so that you could not see it. I should not be
-at all surprised if you found some, after all. Run into the house and
-bring me a spoon with a long handle, and we will fish in the kettle,
-and see what we can find."
-
-Jessy's face brightened, and she ran into the house. If any one had
-been standing near just at that moment, I think it is possible that
-he might have seen the old gentleman's hand go into his pocket and
-out again very quickly, and might have heard a little splash in the
-kettle; but nobody was near, so, of course, I cannot say anything
-about it. At any rate, when Jessy came out with the spoon, he was
-standing with both hands in his pockets, looking in the opposite
-direction. He took the great iron spoon and fished about in the kettle
-for some time. At last there was a little clinking noise, and the old
-gentleman lifted the spoon. Oh, wonder and delight! In it lay three
-great, broad, shining pieces of gold! Jessy could hardly believe her
-eyes. She stared and stared; and when the old gentleman put the gold
-into her hand, she still stood as if in a happy dream, gazing at it.
-Suddenly she started, and remembered that she had not thanked her
-kindly helper. She looked up, and began, "Thank you, sir;" but the old
-gentleman was gone.
-
-Well, the next question was, How could Jessy possibly wait till twelve
-o'clock for her mother to come home? Knitting was out of the question.
-She could do nothing but dance and look out of window, and look out
-of window and dance, holding the precious coins tight in her hand. At
-last, a well-known footstep was heard outside the door, and Mrs. Gray
-came in, looking very tired and worn. She smiled, however, when she
-saw Jessy, and said,--
-
-"Well, my darling, I am glad to see you looking so bright. How has
-the morning gone with my little housekeeper?"
-
-"Oh, mother!" cried Jessy, hopping about on one foot, "it has gone
-very well! oh, very, _very, very_ well! Oh, my mother dear, what do
-you think I have got in my hand? _What_ do you think? oh, what _do_
-you think?" and she went dancing round and round, till poor Mrs. Gray
-was quite dizzy with watching her. At last she stopped, and holding
-out her hand, opened it and showed her mother what was in it. Mrs.
-Gray was really frightened.
-
-"Jessy, my child!" she cried, "where did you get all that money?"
-
-"Out of the cupperty-buts, Mamma!" said Jessy, "out of the
-cupperty-buts! and it's all for you, every bit of it! Dear Mamma, now
-you will be happy, will you not?"
-
-"Jessy," said Mrs. Gray, "have you lost your senses, or are you
-playing some trick on me? Tell me all about this at once, dear child,
-and don't talk nonsense."
-
-"But it isn't nonsense, Mamma!" cried Jessy, "and it did come out of
-the cupperty-buts!"
-
-And then she told her mother the whole story. The tears came into Mrs.
-Gray's eyes, but they were tears of joy and gratitude.
-
-"Jessy dear," she said, "when we say our prayers at night, let us
-never forget to pray for that good gentleman. May Heaven bless him and
-reward him! for if it had not been for him, Jessy dear, I fear you
-would never have found the 'Buttercup Gold.'"
-
-
-
-
-THE PATIENT CAT
-
-
-When the spotted cat first found the nest, there was nothing in it,
-for it was only just finished. So she said, "I will wait!" for she was
-a patient cat, and the summer was before her. She waited a week, and
-then she climbed up again to the top of the tree, and peeped into the
-nest. There lay two lovely blue eggs, smooth and shining.
-
-The spotted cat said, "Eggs may be good, but young birds are better. I
-will wait." So she waited; and while she was waiting, she caught mice
-and rats, and washed herself and slept, and did all that a spotted cat
-should do to pass the time away.
-
-When another week had passed, she climbed the tree again and peeped
-into the nest. This time there were five eggs. But the spotted cat
-said again, "Eggs may be good, but young birds are better. I will wait
-a little longer!"
-
-So she waited a little longer and then went up again to look. Ah!
-there were five tiny birds, with big eyes and long necks, and yellow
-beaks wide open. Then the spotted cat sat down on the branch, and
-licked her nose and purred, for she was very happy. "It is worth while
-to be patient!" she said.
-
-But when she looked again at the young birds, to see which one she
-should take first, she saw that they were very thin,--oh, very, very
-thin they were! The spotted cat had never seen anything so thin in her
-life.
-
-"Now," she said to herself, "if I were to wait only a few days longer,
-they would grow fat. Thin birds may be good, but fat birds are much
-better. I will wait!"
-
-So she waited; and she watched the father-bird bringing worms all day
-long to the nest, and said, "Aha! they must be fattening fast! they
-will soon be as fat as I wish them to be. Aha! what a good thing it
-is to be patient."
-
-At last, one day she thought, "Surely, now they must be fat enough! I
-will not wait another day. Aha! how good they will be!"
-
-So she climbed up the tree, licking her chops all the way and thinking
-of the fat young birds. And when she reached the top and looked into
-the nest, it was empty!!
-
-Then the spotted cat sat down on the branch and spoke thus, "Well,
-of all the horrid, mean, ungrateful creatures I ever saw, those
-birds are the horridest, and the meanest, and the most ungrateful!
-Mi-a-u-ow!!!!"
-
-
-
-
-ALICE'S SUPPER
-
-
- Far down in the meadow the wheat grows green,
- And the reapers are whetting their sickles so keen;
- And this is the song that I hear them sing,
- While cheery and loud their voices ring:
- "'Tis the finest wheat that ever did grow!
- And it is for Alice's supper, ho! ho!"
-
- Far down in the valley the old mill stands,
- And the miller is rubbing his dusty white hands;
- And these are the words of the miller's lay,
- As he watches the millstones a-grinding away:
- "'Tis the finest flour that money can buy,
- And it is for Alice's supper, hi! hi!"
-
- Downstairs in the kitchen the fire doth glow,
- And Maggie is kneading the soft white dough,
- And this is the song that she's singing to-day,
- While merry and busy she's working away:
- "'Tis the finest dough, by near or by far,
- And it is for Alice's supper, ha! ha!"
-
- And now to the nursery comes Nannie at last,
- And what in her hand is she bringing so fast?
- 'Tis a plate full of something all yellow and white,
- And she sings as she comes with her smile so bright:
- "'Tis the best bread-and-butter I ever did see!
- And it is for Alice's supper, he! he!"
-
-
-
-
-THE QUACKY DUCK
-
-
-The Quacky Duck stood on the bank of the stream. And the frogs came
-and sat on stones and insulted him. Now the words which the frogs used
-were these,--
-
- "Ya! ha! he hasn't any hind-legs!
- Ya! ha! he hasn't any fore-legs!
- Oh! what horrid luck
- To be a Quacky Duck!"
-
-These were not pleasant words. And when the Quacky Duck heard them, he
-considered within himself whether it would not be best for him to eat
-the frogs.
-
-"Two good things would come of it," he said. "I should have a savoury
-meal, and their remarks would no longer be audible."
-
-So he fell upon the frogs, and they fled before him. And one jumped
-into the water, and one jumped on the land, and another jumped into the
-reeds; for such is their manner. But one of them, being in fear, saw
-not clearly the way he should go, and jumped even upon the back of the
-Quacky Duck. Now, this displeased the Quacky Duck, and he said, "If you
-will remove yourself from my person, we will speak further of this."
-
-So the frog, being also willing, strove to remove himself, and the
-result was that they two, being on the edge of the bank, fell into the
-water. Then the frog departed swiftly, saying, "Solitude is best for
-meditation."
-
-But the Quacky Duck, having hit his head against a stone, sank to the
-bottom of the pond, where he found himself in the frogs' kitchen. And
-there he spied a fish, which the frogs had caught for their dinner,
-intending to share it in a brotherly manner, for it was a savoury
-fish. When the Quacky Duck saw it, he was glad; and he said, "Fish is
-better than frog" (for he was an English duck)! And, taking the fish,
-he swam with speed to the shore.
-
-Now the frogs lamented when they saw him go, for they said, "He has
-our savoury fish!" And they wept, and reviled the Quacky Duck.
-
-But he said, "Be comforted! for if I had not found the fish, I should
-assuredly have eaten you. Therefore, say now, which is the better for
-you?" And he ate the fish, and departed joyful.
-
-
-
-
-AT THE LITTLE BOY'S HOME
-
-
-It was a very hot day, and the little boy was lying on his stomach
-under the big linden tree, reading the "Scottish Chiefs."
-
-"Little Boy," said his mother, "will you please go out in the garden
-and bring me a head of lettuce?"
-
-"Oh, I--can't!" said the little boy. "I'm--too--_hot_!"
-
-The little boy's father happened to be close by, weeding the geranium
-bed; and when he heard this, he lifted the little boy gently by his
-waistband, and dipped him in the great tub of water that stood ready
-for watering the plants.
-
-"There, my son!" said the father. "Now you are cool enough to go and
-get the lettuce; but remember next time that it will be easier to go
-at once when you are told, as then you will not have to change your
-clothes."
