99 lines
6.1 KiB
Text
99 lines
6.1 KiB
Text
The Willow-Wren
|
||
|
||
In former days every sound still had its meaning and application. When
|
||
the smith’s hammer resounded, it cried, “Strike away! strike away.”
|
||
When the carpenter’s plane grated, it said, “Here goes! here goes.” If
|
||
the mill wheel began to clack, it said, “Help, Lord God! help, Lord
|
||
God!” And if the miller was a cheat and happened to leave the mill, it
|
||
spoke high German, and first asked slowly, “Who is there? Who is
|
||
there?” and then answered quickly, “The miller! the miller!” and at
|
||
last quite in a hurry, “He steals bravely! he steals bravely! three
|
||
pecks in a bushel.”
|
||
|
||
At this time the birds also had their own language which every one
|
||
understood; now it only sounds like chirping, screeching, and
|
||
whistling, and to some like music without words. It came into the
|
||
bird’s mind, however, that they would no longer be without a ruler, and
|
||
would choose one of themselves to be their King. One alone amongst
|
||
them, the green plover, was opposed to this. He had lived free, and
|
||
would die free, and anxiously flying hither and thither, he cried,
|
||
“Where shall I go? where shall I go?” He retired into a solitary and
|
||
unfrequented marsh, and showed himself no more among his fellows.
|
||
|
||
The birds now wished to discuss the matter, and on a fine May morning
|
||
they all gathered together from the woods and fields: eagles and
|
||
chaffinches, owls and crows, larks and sparrows, how can I name them
|
||
all? Even the cuckoo came, and the hoopoe, his clerk, who is so called
|
||
because he is always heard a few days before him, and a very small bird
|
||
which as yet had no name, mingled with the band. The hen, which by some
|
||
accident had heard nothing of the whole matter, was astonished at the
|
||
great assemblage. “What, what, what is going to be done?” she cackled;
|
||
but the cock calmed his beloved hen, and said, “Only rich people,” and
|
||
told her what they had on hand. It was decided, however, that the one
|
||
who could fly the highest should be King. A tree-frog which was sitting
|
||
among the bushes, when he heard that, cried a warning, “No, no, no!
|
||
no!” because he thought that many tears would be shed because of this;
|
||
but the crow said, “Caw, caw,” and that all would pass off peaceably.
|
||
It was now determined that on this fine morning they should at once
|
||
begin to ascend, so that hereafter no one should be able to say, “I
|
||
could easily have flown much higher, but the evening came on, and I
|
||
could do no more.” On a given signal, therefore, the whole troop rose
|
||
up in the air. The dust ascended from the land, and there was
|
||
tremendous fluttering and whirring and beating of wings, and it looked
|
||
as if a black cloud was rising up. The little birds were, however, soon
|
||
left behind. They could go no farther, and fell back to the ground. The
|
||
larger birds held out longer, but none could equal the eagle, who
|
||
mounted so high that he could have picked the eyes out of the sun. And
|
||
when he saw that the others could not get up to him, he thought, “Why
|
||
shouldst thou fly still higher, thou art the King?” and began to let
|
||
himself down again. The birds beneath him at once cried to him. “Thou
|
||
must be our King, no one has flown so high as thou.” “Except me,”
|
||
screamed the little fellow without a name, who had crept into the
|
||
breast-feathers of the eagle. And as he was not at all tired, he rose
|
||
up and mounted so high that he reached heaven itself. When, however, he
|
||
had gone as far as this, he folded his wings together, and called down
|
||
with clear and penetrating voice, “I am King! I am King.”
|
||
|
||
“Thou, our King?” cried the birds angrily. “Thou hast compassed it by
|
||
trick and cunning!” So they made another condition. He should be King
|
||
who could go down lowest in the ground. How the goose did flap about
|
||
with its broad breast when it was once more on the land! How quickly
|
||
the cock scratched a hole! The duck came off the worst of all, for she
|
||
leapt into a ditch, but sprained her legs, and waddled away to a
|
||
neighboring pond, crying, “Cheating, cheating!” The little bird without
|
||
a name, however, sought out a mouse-hole, slipped down into it, and
|
||
cried out of it with his small voice, “I am King! I am King!”
|
||
|
||
“Thou our King!” cried the birds still more angrily. “Dost thou think
|
||
thy cunning shall prevail?” They determined to keep him a prisoner in
|
||
the hole and starve him out. The owl was placed as sentinel in front of
|
||
it, and was not to let the rascal out if she had any value for her
|
||
life. When evening was come all the birds were feeling very tired after
|
||
exerting their wings so much, so they went to bed with their wives and
|
||
children. The owl alone remained standing by the mouse-hole, gazing
|
||
steadfastly into it with her great eyes. In the meantime she, too, had
|
||
grown tired and thought to herself, “You might certainly shut one eye,
|
||
you will still watch with the other, and the little miscreant shall not
|
||
come out of his hole.” So she shut one eye, and with the other looked
|
||
straight at the mouse-hole. The little fellow put his head out and
|
||
peeped, and wanted to slip away, but the owl came forward immediately,
|
||
and he drew his head back again. Then the owl opened the one eye again,
|
||
and shut the other, intending to shut them in turn all through the
|
||
night.
|
||
|
||
But when she next shut the one eye, she forgot to open the other, and
|
||
as soon as both her eyes were shut she fell asleep. The little fellow
|
||
soon observed that, and slipped away.
|
||
|
||
From that day forth, the owl has never dared to show herself by
|
||
daylight, for if she does the other birds chase her and pluck her
|
||
feathers out. She only flies out by night, but hates and pursues mice
|
||
because they make such ugly holes. The little bird, too, is very
|
||
unwilling to let himself be seen, because he is afraid it will cost him
|
||
his life if he is caught. He steals about in the hedges, and when he is
|
||
quite safe, he sometimes cries, “I am King,” and for this reason, the
|
||
other birds call him in mockery, ‘King of the hedges’ (Zaunkönig). No
|
||
one, however, was so happy as the lark at not having to obey the little
|
||
King. As soon as the sun appears, she ascends high in the air and
|
||
cries, “Ah, how beautiful that is! beautiful that is! beautiful,
|
||
beautiful! ah, how beautiful that is!”
|