The Cunning Hare
In a
very cold country, far across the seas, where ice and snow cover the ground for
many months in the year, there lived a little hare, who, as his father and
mother were both dead, was brought up by his grandmother. As he was too young,
and she was too old, to work, they were very poor, and often did not have
enough to eat.
One
day, when the little fellow was hungrier than usual, he asked his grandmother
if he might go down to the river and catch a fish for their breakfast, as the
thaw had come and the water was flowing freely again. She laughed at him for
thinking that any fish would let itself be caught by a hare, especially such a
young one; but as she had the rheumatism very badly, and could get no food
herself, she let him go. 'If he does not catch a fish he may find something else,'
she said to herself. So she told her grandson where to look for the net, and
how he was to set it across the river; but just as he was starting, feeling
himself quite a man, she called him back.
'After
all, I don't know what is the use of your going, my boy! For even if you should
catch a fish, I have no fire to cook it with.'
'Let
me catch my fish, and I will soon make you a fire,' he answered gaily, for he
was young, and knew nothing about the difficulties of fire-making.
It
took him some time to haul the net through bushes and over fields, but at
length he reached a pool in the river which he had often heard was swarming
with fish, and here he set the net, as his grandmother had directed him.
He
was so excited that he hardly slept all night, and at the very first streak of
dawn he ran as fast as ever he could down to the river. His heart beat as
quickly as if he had had dogs behind him, and he hardly dared to look, lest he
should be disappointed. Would there be even one fish? And at this thought the
pangs of hunger made him feel quite sick with fear. But he need not have been
afraid; in every mesh of the net was a fine fat fish, and of course the net
itself was so heavy that he could only lift one corner. He threw some of the
fish back into the water, and buried some more in a hole under a stone, where
he would be sure to find them. Then he rolled up the net with the rest, put it
on his back and carried it home. The weight of the load caused his back to
ache, and he was thankful to drop it outside their hut, while he rushed in,
full of joy, to tell his grandmother. 'Be quick and clean them!' he said, 'and
I will go to those people's tents on the other side of the water.'
The
old woman stared at him in horror as she listened to his proposal. Other people
had tried to steal fire before, and few indeed had come back with their lives;
but as, contrary to all her expectations, he had managed to catch such a number
of fish, she thought that perhaps there was some magic about him which she did
not know of, and did not try to hinder him.
When
the fish were all taken out, he fetched the net which he had laid out to dry,
folded it up very small, and ran down to the river, hoping that he might find a
place narrow enough for him to jump over; but he soon saw that it was too wide
for even the best jumper in the world. For a few moments he stood there,
wondering what was to be done, then there darted into his head some words of a
spell which he had once heard a wizard use, while drinking from the river. He
repeated them, as well as he could remember, and waited to see what would
happen. In five minutes such a grunting and a puffing was heard, and columns of
water rose into the air, though he could not tell what had made them. Then
round the bend of the stream came fifteen huge whales, which he ordered to
place themselves heads to tails, like stepping stones, so that he could jump
from one to the other till he landed on the opposite shore. Directly he got
there he told the whales that he did not need them any more, and sat down in
the sand to rest.
Unluckily
some children who were playing about caught sight of him, and one of them,
stealing softly up behind him, laid tight hold of his ears. The hare, who had
been watching the whales as they sailed down the river, gave a violent start,
and struggled to get away; but the boy held on tight, and ran back home, as
fast as he could go.
'Throw
it in the pot,' said the old woman, as soon as he had told his story; 'put it
in that basket, and as soon as the water boils in the pot we will hang it over
the fire!'
'Better
kill it first,' said the old man; and the hare listened, horribly frightened,
but still looking secretly to see if there was no hole through which he could
escape, if he had a chance of doing so. Yes, there was one, right in the top of
the tent, so, shaking himself, as if with fright, he let the end of his net
unroll itself a little.
'I
wish that a spark of fire would fall on my net,' whispered he; and the next
minute a great log fell forward into the midst of the tent, causing every one
to spring backwards. The sparks were scattered in every direction, and one fell
on the net, making a little blaze. In an instant the hare had leaped through
the hole, and was racing towards the river, with men, women, and children after
him. There was no time to call back the whales, so, holding the net tight in
his mouth, he wished himself across the river. Then he jumped high into the
air, and landed safe on the other side, and after turning round to be sure that
there was no chance of anyone pursuing him, trotted happily home to his
grandmother.
'Didn't
I tell you I would bring you fire?' said he, holding up his net, which was now
burning briskly.
'But
how did you cross the water?' inquired the old woman.
'Oh,
I just jumped!' said he. And his grandmother asked him no more questions, for
she saw that he was wiser than she.
['Indian
Folk Tales.' Bureau of Ethnology.]
The Brown Fairy Book, by Andrew Lang,
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