-
-The little boy went drip, drip, dripping out into the garden and
-brought the lettuce; then he went drip, drip, dripping into the house
-and changed his clothes; but he said never a word, for he knew there
-was nothing to say.
-
-That is the way they do things where the little boy lives. Would you
-like to live there? Perhaps not; yet he is a happy little boy, and he
-is learning the truth of the old saying,--
-
- "Come when you're called, do as you're bid,
- Shut the door after you, and you'll never be chid."
-
-
-
-
-NEW YEAR
-
-
-The little sweet Child tied on her hood, and put on her warm cloak and
-mittens. "I am going to the wood," she said, "to tell the creatures
-all about it. They cannot understand about Christmas, mamma says, and
-of course she knows, but I do think they ought to know about New Year!"
-
-Out in the wood the snow lay light and powdery on the branches, but
-under foot it made a firm, smooth floor, over which the Child could
-walk lightly without sinking in. She saw other footprints beside
-her own, tiny bird-tracks, little hopping marks, which showed where
-a rabbit had taken his way, traces of mice and squirrels and other
-little wild-wood beasts.
-
-The child stood under a great hemlock-tree, and looked up toward the
-clear blue sky, which shone far away beyond the dark tree-tops. She
-spread her hands abroad and called, "Happy New Year! Happy New Year to
-everybody in the wood, and all over the world!"
-
-A rustling was heard in the hemlock branches, and a striped squirrel
-peeped down at her. "What do you mean by that, little Child?" he
-asked. And then from all around came other squirrels, came little
-field-mice, and hares swiftly leaping, and all the winter birds,
-titmouse and snow-bird, and many another; and they all wanted to know
-what the Child meant by her greeting, for they had never heard the
-words before.
-
-"It means that God is giving us another year!" said the Child. "Four
-more seasons, each lovelier than the last, just as it was last year.
-Flowers will bud, and then they will blossom, and then the fruit will
-hang all red and golden on the branches, for birds and men and little
-children to eat." "And squirrels, too!" cried the chipmunk, eagerly.
-
-"Of course!" said the Child. "Squirrels, too, and every creature that
-lives in the good green wood. And this is not all! We can do over
-again the things that we tried to do last year, and perhaps failed in
-doing. We have another chance to be good and kind, to do little loving
-things that help, and to cure ourselves of doing naughty things. Our
-hearts can have lovely new seasons, like the flowers and trees and
-all the sweet things that grow and bear leaves and fruit. I thought I
-would come and tell you all this, because sometimes one does not think
-of things till one hears them from another's lips. Are you glad I
-came? If you are glad, say Happy New Year! each in his own way! I say
-it to you all now in my way. Happy New Year! Happy New Year!"
-
-Such a noise as broke out then had never been heard in the wood since
-the oldest hemlock was a baby, and that was a long time ago. Chirping,
-twittering, squeaking, chattering! The wood-doves lit on the Child's
-shoulder and cooed in her ear, and she knew just what they said. The
-squirrels made a long speech, and meant every word of it, which is
-more than people always do; the field-mouse said that she was going to
-turn over a new leaf, the very biggest cabbage-leaf she could find;
-while the titmouse invited the whole company to dine with him, a thing
-he had never done in his life before.
-
-When the Child turned to leave the wood, the joyful chorus followed
-her, and she went, smiling, home and told her mother all about it.
-"And, mother," she said, "I should not be surprised if they had got a
-little bit of Christmas, after all, along with their New Year!"
-
-
-
-
-JACKY FROST
-
-
- Jacky Frost, Jacky Frost,
- Came in the night;
- Left the meadows that he crossed
- All gleaming white.
- Painted with his silver brush
- Every window-pane;
- Kissed the leaves and made them blush,
- Blush and blush again.
-
- Jacky Frost, Jacky Frost,
- Crept around the house,
- Sly as a silver fox,
- Still as a mouse.
- Out little Jenny came,
- Blushing like a rose;
- Up jumped Jacky Frost,
- And pinched her little nose.
-
-
-
-
-THE CAKE
-
-
-Once a Cake would go seek his fortune in the world, and he took his
-leave of the Pan he was baked in.
-
-"I know my destiny," said the Cake. "I must be eaten, since to that
-end I was made; but I am a good cake, if I say it who should not, and
-I would fain choose the persons I am to benefit."
-
-"I don't see what difference it makes to you!" said the Pan.
-
-"But imagination is hardly your strong point!" said the Cake.
-
-"Huh!" said the Pan.
-
-The Cake went on his way, and soon he passed by a cottage door where
-sat a woman spinning, and her ten children playing about her.
-
-"Oh!" said the woman, "what a beautiful cake!" and she put out her
-hand to take him.
-
-"Be so good as to wait a moment!" said the Cake. "Will you kindly tell
-me what you would do with me if I should yield myself up to you?"
-
-"I shall break you into ten pieces," said the woman, "and give one to
-each of my ten children. So you will give ten pleasures, and that is a
-good thing."
-
-"Oh, that would be very nice, I am sure," said the Cake; "but if you
-will excuse me for mentioning it, your children seem rather dirty,
-especially their hands, and I confess I should like to keep my
-frosting unsullied, so I think I will go a little further."
-
-"As you will!" said the woman. "After all, the brown loaf is better
-for the children."
-
-So the Cake went further, and met a fair child, richly dressed, with
-coral lips and eyes like sunlit water. When the child saw the Cake, he
-said like the woman, "Oh, what a beautiful Cake!" and put out his hand
-to take it.
-
-"I am sure I should be most happy!" said the Cake. "And you will not
-take it amiss, I am confident, if I ask with whom you will share me."
-
-"I shall not share you with any one!" said the child. "I shall eat you
-myself, every crumb. What do you take me for?"
-
-"Good gracious!" cried the Cake. "This will never do. Consider my
-size,--and yours! You would be very ill!"
-
-"I don't care!" said the child. "I'd rather be ill than give any
-away." And he fixed greedy eyes on the Cake, and stretched forth his
-hand again.
-
-"This is really terrible!" cried the Cake. "What is one's frosting to
-this? I will go back to the woman with the ten children."
-
-He turned and ran back, leaving the child screaming with rage and
-disappointed greed. But as he ran, a hungry Puppy met him, and swallowed
-him at a gulp, and went on licking his chops and wagging his tail.
-
-"Huh!" said the Pan.
-
-
-
-
-"OH, DEAR!"
-
-
-Chimborazo was a very unhappy boy. He pouted, and he sulked, and
-he said, "Oh, dear! oh, dear! oh, dear! oh, dear!" He said it till
-everybody was tired of hearing it.
-
-"Chimborazo," his mother would say, "please don't say, 'Oh, dear!' any
-more. It is very annoying. Say something else."
-
-"Oh, dear!" the boy would answer, "I can't! I don't know anything else
-to say. Oh, dear! Oh, _dear_!! oh, DEAR!!!"
-
-One day his mother could not bear it any longer, and she sent for his
-fairy godmother, and told her all about it.
-
-"Humph!" said the fairy godmother. "I will see to it. Send the boy to
-me!"
-
-So Chimborazo was sent for, and came, hanging his head as usual. When
-he saw his fairy godmother, he said, "Oh, dear!" for he was rather
-afraid of her.
-
-"'Oh, dear!' it is!" said the godmother sharply; and she put on her
-spectacles and looked at him. "Do you know what a bell-punch is?"
-
-"Oh, dear!" said Chimborazo. "No, ma'am, I don't!"
-
-"Well," said the godmother, "I am going to give you one."
-
-"Oh, dear!" said Chimborazo, "I don't want one."
-
-"Probably not," replied she, "but that doesn't make much difference.
-You have it now, in your jacket pocket."
-
-Chimborazo felt in his pocket, and took out a queer-looking instrument
-of shining metal. "Oh, dear!" he said.
-
-"'Oh, dear!' it is!" said the fairy godmother. "Now," she continued,
-"listen to me, Chimborazo! I am going to put you on an allowance
-of 'Oh, dears.' This is a self-acting bell-punch, and it will ring
-whenever you say 'Oh, dear!' How many times do you generally say it in
-the course of the day?"
-
-"Oh, dear!" said Chimborazo, "I don't know. Oh, _dear_!"
-
-"_Ting! ting!_" the bell-punch rang twice sharply; and looking at it
-in dismay, he saw two little round holes punched in a long slip of
-pasteboard which was fastened to the instrument.
-
-"Exactly!" said the fairy. "That is the way it works, and a very
-pretty way, too. Now, my boy, I am going to make you a very liberal
-allowance. You may say 'Oh, dear!' forty-five times a day. There's
-liberality for you!"
-
-"Oh, dear!" cried Chimborazo, "I----"
-
-"_Ting!_" said the bell-punch.
-
-"You see!" observed the fairy. "Nothing could be prettier. You have
-now had three of this day's allowance. It is still some hours before
-noon, so I advise you to be careful. If you exceed the allowance----"
-Here she paused, and glowered through her spectacles in a very
-dreadful manner.
