How to Tell Stories to Children, And Some Stories to Tell Part 14
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"I would not speak to strangers," said the willow. And the three trees stood up very tall and proud.
That night the North Wind came to the woods to play. He puffed at the leaves with his icy breath, and every leaf he touched fell to the ground.
He wanted to touch every leaf in the forest, for he loved to see the trees bare.
"May I touch every leaf?" he said to his father, the Frost King.
"No," said the Frost King, "the trees which were kind to the bird with the broken wing may keep their leaves."
So North Wind had to leave them alone, and the spruce, the pine, and the juniper-tree kept their leaves through all the winter. And they have done so ever since.
THE STAR DOLLARS[1]
[Footnote 1: Adapted from Grimms' _Fairy Tales_.]
There was once a little girl who was very, very poor. Her father and mother had died, and at last she had no little room to stay in, and no little bed to sleep in, and nothing more to eat except one piece of bread.
So she said a prayer, put on her little jacket and her hood, and took her piece of bread in her hand, and went out into the world.
When she had walked a little way, she met an old man, bent and thin. He looked at the piece of bread in her hand, and said, "Will you give me your bread, little girl? I am very hungry." The little girl said, "Yes," and gave him her piece of bread.
When she had walked a little farther she came upon a child, sitting by the path, crying. "I am so cold!" said the child. "Won't you give me your little hood, to keep my head warm?" The little girl took off her hood and tied it on the child's head. Then she went on her way.
After a time, as she went, she met another child. This one s.h.i.+vered with the cold, and she said to the little girl, "Won't you give me your jacket, little girl?" And the little girl gave her her jacket. Then she went on again.
By-and-by she saw another child, crouching almost naked by the wayside. "O little girl," said the child, "won't you give me your dress? I have nothing to keep me warm." So the little girl took off her dress and gave it to the other child. And now she had nothing left but her little s.h.i.+rt.
It grew dark, and the wind was cold, and the little girl crept into the woods, to sleep for the night. But in the woods a child stood, weeping and naked. "I am cold," she said, "give me your little s.h.i.+rt!" And the little girl thought, "It is dark, and the woods will shelter me; I will give her my little s.h.i.+rt"; so she did, and now she had nothing left in all the world.
She stood looking up at the sky, to say her night-time prayer. As she looked up, the whole skyful of stars fell in a shower round her feet.
There they were, on the ground, s.h.i.+ning bright, and round. The little girl saw that they were silver dollars. And in the midst of them was the finest little s.h.i.+rt, all woven out of silk! The little girl put on the little silk s.h.i.+rt, and gathered the star dollars; and she was rich, all the days of her life.
THE LION AND THE GNAT[1]
[Footnote 1: This story has been told by the Rev. Albert E. Sims to children in many parts of England. On one occasion it was told to an audience of over three thousand children in the Great a.s.sembly Hall, Mile End, London.]
Far away in Central Africa, that vast land where dense forests and wild beasts abound, the shades of night were once more descending, warning all creatures that it was time to seek repose.
All day long the sun had been like a great burning eye, but now, after painting the western sky with crimson and scarlet and gold, he had disappeared into his fleecy bed; the various creatures of the forest had sought their holes and resting-places; the last sound had rumbled its rumble, the last bee had mumbled his mumble, and the last bear had grumbled his grumble; even the gra.s.shoppers that had been chirruping, chirruping, through all the long hours without a pause, at length had ceased their shrill music, tucked up their long legs, and given themselves to slumber.
There on a nodding gra.s.s-blade, a tiny Gnat had made a swinging couch, and he too had folded his wings, closed his tiny eyes, and was fast asleep.
Darker, darker, darker became the night until the darkness could almost be felt, and over all was a solemn stillness as though some powerful finger had been raised, and some potent voice had whispered, "HU--s.h.!.+"
Just when all was perfectly still, there came suddenly from the far away depths of the forest, like the roll of thunder, a mighty ROAR--R--R--R!
