The Jackal, the
Dove, and the Panther
Contes populaires
des Bassoutos. Recueillis et traduits par E. Jacottet. Paris: Leroux, Editeur.
There was once a
dove who built a nice soft nest as a home for her three little ones. She was
very proud of their beauty, and perhaps talked about them to her neighbours
more than she need have done, till at last everybody for miles round knew where
the three prettiest baby doves in the whole country-side were to be found.
One day a jackal who
was prowling about in search of a dinner came by chance to the foot of the rock
where the dove's nest was hidden away, and he suddenly bethought himself that
if he could get nothing better he might manage to make a mouthful of one of the
young doves. So he shouted as loud as he could, 'Ohe, ohe, mother dove.'
And the dove
replied, trembling with fear, 'What do you want, sir?'
'One of your
children,' said he; 'and if you don't throw it to me I will eat up you and the
others as well.'
Now, the dove was
nearly driven distracted at the jackal's words; but, in order to save the lives
of the other two, she did at last throw the little one out of the nest. The
jackal ate it up, and went home to sleep.
Meanwhile the mother
dove sat on the edge of her nest, crying bitterly, when a heron, who was flying
slowly past the rock, was filled with pity for her, and stopped to ask, 'What
is the matter, you poor dove?'
And the dove
answered, 'A jackal came by, and asked me to give him one of my little ones,
and said that if I refused he would jump on my nest and eat us all up.'
But the heron
replied, 'You should not have believed him. He could never have jumped so high.
He only deceived you because he wanted something for supper.' And with these
words the heron flew off.
He had hardly got
out of sight when again the jackal came creeping slowly round the foot of the
rock. And when he saw the dove he cried out a second time, 'Ohe, ohe, mother
dove! give me one of your little ones, or I will jump on your nest and eat you
all up.'
This time the dove
knew better, and she answered boldly, 'Indeed, I shall do nothing of the sort,'
though her heart beat wildly with fear when she saw the jackal preparing for a
spring.
However, he only cut
himself against the rock, and thought he had better stick to threats, so he
started again with his old cry, 'Mother dove, mother dove! be quick and give me
one of your little ones, or I will eat you all up.'
But the mother dove
only answered as before, 'Indeed, I shall do nothing of the sort, for I know we
are safely out of your reach.'
The jackal felt it
was quite hopeless to get what he wanted, and asked, 'Tell me, mother dove, how
have you suddenly become so wise ?'
'It was the heron
who told me,' replied she.
'And which way did
he go?' said the jackal.
'Down there among
the reeds. You can see him if you look,' said the dove.
Then the jackal
nodded good-bye, and went quickly after the heron. He soon came up to the great
bird, who was standing on a stone on the edge of the river watching for a nice
fat fish. 'Tell me, heron,' said he, 'when the wind blows from that quarter, to
which side do you turn?'
'And which side do
you turn to?' asked the heron.
The jackal answered,
'I always turn to this side.'
'Then that is the
side I turn to,' remarked the heron.
'And when the rain
comes from that quarter, which side do you turn to?'
And the heron
replied, 'And which side do you turn to?'
'Oh, I always turn
to this side,' said the jackal.
'Then that is the
side I turn to,' said the heron.
'And when the rain
comes straight down, what do you do?'
'What do you do
yourself?' asked the heron.
'I do this,'
answered the jackal. 'I cover my head with my paws.'
'Then that is what I
do,' said the heron. 'I cover my head with my wings,' and as he spoke he lifted
his large wings and spread them completely over his head.
With one bound the
jackal had seized him by the neck, and began to shake him.
'Oh, have pity, have
pity!' cried the heron. 'I never did you any harm.'
'You told the dove
how to get the better of me, and I am going to eat you for it.'
'But if you will let
me go,' entreated the heron, 'I will show you the place where the panther has
her lair.'
'Then you had better
be quick about it,' said the jackal, holding tight on to the heron until he had
pointed out the panther's den. 'Now you may go, my friend, for there is plenty
of food here for me.'
So the jackal came
up to the panther, and asked politely, 'Panther, would you like me to look
after your children while you are out hunting?'
'I should be very
much obliged,' said the panther; 'but be sure you take care of them. They
always cry all the time that I am away.'
So saying she
trotted off, and the jackal marched into the cave, where he found ten little
panthers, and instantly ate one up. By-and-bye the panther returned from
hunting, and said to him, 'Jackal, bring out my little ones for their supper.'
The jackal fetched
them out one by one till he had brought out nine, and he took the last one and
brought it out again, so the whole ten seemed to be there, and the panther was
quite satisfied.
Next day she went
again to the chase, and the jackal ate up another little panther, so now there
were only eight. In the evening, when she came back, the panther said, 'Jackal,
bring out my little ones!'
And the jackal
brought out first one and then another, and the last one he brought out three
times, so that the whole ten seemed to be there.
The following day
the same thing happened, and the next and the next and the next, till at length
there was not even one left, and the rest of the day the jackal busied himself
with digging a large hole at the back of the den.
That night, when the
panther returned from hunting, she said to him as usual, 'Jackal, bring out my
little ones.'
But the jackal
replied: 'Bring out your little ones, indeed! Why, you know as well as I do
that you have eaten them all up.'
Of course the
panther had not the least idea what the jackal meant by this, and only
repeated, 'Jackal, bring out my children.' As she got no answer she entered the
cave, but found no jackal, for he had crawled through the hole he had made and
escaped. And, what was worse, she did not find the little ones either.
Now the panther was
not going to let the jackal get off like that, and set off at a trot to catch
him. The jackal, however, had got a good start, and he reached a place where a
swarm of bees deposited their honey in the cleft of a rock. Then he stood still
and waited till the panther came up to him: 'Jackal, where are my little ones?'
she asked.
And the jackal
answered: 'They are up there. It is where I keep school.'
The panther looked
about, and then inquired, 'But where? I see nothing of them.'
'Come a little this
way,' said the jackal, 'and you will hear how beautifully they sing.'
So the panther drew
near the cleft of the rock.
'Don't you hear
them?' said the jackal; 'they are in there,' and slipped away while the panther
was listening to the song of the children.
She was still
standing in the same place when a baboon went by. 'What are you doing there,
panther?'
'I am listening to
my children singing. It is here that the jackal keeps his school.'
Then the baboon
seized a stick, and poked it in the cleft of the rock, exclaiming, 'Well, then,
I should like to see your children!'
The bees flew out in
a huge swarm, and made furiously for the panther, whom they attacked on all
sides, while the baboon soon climbed up out of the way, crying, as he perched
himself on the branch of a tree, 'I wish you joy of your children!' while from
afar the jackal's voice was heard exclaiming: 'Sting, her well! don't let her
go!'
The panther galloped
away as if she was mad, and flung herself into the nearest lake, but every time
she raised her head, the bees stung her afresh so at last the poor beast was
drowned altogether.
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