-
-"Oh, dear!" cried Chimborazo. "What will happen then?"
-
-"You will see!" said the fairy godmother, with a nod. "_Something_
-will happen, you may be very sure of that. Good-by. Remember, only
-forty-five!" And away she flew out of the window.
-
-"Oh, dear!" cried Chimborazo, bursting into tears. "I don't want it! I
-won't have it! Oh, _dear_! oh, dear! oh, dear! oh, dear! oh, DEAR!!!"
-
-"Ting! ting! ting-ting-ting-_ting_!" said the bell-punch; and now
-there were ten round holes in the strip of pasteboard. Chimborazo
-was now really frightened. He was silent for some time; and when
-his mother called him to his lessons he tried very hard not to say
-the dangerous words. But the habit was so strong that he said them
-unconsciously. By dinnertime there were twenty-five holes in the
-cardboard strip; by tea-time there were forty! Poor Chimborazo! he was
-afraid to open his lips, for whenever he did the words would slip out
-in spite of him.
-
-"Well, Chimbo," said his father after tea, "I hear you have had a
-visit from your fairy godmother. What did she say to you, eh?"
-
-"Oh, dear!" said Chimborazo, "she said--oh, dear! I've said it again!"
-
-"She said, 'Oh, dear! I've said it again!'" repeated his father. "What
-do you mean by that?"
-
-"Oh, dear! I didn't mean that," cried Chimborazo hastily; and again
-the inexorable bell rang, and he knew that another hole was punched
-in the fatal cardboard. He pressed his lips firmly together, and did
-not open them again except to say "Good-night," until he was safe
-in his own room. Then he hastily drew the hated bell-punch from his
-pocket, and counted the holes in the strip of cardboard; there were
-forty-three! "Oh, _dear_!" cried the boy, forgetting himself again in
-his alarm, "only two more! Oh, _dear_! oh, DEAR! I've done it again!
-oh----" "Ting! ting!" went the bell-punch; and the cardboard was
-punched to the end. "Oh, dear!" cried Chimborazo, now beside himself
-with terror. "Oh, dear! oh, dear! oh, dear! oh, _dear_!! what will
-become of me?"
-
-A strange whirring noise was heard, then a loud clang; and the next
-moment the bell-punch, as if it were alive, flew out of his hand, out
-of the window, and was gone!
-
-Chimborazo stood breathless with terror for a few minutes, momentarily
-expecting that the roof would fall in on his head, or the floor blow
-up under his feet, or some appalling catastrophe of some kind follow;
-but nothing followed. Everything was quiet, and there seemed to be
-nothing to do but go to bed; and so to bed he went, and slept, only to
-dream that he was shot through the head with a bell-punch, and died
-saying, "Oh, dear!"
-
-The next morning, when Chimborazo came downstairs, his father said,
-"My boy, I am going to drive over to your grandfather's farm this
-morning; would you like to go with me?"
-
-A drive to the farm was one of the greatest pleasures Chimborazo had,
-so he answered promptly, "Oh, _dear_!"
-
-"Oh, very well!" said his father, looking much surprised. "You need
-not go, my son, if you do not want to. I will take Robert instead."
-
-Poor Chimborazo! He had opened his lips to say, "Thank you, papa. I
-should like to go _very_ much!" and, instead of these words, out had
-popped, in his most doleful tone, the now hated "Oh, dear!" He sat
-amazed; but was roused by his mother's calling him to breakfast.
-
-"Come, Chimbo," she said. "Here are sausages and scrambled eggs: and
-you are very fond of both of them. Which will you have?"
-
-Chimborazo hastened to say, "Sausages, please, mamma,"--that is, he
-hastened to _try_ to say it; but all his mother heard was, "Oh, _dear_!"
-
-His father looked much displeased. "Give the boy some bread and water,
-wife," he said sternly. "If he cannot answer properly, he must be
-taught. I have had enough of this 'oh, dear!' business."
-
-Poor Chimborazo! He saw plainly enough now what his punishment was
-to be; and the thought of it made him tremble. He tried to ask for
-some more bread, but only brought out his "Oh, _dear_!" in such a
-lamentable tone that his father ordered him to leave the room. He went
-out into the garden, and there he met John the gardener, carrying a
-basket of rosy apples. Oh! how good they looked!
-
-"I am bringing some of the finest apples up to the house, little
-master," said John. "Will you have one to put in your pocket?"
-
-"Oh, _dear_!" was all the poor boy could say, though he wanted an
-apple, oh, so much! And when John heard that he put the apple back in
-his basket, muttering something about ungrateful monkeys.
-
-Poor Chimborazo! I will not give the whole history of that miserable
-day,--a miserable day it was from beginning to end. He fared no better
-at dinner than at breakfast; for at the second "Oh, dear!" his father
-sent him up to his room, "to stay there until he knew how to take what
-was given him, and be thankful for it." He knew well enough by this
-time; but he could not tell his father so. He went to his room, and
-sat looking out of the window, a hungry and miserable boy.
-
-In the afternoon his cousin Will came up to see him. "Why, Chimbo!" he
-cried. "Why do you sit moping here in the house, when all the boys are
-out? Come and play marbles with me on the piazza. Ned and Harry are
-out there waiting for you. Come on!"
-
-"Oh, dear!" said Chimborazo.
-
-"What's the matter?" asked Will. "Haven't you any marbles? Never mind.
-I'll give you half of mine, if you like. Come!"
-
-"Oh, DEAR!" said Chimborazo.
-
-"Well," said Will, "if that's all you have to say when I offer you
-marbles, I'll keep them myself. I suppose you expected me to give you
-all of them, did you? I never saw such a fellow!" and off he went in a
-huff.
-
- * * * * *
-
-"Well, Chimborazo," said the fairy godmother, "what do you think of
-'Oh, dear!' now?"
-
-Chimborazo looked at her beseechingly, but said nothing.
-
-"Finding that forty-five times was not enough for you yesterday, I
-thought I would let you have all you wanted to-day, you see," said the
-fairy wickedly.
-
-The boy still looked imploringly at her, but did not open his lips.
-
-"Well, well," she said at last, touching his lips with her wand, "I
-think that is enough in the way of punishment, though I am sorry you
-broke the bell-punch. Good-by! I don't believe you will say 'Oh,
-dear!' any more."
-
-And he didn't.
-
-
-
-
-THE USEFUL COAL
-
-
-There was once a king whose name was Sligo. He was noted both for his
-riches and his kind heart. One evening, as he sat by his fireside, a
-coal fell out on the hearth. The king took up the tongs, intending to
-put it back on the fire, but the coal said:--
-
-"If you will spare my life, and do as I tell you, I will save your
-treasure three times, and tell you the name of the thief who steals it."
-
-These words gave the king great joy, for much treasure had been stolen
-from him of late, and none of his officers could discover the culprit.
-So he set the coal on the table, and said:--
-
-"Pretty little black and red bird, tell me, what shall I do?"
-
-"Put me in your waistcoat-pocket," said the coal, "and take no more
-thought for to-night."
-
-Accordingly the king put the coal in his pocket, and then, as he sat
-before the warm fire, he grew drowsy, and presently fell fast asleep.
-
-When he had been asleep some time, the door opened, very softly,
-and the High Cellarer peeped cautiously in. This was the one of the
-king's officers who had been most eager in searching for the thief.
-He now crept softly, softly, toward the king, and seeing that he was
-fast asleep, put his hand into his waistcoat-pocket; for in that
-waistcoat-pocket King Sligo kept the key of his treasure-chamber,
-and the High Cellarer was the thief. He put his hand into the
-waistcoat-pocket. S-s-s-s-s! the coal burned it so frightfully that he
-gave a loud shriek, and fell on his knees on the hearth.
-
-"What is the matter?" cried the king, waking with a start.
-
-"Alas! your Majesty," said the High Cellarer, thrusting his burnt
-fingers into his bosom, that the king might not see them. "You were
-just on the point of falling forward into the fire, and I cried out,
-partly from fright and partly to waken you."
-
-The king thanked the High Cellarer, and gave him a ruby ring as a
-reward. But when he was in his chamber, and making ready for bed, the
-coal said to him:--
-
-"Once already have I saved your treasure, and to-night I shall save
-it again. Only put me on the table beside your bed, and you may sleep
-with a quiet heart."
-
-So the king put the coal on the table, and himself into the bed, and
-was soon sound asleep. At midnight the door of the chamber opened very
-softly, and the High Cellarer peeped in again. He knew that at night
-King Sligo kept the key under his pillow, and he was coming to get it.
-He crept softly, softly, toward the bed, but as he drew near it, the
-coal cried out:--
-
-"One eye sleeps, but the other eye wakes! one eye sleeps, but the
-other eye wakes! Who is this comes creeping, while honest men are
-sleeping?"
-
-The High Cellarer looked about him in affright, and saw the coal
-burning fiery red in the darkness, and looking for all the world like
-a great flaming eye. In an agony of fear he fled from the chamber,
-crying,--
-
- "Black and red! black and red!
