"Not I," said the Duck.
"I will, then," said the little Red Hen, and she took the wheat to the mill.
When she brought the flour home she said, "Who will make some bread with this flour?"
"Not I," said the Goose.
"Not I," said the Duck.
"I will, then," said the little Red Hen.
When the bread was baked, she said, "Who will eat this bread?"
"I will," said the Goose
"I will," said the Duck
"No, you won"t," said the little Red Hen. "I shall eat it myself.
Cluck! cluck!" And she called her chickens to help her.
THE GINGERBREAD MAN[1]
[1] I have tried to give this story in the most familiar form; it varies a good deal in the hands of different story-tellers, but this is substantially the version I was "brought up on." The form of the ending was suggested to me by the story in Carolyn Bailey"s For the Children"s Hour (Milton Bradley Co.).
Once upon a time there was a little old woman and a little old man, and they lived all alone in a little old house. They hadn"t any little girls or any little boys, at all. So one day, the little old woman made a boy out of gingerbread; she made him a chocolate jacket, and put cinnamon seeds in it for b.u.t.tons; his eyes were made of fine, fat currants; his mouth was made of rose-colored sugar; and he had a gay little cap of orange sugar-candy. When the little old woman had rolled him out, and dressed him up, and pinched his gingerbread shoes into shape, she put him in a pan; then she put the pan in the oven and shut the door; and she thought, "Now I shall have a little boy of my own."
When it was time for the Gingerbread Boy to be done she opened the oven door and pulled out the pan. Out jumped the little Gingerbread Boy on to the floor, and away he ran, out of the door and down the street!
The little old woman and the little old man ran after him as fast as they could, but he just laughed, and shouted,--
"Run! run! as fast as you can!
"You can"t catch me, I"m the Gingerbread Man!"
And they couldn"t catch him.
The little Gingerbread Boy ran on and on, until he came to a cow, by the roadside. "Stop, little Gingerbread Boy," said the cow; "I want to eat you." The little Gingerbread Boy laughed, and said,--
"I have run away from a little old woman, "And a little old man, "And I can run away from you, I can!"
And, as the cow chased him, he looked over his shoulder and cried,--
"Run! run! as fast as you can!
"You can"t catch me, I"m the Gingerbread Man!"
And the cow couldn"t catch him.
The little Gingerbread Boy ran on, and on, and on, till he came to a horse, in the pasture. "Please stop, little Gingerbread Boy," said the horse, "you look very good to eat." But the little Gingerbread Boy laughed out loud. "Oho! oho!" he said,--
"I have run away from a little old woman, "A little old man, "A cow, "And I can run away from you, I can!"
And, as the horse chased him, he looked over his shoulder and cried,--
"Run! run! as fast as you can!
"You can"t catch me, I"m the Gingerbread Man!"
And the horse couldn"t catch him.
By and by the little Gingerbread Boy came to a barn full of threshers.
When the threshers smelled the Gingerbread Boy, they tried to pick him up, and said, "Don"t run so fast, little Gingerbread Boy; you look very good to eat." But the little Gingerbread Boy ran harder than ever, and as he ran he cried out,--
"I have run away from a little old woman, "A little old man, "A cow, "A horse, "And I can run away from you, I can!"
And when he found that he was ahead of the threshers, he turned and shouted back to them,--
"Run! run! as fast as you can!
"You can"t catch me, I"m the Gingerbread Man!"
And the threshers couldn"t catch him.
Then the little Gingerbread Boy ran faster than ever. He ran and ran until he came to a field full of mowers. When the mowers saw how fine he looked, they ran after him, calling out, "Wait a bit! wait a bit, little Gingerbread Boy, we wish to eat you!" But the little Gingerbread Boy laughed harder than ever, and ran like the wind. "Oho!
oho!" he said,--
"I have run away from a little old woman, "A little old man, "A cow, "A horse, "A barn full of threshers, "And I can run away from you, I can!"
And when he found that he was ahead of the mowers, he turned and shouted back to them,--
"Run! run! as fast as you can!
"You can"t catch me, I"m the Gingerbread Man!"
And the mowers couldn"t catch him.
By this time the little Gingerbread Boy was so proud that he didn"t think anybody could catch him. Pretty soon he saw a fox coming across a field. The fox looked at him and began to run. But the little Gingerbread Boy shouted across to him, "You can"t catch me!" The fox began to run faster, and the little Gingerbread Boy ran faster, and as he ran he chuckled,--
"I have run away from a little old woman, "A little old man, "A cow, "A horse, "A barn full of threshers, "A field full of mowers, "And I can run away from you, I can!
"Run! run! as fast as you can!
"You can"t catch me, I"m the Gingerbread Man!"
"Why," said the fox, "I would not catch you if I could. I would not think of disturbing you."
Just then, the little Gingerbread Boy came to a river. He could not swim across, and he wanted to keep running away from the cow and the horse and the people.
"Jump on my tail, and I will take you across," said the fox.
So the little Gingerbread Boy jumped on the fox"s tail, and the fox swam into the river. When he was a little way from sh.o.r.e he turned his head, and said, "You are too heavy on my tail, little Gingerbread Boy, I fear I shall let you get wet; jump on my back."
The little Gingerbread Boy jumped on his back.