In a moment all the beasts and birds were wide awake, and the poor little Gnat was nearly frightened out of his little senses, and his little heart went pit-a-pat. He rubbed his little eyes with his feelers, and then peered all around trying to penetrate the deep gloom as he whispered in terror--_"What--was--that?"_
What do _you_ think it was?... Yes, a LION! A great, big lion who, while most other denizens of the forest slept, was out hunting for prey. He came rus.h.i.+ng and cras.h.i.+ng through the thick undergrowth of the forest, swirling his long tail and opening wide his great jaws, and as he rushed he RO-AR-R-R-ED!
Presently he reached the spot where the little Gnat hung panting at the tip of the waving gra.s.s-blade. Now the little Gnat was not afraid of lions, so when he saw it was only a lion, he cried out--
"Hi, stop, stop! What are you making that horrible noise about?"
The Lion stopped short, then backed slowly and regarded the Gnat with scorn.
"Why, you tiny, little, mean, insignificant creature you, how DARE you speak to ME?" he raged.
"How dare I speak to you?" repeated the Gnat quietly. "By the virtue of _right_, which is always greater than _might_. Why don't you keep to your own part of the forest? What right have you to be here, disturbing folks at this time of night?"
By a mighty effort the Lion restrained his anger--he knew that to obtain mastery over others one must be master over oneself.
"What _right_?" he repeated in dignified tones. "_Because I'm King of the Forest._ That's why. I can do no wrong, for all the other creatures of the forest are afraid of me. I DO what I please, I SAY what I please, I EAT whom I please, I GO where I please--simply because I'm King of the Forest."
"But who told you you were King?" demanded the Gnat. "Just answer me that!"
"Who told ME?" roared the Lion. "Why, everyone acknowledges it--don't I tell you that everyone is afraid of me?"
"Indeed!" cried the Gnat disdainfully. "Pray don't say _all_, for I'm not afraid of you. And further, I deny your right to be King."
This was too much for the Lion. He now worked himself into a perfect fury.
"You--you--YOU deny my right as King?"
"I _do_, and, what is more, you shall never be King until you have fought and conquered me."
The Lion laughed a great lion laugh, and a lion laugh cannot be laughed at like a cat laugh, as everyone ought to know.
"Fight--did you say fight?" he asked. "Who ever heard of a lion fighting a gnat? Here, out of my way, you atom of nothing! I'll blow you to the other end of the world."
But though the Lion puffed his cheeks until they were like great bellows, and then blew with all his might, he could not disturb the little Gnat's hold on the swaying gra.s.s-blade.
"You'll blow all your whiskers away if you are not careful," he said, with a laugh--"but you won't move me. And if you dare leave this spot without fighting me, I'll tell all the beasts of the forest that you are afraid of me, and they'll make _me_ King."
"Ho, ho!" roared the Lion. "Very well, since you will fight, let it be so."
"You agree to the conditions, then? The one who conquers shall be King?"
"Oh, certainly," laughed the Lion, for he expected an easy victory. "Are you ready?"
"Quite ready."
"Then--GO!" roared the Lion.
And with that he sprang forward with open jaws, thinking he could easily swallow a million gnats. But just as the great jaws were about to close upon the blade of gra.s.s whereto the Gnat clung, what should happen but that the Gnat suddenly spread his wings and nimbly flew--where do you think?--right into one of the Lion's nostrils! And there he began to sting, sting, sting. The Lion wondered, and thundered, and blundered--but the Gnat went on stinging; he foamed, and he moaned, and he groaned--still the Gnat went on stinging; he rubbed his head on the ground in agony, he swirled his tail in furious pa.s.sion, he roared, he spluttered, he sniffed, he snuffed--and still the Gnat went on stinging.
"O my poor nose, my nose, my nose!" the Lion began to moan. "Come down, come DOWN, come DOWN! My nose, my NOSE, my NOSE!! You're King of the Forest, you're King, you're King--only come down. My nose, my NOSE, my NOSE!"
So at last the Gnat flew out from the Lion's nostril and went back to his waving gra.s.s-blade, while the Lion slunk away into the depths of the forest with his tail between his legs--_beaten_, and by a tiny Gnat!
How to Tell Stories to Children, And Some Stories to Tell Part 14
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How to Tell Stories to Children, And Some Stories to Tell Part 14 summary
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