- The king has a devil to guard his bed."
-
-And he spent the rest of the night shivering in the farthest garret he
-could find.
-
-The next morning the coal said to the king:--
-
-"Again this night have I saved your treasure, and mayhap your life as
-well. Yet a third time I shall do it, and this time you shall learn
-the name of the thief. But if I do this, you must promise me one
-thing, and that is that you will place me in your royal crown and wear
-me as a jewel. Will you do this?"
-
-"That will I, right gladly!" replied King Sligo, "for a jewel indeed
-you are."
-
-"That is well!" said the coal. "It is true that I am dying; but no
-matter. It is a fine thing to be a jewel in a king's crown, even if
-one is dead. Now listen, and follow my directions closely. As soon
-as I am quite black and dead,--which will be in about ten minutes
-from now,--you must take me in your hand and rub me all over and
-around the handle of the door of the treasure-chamber. A good part
-of me will be rubbed off, but there will be enough left to put in
-your crown. When you have thoroughly rubbed the door, lay the key of
-the treasure-chamber on your table, as if you had left it there by
-mistake. You may then go hunting or riding, but not for more than an
-hour; and when you return, you must instantly call all your court
-together, as if on business of the greatest importance. Invent some
-excuse for asking them to raise their hands, and then arrest the man
-whose hands are black. Do you understand?"
-
-"I do!" replied King Sligo, fervently, "I do, and my warmest thanks,
-good Coal, are due to you for this--"
-
-But here he stopped, for already the coal was quite black, and in
-less than ten minutes it was dead and cold. Then the king took it
-and rubbed it carefully over the door of the treasure-chamber, and
-laying the key of the door in plain sight on his dressing-table, he
-called his huntsmen together, and mounting his horse, rode away to the
-forest. As soon as he was gone, the High Cellarer, who had pleaded
-a headache when asked to join the hunt, crept softly to the king's
-room, and to his surprise found the key on the table. Full of joy, he
-sought the treasure-chamber at once, and began filling his pockets
-with gold and jewels, which he carried to his own apartment, returning
-greedily for more. In this way he opened and closed the door many
-times. Suddenly, as he was stooping over a silver barrel containing
-sapphires, he heard the sound of a trumpet, blown once, twice, thrice.
-The wicked thief started, for it was the signal for the entire court
-to appear instantly before the king, and the penalty of disobedience
-was death. Hastily cramming a handful of sapphires into his pocket,
-he stumbled to the door, which he closed and locked, putting the
-key also in his pocket, as there was no time to return it. He flew
-to the presence-chamber, where the lords of the kingdom were hastily
-assembling.
-
-The king was seated on his throne, still in his hunting-dress, though
-he had put on his crown over his hat, which presented a peculiar
-appearance. It was with a majestic air, however, that he rose and
-said:--
-
-"Nobles, and gentlemen of my court! I have called you together to
-pray for the soul of my lamented grandmother, who died, as you may
-remember, several years ago. In token of respect, I desire you all to
-raise your hands to Heaven."
-
-The astonished courtiers, one and all, lifted their hands high in air.
-The king looked, and, behold! the hands of the High Cellarer were as
-black as soot! The king caused him to be arrested and searched, and
-the sapphires in his pocket, besides the key of the treasure-chamber,
-gave ample proof of his guilt. His head was removed at once, and
-the king had the useful coal, set in sapphires, placed in the very
-front of his crown, where it was much admired and praised as a BLACK
-DIAMOND.
-
-
-
-
-SONG OF THE LITTLE WINDS
-
-
- The birdies may sleep, but the winds must wake
- Early and late, for the birdies' sake.
- Kissing them, fanning them, soft and sweet,
- E'en till the dark and the dawning meet.
-
- The flowers may sleep, but the winds must wake
- Early and late, for the flowers' sake.
- Rocking the buds on the rose-mother's breast,
- Swinging the hyacinth-bells to rest.
-
- The children may sleep, but the winds must wake
- Early and late, for the children's sake.
- Singing so sweet in each little one's ear,
- He thinks his mother's own song to hear.
-
-
-
-
-THE THREE REMARKS
-
-
-There was once a princess, the most beautiful princess that ever was
-seen. Her hair was black and soft as the raven's wing; her eyes were
-like stars dropped in a pool of clear water, and her speech like the
-first tinkling cascade of the baby Nile. She was also wise, graceful,
-and gentle, so that one would have thought she must be the happiest
-princess in the world.
-
-But, alas! there was one terrible drawback to her happiness. She could
-make only three remarks. No one knew whether it was the fault of her
-nurse, or a peculiarity born with her; but the sad fact remained, that
-no matter what was said to her, she could only reply in one of three
-phrases. The first was,--
-
-"What is the price of butter?"
-
-The second, "Has your grandmother sold her mangle yet?"
-
-And the third, "With all my heart!"
-
-You may well imagine what a great misfortune this was to a young and
-lively princess. How could she join in the sports and dances of the
-noble youths and maidens of the court? She could not always be silent,
-neither could she always say, "With all my heart!" though this was her
-favorite phrase, and she used it whenever she possibly could; and it
-was not at all pleasant, when some gallant knight asked her whether
-she would rather play croquet or Aunt Sally, to be obliged to reply,
-"What is the price of butter?"
-
-On certain occasions, however, the princess actually found her
-infirmity of service to her. She could always put an end suddenly to
-any conversation that did not please her, by interposing with her
-first or second remark; and they were also a very great assistance
-to her when, as happened nearly every day, she received an offer
-of marriage. Emperors, kings, princes, dukes, earls, marquises,
-viscounts, baronets, and many other lofty personages knelt at her
-feet, and offered her their hands, hearts, and other possessions of
-greater or less value. But for all her suitors the princess had but
-one answer. Fixing her deep radiant eyes on them, she would reply with
-thrilling earnestness, "_Has_ your grandmother sold her mangle yet?"
-and this always impressed the suitors so deeply that they retired,
-weeping, to a neighboring monastery, where they hung up their armor in
-the chapel, and taking the vows, passed the remainder of their lives
-mostly in flogging themselves, wearing hair shirts, and putting dry
-toast-crumbs in their beds.
-
-Now, when the king found that all his best nobles were turning into
-monks, he was greatly displeased, and said to the princess:--
-
-"My daughter, it is high time that all this nonsense came to an end.
-The next time a respectable person asks you to marry him, you will
-say, 'With all my heart!' or I will know the reason why."
-
-But this the princess could not endure, for she had never yet seen
-a man whom she was willing to marry. Nevertheless, she feared her
-father's anger, for she knew that he always kept his word; so that
-very night she slipped down the back stairs of the palace, opened the
-back door, and ran away out into the wide world.
-
-She wandered for many days, over mountain and moor, through fen and
-through forest, until she came to a fair city. Here all the bells
-were ringing, and the people shouting and flinging caps into the air;
-for their old king was dead, and they were just about to crown a new
-one. The new king was a stranger, who had come to the town only the
-day before; but as soon as he heard of the old monarch's death, he
-told the people that he was a king himself, and as he happened to be
-without a kingdom at that moment, he would be quite willing to rule
-over them. The people joyfully assented, for the late king had left no
-heir; and now all the preparations had been completed. The crown had
-been polished up, and a new tip put on the sceptre, as the old king had
-quite spoiled it by poking the fire with it for upwards of forty years.
-
-When the people saw the beautiful princess, they welcomed her with
-many bows, and insisted on leading her before the new king.
-
-"Who knows but that they may be related?" said everybody. "They both
-came from the same direction, and both are strangers."
-
-Accordingly the princess was led to the market-place, where the king
-was sitting in royal state. He had a fat, red, shining face, and did
-not look like the kings whom she had been in the habit of seeing; but
-nevertheless the princess made a graceful courtesy, and then waited to
-hear what he would say.
-
-The new king seemed rather embarrassed when he saw that it was a
-princess who appeared before him; but he smiled graciously, and said,
-in a smooth oily voice,--
-
-"I trust your 'Ighness is quite well. And 'ow did yer 'Ighness leave
-yer pa and ma?"
-
-At these words the princess raised her head and looked fixedly at the
-red-faced king; then she replied, with scornful distinctness,--
-
-"What is the price of butter?"
-
-At these words an alarming change came over the king's face. The red
-faded from it, and left it a livid green; his teeth chattered; his
-eyes stared, and rolled in their sockets; while the sceptre dropped
-from his trembling hand and fell at the princess's feet. For the truth
-was, this was no king at all, but a retired butterman, who had laid by
-a little money at his trade, and had thought of setting up a public
-house; but chancing to pass through this city at the very time when
-they were looking for a king, it struck him that he might just as
-well fill the vacant place as any one else. No one had thought of his
-being an impostor; but when the princess fixed her clear eyes on him
-and asked him that familiar question, which he had been in the habit
-of hearing many times a day for a great part of his life, the guilty
-butterman thought himself detected, and shook in his guilty shoes.
