THE MARVELLOUS MUSICIAN
THERE
was once upon a time a marvellous musician. One day he was wandering through a
wood all by himself, thinking now of one thing, now of another, till there was
nothing else left to think about. Then he said to himself:
`Time
hangs very heavily on my hands when I'm all alone in the wood. I must try and
find a pleasant companion.'
So
he took his fiddle out, and fiddled till he woke the echoes round. After a time
a wolf came through the thicket and trotted up to the musician.
`Oh!
it's a Wolf, is it?' said he. `I've not the smallest wish for his society.'
But
the Wolf approached him and said:
`Oh,
my dear musician, how beautifully you play! I wish you'd teach me how it's
done.'
`That's
easily learned,' answered the fiddler; `you must only do exactly as I tell
you.'
`Of
course I will,' replied the Wolf. `I can promise that you will find me a most
apt pupil.'
So
they joined company and went on their way together, and after a time they came
to an old oak tree, which was hollow and had a crack in the middle of the
trunk.
`Now,'
said the Musician, `if you want to learn to fiddle, here's your chance. Lay
your front paws in this crack.'
The
Wolf did as he was told, and the Musician quickly seized a stone, and wedged
both his fore paws so firmly into the crack that he was held there, a fast
prisoner.
`Wait
there till I return,' said the Fiddler, and he went on his way.
After
a time he said to himself again:
`Time
hangs very heavily on my hands when I'm all alone in the wood; I must try and
find a companion.'
So
he drew out his fiddle, and fiddled away lustily. Presently a fox slunk through
the trees.
`Aha
I what have we here?' said the Musician. `A fox; well, I haven't the smallest
desire for his company.'
The
Fox came straight up to him and said:
`My
dear friend, how beautifully you play the fiddle; I would like to learn how you
do it.'
`Nothing
easier,' said the Musician. `if you'll promise to do exactly as I tell you.'
`Certainly,'
answered the Fox, `you have only to say the word.'
`Well,
then, follow me,' replied the Fiddler.
When
they had gone a bi of the way, they came to a path with high trees on each
side. Here the Musician halted, bent a stout hazel bough down to the ground
from one side of the path, and put his foot on the end of it to keep it down.
Then he bent a branch down from the other side and said:
`Give
me your left front paw, my little Fox, if you really wish to learn how it's
done.'
The
Fox did as he was told, and the Musician tied his front paw to the end of one
of the branches.
`Now,
my friend,' he said, `give me your right paw.'
This
he bound to the other branch, and having carefully seen that his knots were all
secure, he stepped off the ends of the branches, and they sprang back, leaving
the poor Fox suspended in mid-air.
`Just
you wait where you are till I return,' said the Musician, and he went on his
way again.
Once
more he said to himself:
`Time
hangs heavily on my hands when I'm all alone in the wood; I must try and find
another companion.'
So
he took out his fiddle and played as merrily as before. This time a little hare
came running up at the sound.
`Oh!
here comes a hare,' said the Musician; `I've not the smallest desire for his
company.'
`How
beautifully you play, dear Mr. Fiddler,' said the little Hare. `I wish I could
learn how you do it.'
`It's
easily learnt,' answered the Musician; `just do exactly as I tell you.'
`That
I will,' said the Hare, `you will find me a most attentive pupil.'
They
went on a bit together, till they came to a thin part of the wood, where they
found an aspen tree growing. The Musician bound a long cord round the little
Hare's neck, the other end of which he fastened to the tree.
`Now,
my merry little friend,' said the Musician, `run twenty times round the tree.'
The
little Hare obeyed, and when it had run twenty times round the tree, the cord
had twisted itself twenty times round the trunk, so that the poor little beast
was held a fast prisoner, and it might bite and tear as much as it liked, it
couldn't free itself, and the cord only cut its tender neck.
`Wait
there till I return,' said the Musician, and went on his way.
In
the meantime the Wolf had pulled and bitten and scratched at the stone, till at
last he succeeded in getting his paws out. Full of anger, he hurried after the
Musician, determined when he met him to tear him to pieces. When the Fox saw
him running by, he called out as loud as he could:
`Brother
Wolf, come to my rescue, the Musician has deceived me too.'
The
Wolf pulled the branches down, bit the cord in two, and set the Fox free. So
they went on their way together, both vowing vengeance on the Musician. They
found the poor imprisoned little Hare, and having set him free also, they all
set out to look for their enemy.
During
this time the Musician had once more played his fiddle, and had been more
fortunate in the result. The sounds pierced to the ears of a poor woodman, who
instantly left his work, and with his hatchet under his arm came to listen to the
music.
`At
last I've got a proper sort of companion,' said the Musician, `for it was a
human being I wanted all along, and not a wild animal.'
And
he began playing so enchantingly that the poor man stood there as if bewitched,
and his heart leapt for joy as he listened.
And
as he stood thus, the Wolf and Fox and little Hare came up, and the woodman saw
at once that they meant mischief. He lifted his glittering axe and placed
himself in front of the Musician, as much as to say: `If you touch a hair of
his head, beware, for you will have to answer for it to me.'
Then the beasts were frightened, and they all three ran back into the wood, and the Musician played the woodman one of his best tunes, by way of thanks, and then continued his way
0 Comments
If you have any Misunderstanding Please let me know