-Hastily descending from his throne, he beckoned the princess into a
-side-chamber, and closing the door, besought her in moving terms not
-to betray him.
-
-"Here," he said, "is a bag of rubies as big as pigeon's eggs. There
-are six thousand of them, and I 'umbly beg your 'Ighness to haccept
-them as a slight token hof my hesteem, if your 'Ighness will kindly
-consent to spare a respeckable tradesman the disgrace of being
-hexposed."
-
-The princess reflected, and came to the conclusion that, after all, a
-butterman might make as good a king as any one else; so she took the
-rubies with a gracious little nod, and departed, while all the people
-shouted, "Hooray!" and followed her, waving their hats and kerchiefs,
-to the gates of the city.
-
-With her bag of rubies over her shoulder, the fair princess now
-pursued her journey, and fared forward over heath and hill, through
-brake and through brier. After several days she came to a deep
-forest, which she entered without hesitation, for she knew no fear.
-She had not gone a hundred paces under the arching limes, when she
-was met by a band of robbers, who stopped her and asked what she did
-in their forest, and what she carried in her bag. They were fierce,
-black-bearded men, armed to the teeth with daggers, cutlasses,
-pistols, dirks, hangers, blunderbusses, and other defensive weapons;
-but the princess gazed calmly on them, and said haughtily,--
-
-"Has your grandmother sold her mangle yet?"
-
-The effect was magical. The robbers started back in dismay, crying,
-"The countersign!" Then they hastily lowered their weapons, and
-assuming attitudes of abject humility, besought the princess
-graciously to accompany them to their master's presence. With a lofty
-gesture she signified assent, and the cringing, trembling bandits led
-her on through the forest till they reached an open glade, into which
-the sunbeams glanced right merrily. Here, under a broad oak-tree which
-stood in the centre of the glade, reclined a man of gigantic stature
-and commanding mien, with a whole armory of weapons displayed upon
-his person. Hastening to their chief, the robbers conveyed to him, in
-agitated whispers, the circumstance of their meeting the princess,
-and of her unexpected reply to their questions. Hardly seeming to
-credit their statement, the gigantic chieftain sprang to his feet, and
-advancing toward the princess with a respectful reverence, begged her
-to repeat the remark which had so disturbed his men. With a royal air,
-and in clear and ringing tones, the princess repeated,--
-
-"_Has_ your grandmother sold her mangle yet?" and gazed steadfastly at
-the robber chief.
-
-He turned deadly pale, and staggered against a tree, which alone
-prevented him from falling.
-
-"It is true!" he gasped. "We are undone! The enemy is without doubt
-close at hand, and all is over. Yet," he added with more firmness, and
-with an appealing glance at the princess, "yet there may be one chance
-left for us. If this gracious lady will consent to go forward, instead
-of returning through the wood, we may yet escape with our lives.
-Noble princess!" and here he and the whole band assumed attitudes of
-supplication, "consider, I pray you, whether it would really add to
-your happiness to betray to the advancing army a few poor foresters,
-who earn their bread by the sweat of their brow. Here," he continued,
-hastily drawing something from a hole in the oak-tree, "is a bag
-containing ten thousand sapphires, each as large as a pullet's egg. If
-you will graciously deign to accept them, and to pursue your journey
-in the direction I shall indicate, the Red Chief of the Rustywhanger
-will be your slave forever."
-
-The princess, who of course knew that there was no army in the
-neighborhood, and who moreover did not in the least care which way she
-went, assented to the Red Chief's proposition, and taking the bag of
-sapphires, bowed her farewell to the grateful robbers, and followed
-their leader down a ferny path which led to the farther end of the
-forest. When they came to the open country, the robber chieftain took
-his leave of the princess, with profound bows and many protestations
-of devotion, and returned to his band, who were already preparing to
-plunge into the impenetrable thickets of the midforest.
-
-The princess, meantime, with her two bags of gems on her shoulders,
-fared forward with a light heart, by dale and by down, through moss
-and through meadow. By-and-by she came to a fair high palace, built
-all of marble and shining jasper, with smooth lawns about it, and
-sunny gardens of roses and gillyflowers, from which the air blew so
-sweet that it was a pleasure to breathe it. The princess stood still
-for a moment, to taste the sweetness of this air, and to look her
-fill at so fair a spot; and as she stood there, it chanced that the
-palace-gates opened, and the young king rode out with his court, to go
-a-catching of nighthawks.
-
-Now when the king saw a right fair princess standing alone at his
-palace-gate, her rich garments dusty and travel-stained, and two
-heavy sacks hung upon her shoulders, he was filled with amazement;
-and leaping from his steed, like the gallant knight that he was, he
-besought her to tell him whence she came and whither she was going,
-and in what way he might be of service to her.
-
-But the princess looked down at her little dusty shoes, and answered
-never a word; for she had seen at the first glance how fair and goodly
-a king this was, and she would not ask him the price of butter, nor
-whether his grandmother had sold her mangle yet. But she thought in
-her heart, "Now, I have never, in all my life, seen a man to whom I
-would so willingly say, 'With all my heart!' if he should ask me to
-marry him."
-
-The king marvelled much at her silence, and presently repeated his
-questions, adding, "And what do you carry so carefully in those two
-sacks, which seem over-heavy for your delicate shoulders?"
-
-Still holding her eyes downcast, the princess took a ruby from one
-bag, and a sapphire from the other, and in silence handed them to
-the king, for she willed that he should know she was no beggar, even
-though her shoes were dusty. Thereat all the nobles were filled with
-amazement, for no such gems had ever been seen in that country.
-
-But the king looked steadfastly at the princess, and said, "Rubies are
-fine, and sapphires are fair; but, maiden, if I could but see those
-eyes of yours, I warrant that the gems would look pale and dull beside
-them."
-
-At that the princess raised her clear dark eyes, and looked at the
-king and smiled; and the glance of her eyes pierced straight to his
-heart, so that he fell on his knees and cried:
-
-"Ah! sweet princess, now do I know that thou art the love for whom I
-have waited so long, and whom I have sought through so many lands.
-Give me thy white hand, and tell me, either by word or by sign, that
-thou wilt be my queen and my bride!"
-
-And the princess, like a right royal maiden as she was, looked him
-straight in the eyes, and giving him her little white hand, answered
-bravely, "_With all my heart!_"
-
-
-
-
-HOKEY POKEY
-
-
-Hokey Pokey was the youngest of a large family of children. His elder
-brothers, as they grew up, all became either butchers or bakers or
-makers of candle-sticks, for such was the custom of the family. But
-Hokey Pokey would be none of these things; so when he was grown to be
-a tall youth he went to his father and said, "Give me my fortune."
-
-"'Will you be a butcher?' asked his father.
-
-"'No,' said Hokey Pokey.
-
-"'Will you be a baker?'
-
-"'No, again.'
-
-"'Will you make candlesticks?'
-
-"'Nor that either.'
-
-"'Then,' said his father, 'this is the only fortune I can give
-you;' and with that he took up his cudgel and gave the youth a stout
-beating. 'Now you cannot complain that I gave you nothing,' said he.
-
-"'That is true,' said Hokey Pokey. 'But give me also the wooden mallet
-which lies on the shelf, and I will make my way through the world.'
-
-"His father gave him the mallet, glad to be so easily rid of him, and
-Hokey Pokey went out into the world to seek his fortune. He walked
-all day, and at nightfall he came to a small village. Feeling hungry,
-he went into a baker's shop, intending to buy a loaf of bread for his
-supper. There was a great noise and confusion in the back part of the
-shop; and on going to see what was the matter, he found the baker on
-his knees beside a large box or chest, which he was trying with might
-and main to keep shut. But there was something inside the box which
-was trying just as hard to get out, and it screamed and kicked, and
-pushed the lid up as often as the baker shut it down.
-
-"'What have you there in the box?' asked Hokey Pokey.
-
-"'I have my wife,' replied the baker. 'She is so frightfully
-ill-tempered that whenever I am going to bake bread I am obliged to
-shut her up in this box, lest she push me into the oven and bake me
-with the bread, as she has often threatened to do. But to-day she has
-broken the lock of the box, and I know not how to keep her down.'
-
-"'That is easily managed,' said Hokey Pokey. 'Do you but tell her,
-when she asks who I am, that I am a giant with three heads, and all
-will be well.' So saying, he took his wooden mallet and dealt three
-tremendous blows on the box, saying in a loud voice,--
-
- 'Hickory Hox!
- I sit by the box,
- Waiting to give you a few of my knocks.'
-
-"'Husband, husband! whom have you there?' cried the wife in terror.
-
-"'Alas!' said the baker; 'it is a frightful giant with three heads. He
-is sitting by the box, and if you open it so much as the width of your
-little finger, he will pull you out and beat you to powder.'
-
-"When the wife heard that she crouched down in the box, and said never
-a word, for she was afraid of her life.
-
-"The baker then took Hokey Pokey into the other part of the shop,
-thanked him warmly, and gave him a good supper and a bed. The next
-morning he gave him for a present the finest loaf of bread in his
-shop, which was shaped like a large round ball; and Hokey Pokey, after
-knocking once more on the lid of the box, continued his travels.
-
-"He had not gone far before he came to another village, and wishing
-to inquire his way he entered the first shop he came to, which proved
-to be that of a confectioner. The shop was full of the most beautiful
-sweetmeats imaginable, and everything was bright and gay; but the
-confectioner himself sat upon a bench, weeping bitterly.
-
-"'What ails you, friend?' asked Hokey Pokey; 'and why do you weep,
-when you are surrounded by the most delightful things in the world?'
-
-"'Alas!' replied the confectioner. 'That is just the cause of my
-trouble. The sweetmeats that I make are so good that their fame has
-spread far and wide, and the Rat King, hearing of them, has taken
-up his abode in my cellar. Every night he comes up and eats all the
-sweetmeats I have made the day before. There is no comfort in my life,
-and I am thinking of becoming a rope-maker and hanging myself with the
-first rope I make.'
-
-"'Why don't you set a trap for him?' asked Hokey Pokey.
-
-"'I have set fifty-nine traps,' replied the confectioner, 'but he is
-so strong that he breaks them all.'
-
-"'Poison him,' suggested Hokey Pokey.
-
-"'He dislikes poison,' said the confectioner, 'and will not take it in
-any form.'
-
-"'In that case,' said Hokey Pokey, 'leave him to me. Go away, and hide
-yourself for a few minutes, and all will be well.'
-
-"The confectioner retired behind a large screen, having first showed
-Hokey Pokey the hole of the Rat King, which was certainly a very large
-one. Hokey Pokey sat down by the hole, with his mallet in his hand,
-and said in a squeaking voice,--
-
- 'Ratly King! Kingly Rat!
- Here your mate comes pit-a-pat.
- Come and see; the way is free;
- Hear my signal: one! two! three!'
-
-And he scratched three times on the floor. Almost immediately the head
-of a rat popped up through the hole. He was a huge rat, quite as large
-as a cat; but his size was no help to him, for as soon as he appeared,
-Hokey Pokey dealt him such a blow with his mallet that he fell down
-dead without even a squeak. Then Hokey Pokey called the confectioner,
-who came out from behind the screen and thanked him warmly; he also
-bade him choose anything he liked in the shop, in payment for his
-services.
-
-"'Can you match this?' asked Hokey Pokey, showing his round ball of
-bread.
-
-"'That can I!' said the confectioner; and he brought out a most
-beautiful ball, twice as large as the loaf, composed of the finest
-sweetmeats in the world, red and yellow and white. Hokey Pokey took
-it with many thanks, and then went on his way.
-
-"The next day he came to a third village in the streets of which the
-people were all running to and fro in the wildest confusion.
-
-"'What is the matter?' asked Hokey Pokey, as one man ran directly into
-his arms.
-
-"'Alas!' replied the man. 'A wild bull has got into the principal
-china-shop, and is breaking all the beautiful dishes.'
-
-"'Why do you not drive him out?' asked Hokey Pokey.
-
-"'We are afraid to do that,' said the man; 'but we are running up and
-down to express our emotion and sympathy, and that is something.'
-
-"'Show me the china-shop,' said Hokey Pokey.
-
-"So the man showed him the china-shop; and there, sure enough, was a
-furious bull, making most terrible havoc. He was dancing up and down
-on a Dresden dinner set, and butting at the Chinese mandarins, and
-switching down finger-bowls and teapots with his tail, bellowing
-meanwhile in the most outrageous manner. The floor was covered with
-broken crockery, and the whole scene was melancholy to behold.
-
-"Now when Hokey Pokey saw this, he said to the owner of the
-china-shop, who was tearing his hair in a frenzy of despair, 'Stop
-tearing your hair, which is indeed a senseless occupation, and I will
-manage this matter for you. Bring me a red cotton umbrella, and all
-will yet be well.'
-
-"So the china-shop man brought him a red cotton umbrella, and Hokey
-Pokey began to open and shut it violently in front of the door. When
-the bull saw that, he stopped dancing on the Dresden dinner set and
-came charging out of the shop, straight towards the red umbrella. When
-he came near enough, Hokey Pokey dropped the umbrella, and raising his
-wooden mallet hit the bull such a blow on the muzzle that he fell down
-dead, and never bellowed again.
-
-"The people all flung up their hats, and cheered, and ran up and down
-all the more, to express their gratification. As for the china-shop
-man, he threw his arms round Hokey Pokey's neck, called him his
-cherished preserver, and bade him choose anything that was left in his
-shop in payment for his services.
-
-"'Can you match these?' asked Hokey Pokey, holding up the loaf of
-bread and the ball of sweetmeats.
-
-"'That can I,' said the shop-man; and he brought out a huge ball of
-solid ivory, inlaid with gold and silver, and truly lovely to behold.
-It was very heavy, being twice as large as the ball of sweetmeats; but
-Hokey Pokey took it, and, after thanking the shop-man and receiving
-his thanks in return, he proceeded on his way.
-
-"After walking for several days, he came to a fair, large castle, in
-front of which sat a man on horseback. When the man saw Hokey Pokey,
-he called out,--
-
-"'Who are you, and what do you bring to the mighty Dragon, lord of
-this castle?'
-
-"'Hokey Pokey is my name,' replied the youth, 'and strange things do I
-bring. But what does the mighty Dragon want, for example?'
-
-"'He wants something new to eat,' said the man on horseback. 'He
-has eaten of everything that is known in the world, and pines for
-something new. He who brings him a new dish, never before tasted by
-him, shall have a thousand crowns and a new jacket; but he who fails,
-after three trials, shall have his jacket taken away from him, and his
-head cut off besides.'
-
-"'I bring strange food,' said Hokey Pokey. 'Let me pass in, that I may
-serve the mighty Dragon.'
-
-"Then the man on horseback lowered his lance, and let him pass in, and
-in short space he came before the mighty Dragon. The Dragon sat on
-a silver throne, with a golden knife in one hand, and a golden fork
-in the other. Around him were many people, who offered him dishes of
-every description; but he would none of them, for he had tasted them
-all before; and he howled with hunger on his silver throne. Then came
-forward Hokey Pokey, and said boldly,--
-
-"'Here come I, Hokey Pokey, bringing strange food for the mighty
-Dragon.'
-
-"The Dragon howled again, and waving his knife and fork, bade Hokey
-Pokey give the food to the attendants, that they might serve him.
-
-"'Not so,' said Hokey Pokey. 'I must serve you myself, most mighty
-Dragon, else you shall not taste of my food. Therefore put down your
-knife and fork, and open your mouth, and you shall see what you shall
-see.'
-
-"So the Dragon, after summoning the man-with-the-thousand-crowns
-and the man-with-the-new-jacket to one side of his throne, and the
-man-to-take-away-the old-jacket and the executioner to the other, laid
-down his knife and fork and opened his mouth. Hokey Pokey stepped
-lightly forward, and dropped the round loaf down the great red throat.
-The Dragon shut his jaws together with a snap, and swallowed the loaf
-in two gulps.
-
-"'That is good,' he said; 'but it is not new. I have eaten much bread,
-though never before in a round loaf. Have you anything more? Or shall
-the man take away your jacket?'
-
-"'I have this, an it please you,' said Hokey Pokey; and he dropped
-the ball of sweetmeats into the Dragon's mouth.
-
-"When the Dragon tasted this, he rolled his eyes round and round,
-and was speechless with delight for some time. At length he said,
-'Worthy youth, this is very good; it is extremely good; it is better
-than anything I ever tasted. Nevertheless, it is not new; for I have
-tasted the same kind of thing before, only not nearly so good. And
-now, unless you are positively sure that you have something new for
-your third trial, you really might as well take off your jacket; and
-the executioner shall take off your head at the same time, as it is
-getting rather late. Executioner, do your--'
-
-"'Craving your pardon, most mighty Dragon,' said Hokey Pokey, 'I will
-first make my third trial;' and with that he dropped the ivory ball
-into the Dragon's mouth.
-
-"'Gug-wugg-gllll-grrr!' said the Dragon, for the ball had stuck fast,
-being too big for him to swallow.
-
-"Then Hokey Pokey lifted his mallet and struck one tremendous blow
-upon the ball, driving it far down the throat of the monster, and
-killing him most fatally dead. He rolled off the throne like a scaly
-log, and his crown fell off and rolled to Hokey Pokey's feet. The
-youth picked it up and put it on his own head, and then called the
-people about him and addressed them.
-
-"'People,' he said, 'I am Hokey Pokey, and I have come from a far land
-to rule over you. Your Dragon have I slain, and now I am your king;
-and if you will always do exactly what I tell you to do, you will have
-no further trouble.'
-
-"So the people threw up their caps and cried, 'Long live Hokey Pokey!'
-and they always did exactly as he told them, and had no further trouble.
-
-"And Hokey Pokey sent for his three brothers, and made them Chief
-Butcher, Chief Baker, and Chief Candlestick-maker of his kingdom. But
-to his father he sent a large cudgel made of pure gold, with these
-words engraved on it: 'Now you cannot complain that I have given you
-nothing!'"
-
-
-
-
-THE TANGLED SKEIN
-
-
-"My dear child," said the Angel-who-attends-to things, "why are you
-crying so very hard?"
-
-"Oh dear! oh dear!" said the child. "No one ever had such a dreadful
-time before, I do believe, and it all comes of trying to be good.
-Oh dear! Oh dear! I wish I was bad; then I should not have all this
-trouble."
-
-"Yes, you would," said the Angel; "a great deal worse. Now tell me
-what is the matter!"
-
-"Look!" said the child. "Mother gave me this skein to wind, and I
-promised to do it. But then father sent me on an errand, and it was
-almost school-time, and I was studying my lesson and going on the
-errand and winding the skein, all at the same time, and now I have got
-all tangled up in the wool, and I cannot walk either forward or back,
-and oh! dear me, what ever _shall_ I do?"
-
-"Sit down!" said the Angel.
-
-"But it is school-time!" said the child.
-
-"Sit down!" said the Angel.
-
-"But father sent me on an errand!" said the child.
-
-"SIT DOWN!" said the Angel; and he took the child by her shoulders and
-set her down.
-
-"Now sit still!" he said, and he began patiently to wind up the skein.
-It was wofully tangled, and knotted about the child's hands and feet;
-it was a wonder she could move at all; but at last it was all clear,
-and the Angel handed her the ball.
-
-"I thank you so very much!" said the child. "I was not naughty, was I?"
-
-"Not naughty, only foolish; but that does just as much harm sometimes."
-
-"But I was doing right things!" said the child.
-
-"But you were doing them in the wrong way!" said the Angel. "It is
-good to do an errand, and it is good to go to school, but when you
-have a skein to wind you must sit still."
-
-
-
-
-A SONG FOR HAL
-
-
- Once I saw a little boat, and a pretty, pretty boat,
- When daybreak the hills was adorning,
- And into it I jumped, and away I did float,
- So very, very early in the morning.
-
- _Chorus_
-
- And every little wave had its nightcap on,
- Its nightcap, white cap, nightcap on.
- And every little wave had its nightcap on,
- So very, very early in the morning.
-
- All the fishes were asleep in their caves cool and deep,
- When the ripple round my keel flashed a warning.
- Said the minnow to the skate, "We must certainly be late,
- Though I thought 't was very early in the morning."
-
- _Chorus_
-
- For every little wave has its nightcap on,
- Its nightcap, white cap, nightcap on.
- For every little wave has its nightcap on,
- So very, very early in the morning.
-
- The lobster darkly green soon appeared upon the scene,
- And pearly drops his claws were adorning.
- Quoth he, "May I be boiled, if I'll have my slumber spoiled,
- So very, very early in the morning!"
-
- _Chorus_
-
- For every little wave has its nightcap on,
- Its nightcap, white cap, nightcap on,
- For every little wave has its nightcap on,
- So very, very early in the morning.
-
- Said the sturgeon to the eel, "Just imagine how I feel,
- Thus roused without a syllable of warning.
- People ought to let us know when a-sailing they would go,
- So very, very early in the morning."
-
- _Chorus_
-
- When every little wave has its nightcap on,
- Its nightcap, white cap, nightcap on.
- When every little wave has its nightcap on,
- So very, very early in the morning.
-
- Just then up jumped the sun, and the fishes every one
- For their laziness at once fell a-mourning.
- But I stayed to hear no more, for my boat had reached the shore,
- So very, very early in the morning.
-
- _Chorus_
-
- And every little wave took its nightcap off,
- Its nightcap, white cap, nightcap off.
- And every little wave took its nightcap off,
- And courtesied to the sun in the morning.
-
-
-
-
-FOR YOU AND ME
-
-
-"I have come to speak to you about your work," said the
-Angel-who-attends-to-things. "It appears to be unsatisfactory."
-
-"Indeed!" said the man. "I hardly see how that can be. Perhaps you
-will explain."
-
-"I will!" said the Angel. "To begin with, the work is slovenly."
-
-"I was born heedless," said the man. "It is a family failing which I
-have always regretted."
-
-"It is ill put together, too;" said the Angel. "The parts do not fit."
-
-"I never had any eye for proportion," said the man; "I admit it is
-unfortunate."
-
-"The whole thing is a botch," said the Angel. "You have put neither
-brains nor heart into it, and the result is ridiculous failure. What
-do you propose to do about it?"
-
-"I credited you with more comprehension," said the man. "My faults,
-such as they are, were born with me. I am sorry that you do not
-approve of me, but this is the way I was made; do you see?"
-
-"I see!" said the Angel. He put out a strong white hand, and taking
-the man by the collar, tumbled him neck and crop into the ditch.
-
-"What is the meaning of this?" cried the man, as he scrambled out
-breathless and dripping. "I never saw such behavior. Do you see what
-you have done? you have ruined my clothes, and nearly drowned me
-beside."
-
-"Oh yes!" said the Angel: "this is the way _I_ was made."
-
-
-
-
-THE BURNING HOUSE
-
-
-Some neighbours were walking together in the cool of the day, watching
-the fall of the twilight, and talking of this and that; and as they
-walked, they saw at a little distance a light, as it were a house on
-fire.
-
-"From the direction, that must be our neighbour William's house," said
-one. "Ought we not to warn him of the danger?"
-
-"I see only a little flame," said another; "perchance it may go out of
-itself, and no harm done."
-
-"I should be loth to carry ill news," said a third; "it is always a
-painful thing to do."
-
-"William is not a man who welcomes interference," said a fourth. "I
-should not like to be the one to intrude upon his privacy; probably
-he knows about the fire, and is managing it in his own way."
-
-While they were talking, the house burned up.
-
-
-
-
-THE NAUGHTY COMET
-
-
-The door of the Comet House was open. In the great court-yard stood
-hundreds of comets, of all sizes and shapes. Some were puffing and
-blowing, and arranging their tails, all ready to start; others
-had just come in, and looked shabby and forlorn after their long
-journeyings, their tails drooping disconsolately; while others still
-were switched off on side-tracks, where the tinker and the tailor were
-attending to their wants, and setting them to rights. In the midst
-of all stood the Comet Master, with his hands behind him, holding a
-very long stick with a very sharp point. The comets knew just how the
-point of that stick felt, for they were prodded with it whenever they
-misbehaved themselves; accordingly, they all remained very quiet,
-while he gave his orders for the day.
-
-In a distant corner of the court-yard lay an old comet, with his tail
-comfortably curled up around him. He was too old to go out, so he
-enjoyed himself at home in a quiet way. Beside him stood a very young
-comet, with a very short tail. He was quivering with excitement, and
-occasionally cast sharp impatient glances at the Comet Master.
-
-"Will he _never_ call me?" he exclaimed, but in an undertone, so that
-only his companion could hear. "He knows I am dying to go out, and
-for that very reason he pays no attention to me. I dare not leave my
-place, for you know what he is."
-
-"Ah!" said the old comet, slowly, "if you had been out as often as I
-have, you would not be in such a hurry. Hot, tiresome work, _I_ call
-it. And what does it all amount to?"
-
-"Ay, that's the point!" exclaimed the young comet. "What _does_ it
-all amount to? That is what I am determined to find out. I cannot
-understand your going on, travelling and travelling, and never
-finding out why you do it. _I_ shall find out, you may be very sure,
-before I have finished my first journey."
-
-"Better not! better not!" answered the old comet. "You'll only get into
-trouble. Nobody knows except the Comet Master and the Sun. The Master
-would cut you up into inch pieces if you asked him, and the Sun--"
-
-"Well, what about the Sun?" asked the young comet, eagerly.
-
-"Short-tailed Comet No. 73!" rang suddenly, clear and sharp, through
-the court-yard.
-
-The young comet started as if he had been shot, and in three bounds he
-stood before the Comet Master, who looked fixedly at him.
-
-"You have never been out before," said the Master.
-
-"No, sir!" replied No. 73; and he knew better than to add another word.
-
-"You will go out now," said the Comet Master. "You will travel for
-thirteen weeks and three days, and will then return. You will avoid
-the neighborhood of the Sun, the Earth, and the planet Bungo. You
-will turn to the left on meeting other comets, and you are not allowed
-to speak to meteors. These are your orders. Go!"
-
-At the word, the comet shot out of the gate and off into space, his
-short tail bobbing as he went.
-
-Ah! here was something worth living for. No longer shut up in that
-tiresome court-yard, waiting for one's tail to grow, but out in the
-free, open, boundless realm of space, with leave to shoot about here
-and there and everywhere--well, _nearly_ everywhere--for thirteen
-whole weeks! Ah, what a glorious prospect! How swiftly he moved! How
-well his tail looked, even though it was still rather short! What a
-fine fellow he was, altogether!
-
-For two or three weeks our comet was the happiest creature in all
-space; too happy to think of anything except the joy of frisking
-about. But by-and-by he began to wonder about things, and that is
-always dangerous for a comet.
-
-"I wonder, now," he said, "why I may not go near the planet Bungo.
-I have always heard that he was the most interesting of all the
-planets. And the Sun! how I _should_ like to know a little more
-about the Sun! And, by the way, that reminds me that all this time I
-have never found out _why_ I am travelling. It shows how I have been
-enjoying myself, that I have forgotten it so long; but now I must
-certainly make a point of finding out. Hello! there comes Long-Tail
-No. 45. I mean to ask him."
-
-So he turned out to the left, and waited till No. 45 came along. The
-latter was a middle-aged comet, very large, and with an uncommonly
-long tail,--quite preposterously long, our little No. 73 thought, as
-he shook his own tail and tried to make as much of it as possible.
-
-"Good morning, Mr. Long-Tail!" he said as soon as the other was within
-speaking distance. "Would you be so very good as to tell me what you
-are travelling for?"
-
-"For six months," answered No. 45 with a puff and a snort. "Started a
-month ago; five months still to go."
-
-"Oh, I don't mean that!" exclaimed Short-Tail No. 73. "I mean _why_
-are you travelling at all?"
-
-"Comet Master sent me!" replied No. 45, briefly.
-
-"But what for?" persisted the little comet. "What is it all about?
-What good does it do? _Why_ do we travel for weeks and months and
-years? That's what I want to find out."
-
-"Don't know, I'm sure!" said the elder, still more shortly. "What's
-more, don't care!"
-
-The little comet fairly shook with amazement and indignation. "You
-don't care!" he cried. "Is it possible? And how long, may I ask, have
-you been travelling hither and thither through space, without knowing
-or caring why?"
-
-"Long enough to learn not to ask stupid questions!" answered Long-Tail
-No. 45. "Good morning to you!"
-
-And without another word he was off, with his preposterously long tail
-spreading itself like a luminous fan behind him. The little comet
-looked after him for some time in silence. At last he said:--
-
-"Well, _I_ call that simply _disgusting_! An ignorant, narrow-minded
-old--"
-
-"Hello, cousin!" called a clear merry voice just behind him. "How
-goes it with you? Shall we travel together? Our roads seem to go in
-the same direction."
-
-The comet turned and saw a bright and sparkling meteor. "I--I--must
-not speak to you!" said No. 73, confusedly.
-
-"Not speak to me!" exclaimed the meteor, laughing. "Why, what's the
-matter? What have I done? I never saw you before in my life."
-
-"N-nothing that I know of," answered No. 73, still more confused.
-
-"Then why mustn't you speak to me?" persisted the meteor, giving a
-little skip and jump. "Eh? tell me that, will you? _Why_ mustn't you?"
-
-"I--don't--know!" answered the little comet, slowly, for he was
-ashamed to say boldly, as he ought to have done, that it was against
-the orders of the Comet Master.
-
-"Oh, gammon!" cried the meteor, with another skip. "_I_ know! Comet
-Master, eh? But a fine high-spirited young fellow like you isn't going
-to be afraid of that old tyrant. Come along, I say! If there were any
-_real reason_ why you should not speak to me--"
-
-"That's just what I say," interrupted the comet, eagerly. "What IS the
-reason? Why don't they tell it to me?"
-
-"'Cause there isn't any!" rejoined the meteor. "Come along!"
-
-After a little more hesitation, the comet yielded, and the two frisked
-merrily along, side by side. As they went, No. 73 confided all his
-vexations to his new friend, who sympathized warmly with him, and
-spoke in most disrespectful terms of the Comet Master.
-
-"A pretty sort of person to dictate to you, when he hasn't the
-smallest sign of a tail himself! I wouldn't submit to it!" cried the
-meteor. "As to the other orders, some of them are not so bad. Of
-course, nobody would want to go near that stupid, poky Earth, if he
-could possibly help it; and the planet Bungo is--ah--is not a very
-nice planet, I believe." [The fact is, the planet Bungo contains
-a large reform-school for unruly meteors, but our friend made no
-mention of that.] "But as for the Sun,--the bright, jolly, delightful
-Sun,--why, I am going to take a nearer look at him myself. Come on! We
-will go together, in spite of the Comet Master."
-
-Again the little comet hesitated and demurred; but after all, he had
-already broken one rule, and why not another? He would be punished
-in any case, and he might as well get all the pleasure he could.
-Reasoning thus, he yielded once more to the persuasions of the meteor,
-and together they shot through the great space-world, taking their way
-straight toward the Sun.
-
-When the Sun saw them coming, he smiled and seemed much pleased. He
-stirred his fire, and shook his shining locks, and blazed brighter and
-brighter, hotter and hotter. The heat seemed to have a strange effect
-on the comet, for he began to go faster and faster.
-
-"Hold on!" said the meteor. "Why are you hurrying so? I cannot keep up
-with you."
-
-"I cannot stop myself!" cried No. 73. "Something is drawing me
-forward, faster and faster!"
-
-On he went at a terrible rate, the meteor following as best he might.
-Several planets that he passed shouted to him in warning tones, but
-he could not hear what they said. The Sun stirred his fire again, and
-blazed brighter and brighter, hotter and hotter; and onward rushed the
-wretched little comet, faster and faster, faster and faster!
-
-"Catch hold of my tail and stop me!" he shrieked to the meteor. "I am
-shrivelling, burning up, in this fearful heat! Stop me, for pity's
-sake!"
-
-But the meteor was already far behind, and had stopped short to watch
-his companion's headlong progress. And now,--ah, me!--now the Sun
-opened his huge fiery mouth. The comet made one desperate effort to
-stop himself, but it was in vain. An awful, headlong plunge through
-the intervening space; a hissing and crackling; a shriek,--and the
-fiery jaws had closed on Short-Tail No. 73 forever!
-
-"Dear me!" said the meteor. "How very shocking! I quite forgot that
-the Sun ate comets. I must be off, or I shall get an æon in the
-Reform School for this. I am really very sorry, for he was a nice
-little comet!"
-
-And away frisked the meteor, and soon forgot all about it.
-
-But in the great court-yard in front of the Comet House, the Master
-took a piece of chalk, and crossed out No. 73 from the list of
-short-tailed comets on the slate that hangs on the door. Then he
-called out, "No. 1 Express, come forward!" and the swiftest of all the
-comets stood before him, brilliant and beautiful, with a bewildering
-magnificence of tail. The Comet Master spoke sharply and decidedly, as
-usual, but not unkindly.
-
-"No. 73, Short-Tail," he said, "has disobeyed orders, and has in
-consequence been devoured by the Sun."
-
-Here there was a great sensation among the comets.
-
-"No. 1," continued the Master, "you will start immediately, and travel
-until you find a runaway meteor, with a red face and blue hair. You
-are permitted to make inquiries of respectable bodies, such as planets
-or satellites. When found, you will arrest him and take him to the
-planet Bungo. My compliments to the Meteor Keeper, and I shall be
-obliged if he will give this meteor two æons in the Reform School. I
-trust," he continued, turning to the assembled comets, "that this will
-be a lesson to all of you!"
-
-And I believe it was.
-
-
-
-
-DAY DREAMS
-
-
- White wings over the water,
- Fluttering, fluttering over the sea,
- White wings over the water,
- What are you bringing to me?
- A fairy prince in a golden boat,
- With golden ringlets that fall and float,
- A velvet cap, and a taffety cloak,
- This you are bringing to me.
-
- Fairy, fairy princekin,
- Sailing, sailing hither to me,
- Silk and satin and velvet,
- What are you coming to see?
- A little girl in a calico gown,
- With hair and eyes of dusky brown,
- Who sits on the wharf of the fishing-town.
- Looking away to sea.
-
- Golden, golden sunbeams,
- Touch me now with your wands of gold;
- Make me a beautiful princess,
- Radiant to behold.
- Blue and silver and ermine fine,
- Diamond drops that flash and shine;
- So shall I meet this prince of mine,
- Fairer than may be told.
-
- White wings over the water,
- Fluttering ever farther away;
- Dark clouds shrouding the sunbeams,
- Sullen and cold and gray.
- Back I go in my calico gown,
- Back to the hut in the fishing-town.
- And oh, but the night shuts darkly down
- After the summer day!
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's note
-
-
-The story "Hokey Pokey", starting on page 106 has double quotes with
-every paragraph except the first. Although this is probably a printer's
-mistake, it has been preserved.
-
-Spelling and hyphenation may be inconsistent, this has not been
-changed. The following corrections have been made, on page
-
- 12 ' changed to " (and rest, dear children?")
- 106 " changed to ' (be a butcher?' asked his father).
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Pig Brother and Other Fables and
-Stories, by Laura E. Richards
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