When they came where all the people were, Mr. Mouse picked up his feet and ran down a rat hole; but Miss p.u.s.s.y Cat sat down by the side of the road to eat a little. She was sitting there, spreading out all her good country sausage and good country ham and such things, when a town cat came prowling along past.
This town cat was hungry. He was just as ragged as a beggar man, and he wanted Miss p.u.s.s.y Cat"s victuals mighty bad.
"My land," he said. "Where did you get that big lunch?"
"Oh, that"s just a little snack," said Miss p.u.s.s.y Cat very politely.
"I brought it with me from home. Won"t you join me, sir?"
Now that old, hungry town cat wanted all Miss p.u.s.s.y Cat"s victuals mighty bad. He didn"t want to join her. So he said, "Do you really eat such a mess as that in the country where you come from?"
"Yes, indeed," said Miss p.u.s.s.y Cat, who was mighty glad to meet even a beggar cat from town and learn town ways.
"Don"t you eat sausages and ham in town? What do you eat in town, anyway?" she asked.
The town cat looked all about. He was bound to send Miss p.u.s.s.y Cat on an errand that would take her away from those good victuals. Just then he saw Mr. Mouse peep out of the hole to ask Miss p.u.s.s.y Cat if she was having a good time. The town cat reasoned that if he could start Miss p.u.s.s.y Cat running after Mr. Swift Foot Mouse he would have time to steal her dinner.
"We eat mice!" he said in the grandest manner. "You never will learn town ways until you learn to eat mice."
Miss p.u.s.s.y Cat was bound she would learn to do as town folks did. Up she hopped and left the lunch as quick as you could wink--and the old, hungry town cat grabbed it just as quickly. Miss p.u.s.s.y Cat chased Mr.
Mouse all the way to the Court House. There she caught him and there she ate him, all but his squeak and his teeth.
Then, by that, she got the taste; and cats have been eating mice and rats ever since, to this day.
FAIRIES
THE THREE BROTHERS
Once upon a time there lived three poor little dwarfs in a tumble-down house by a roadside, and each dwarf owned a china mug.
One little dwarf was stingy. He did his mug up in tissue paper and cotton batting and kept it locked up in his third bureau drawer. "I will keep it safe," said he, "where n.o.body can ever use it. It is my mug. My mug shall never get broken, and when I need a mug to drink from, I can use one that belongs to some one else."
The second little dwarf was selfish. He carried his mug in his pocket.
"I am going to keep this mug to drink from myself. It belongs to me.
If others need a mug to drink from, let them look out for themselves,"
he said.
The third little dwarf was generous. "I"m so glad that I own a pretty mug!" he chuckled to himself. "Every one can use it. It is the very thing to offer a thirsty traveller who stops at our tumble-down house to ask for a drink of water. My brothers can use it, too. I am sure they will both be quite as careful of it as if it belonged to them.
We need only the one mug, for we share alike, because we love one another."
Now one day there came a traveller over the dusty highroad. He was thirsty and tired. He saw the well, and he went up to the door of the tumble-down house and knocked, rat-tat-tat!
The stingy little dwarf was yawning in the parlor, because he never did any work--he let the others do it. When he heard the rat-tat-tat he kept very quiet.
The selfish little dwarf was in the dining-room, pretending to sweep--but he was only sweeping the crumbs under the mat, for he did not like to clean. He heard the rat-tat-tat! but he pretended that he was too busy to answer it.
The third little dwarf was in the kitchen, scrubbing the hearth with a mop. His sleeves were rolled up, and he had overalls on, but he could not bear to keep a tired traveller waiting at the door. "I must go at once," he thought. And he went.
"Come right round to the well," he said. "I will get a mug and give you a drink of our nice cold water. You must be tired, for the highway is warm, and dusty." He set the best chair for the traveller, and gave him a fan.
He went to fetch his mug. But what do you think! When he found it at last, it was soiled--and the stingy dwarf had carelessly broken the handle off, and the selfish dwarf had dropped it on the floor and nicked the rim! "Oh! Oh! It"s not fit for company use!" cried the generous little dwarf. "I must have something better!"
He asked Stingy to let him take his mug.
"No. You can"t take mine," said Stingy. "n.o.body can ever use it. It is all put away. It"s mine, and I won"t lend it to anybody."
Then he asked Selfish to let him take his mug.
"No," said Selfish. "I can"t let you take my mug. Give him yours. What do you care if it is nicked, and the handle is off--it is good enough for a beggar, I should think!"
So there was nothing for the generous little dwarf to do except to take his own broken mug to the stranger. But he cut some slices of bread and put them on the prettiest plate that he could find.
"I"m sorry I haven"t a better mug to offer you," he said, "but the others were all put away. They belong to my brothers. Oh, I wish that they would come out to see you,--they are so nice,--but they said they were busy at present. Stingy is dusting the parlor, and Selfish is brushing up the dining-room. Their mugs are nicer than mine, because they always know just how to take care of their things. Wouldn"t you like some more bread? I am sorry we haven"t b.u.t.ter to offer you--but we never buy it."
The traveller thanked Generous for all he had done. He said, "I am so grateful to you that I should like to do something for you before I go. I should like to give you something to remember me by. Let me take your mug again, little dwarf. Have you a big pail that I can use?"
"Oh, yes," returned the generous little dwarf. "I have one." And he ran to the kitchen and rinsed out the one that he had been using.
The stranger took the broken mug that had lost its handle and had a chipped rim, and he began to dip water from the bucket into the pail.
At the first dip, the handle came back on the mug, and the mug became quite whole and new. At the second dip, the mop-pail turned into gold.
At the third dip, the tumble-down house became new and splendid. At the fourth dip, the cupboards became filled with pots, kettles, and good things to eat. At the fifth dip, Stingy and Selfish came running out of the house, and they were changed. They were not stingy or selfish any longer, but were like their brother, generous, and good, and loving. They carried their mugs and gave them to the stranger.
And they kissed the generous little brother dwarf. The one who had been stingy said he was sorry that he had never helped with the work.
And the one who had been selfish said that he was sorry, too, and that he never would sweep crumbs under the mat again--for it only made work for other people to do. And at the seventh dip, the pail was filled full of gold.
Then the stranger bade them good-bye, and went on his way.
Who was he? A good fairy, no doubt. He may have heard of the generous little dwarf, and wanted to help him. If that were so, he probably wanted to help Stingy and Selfish, too, and make them into Good and Happy. At any rate, they all lived happily ever after, and the mug that belonged to the generous little dwarf was kept at the wellside for travellers to use.
THE CRY FAIRY
There was once a fairy who wanted to know all the things that ever were. This was very unusual, because most fairies know a great deal more than they have time to do; but somehow this fairy, who was named Gillibloom, had an idea that mortals know a great deal and that fairies would be happier if they could find out what some of the things are.
So he went to the Fairy Queen and asked for leave of absence for thirty-three and a third years, that he might go and live among mortals and learn things.
At the end of thirty-three and a third years he came back again, and he found the fairies dancing just as if they had never left off. They were all perfectly delighted to see him, and they left off dancing and crowded round him and cried out all together, which is the way the fairies sometimes talk: "O Gillibloom, what have you learned?"
Gillibloom looked at them a few minutes very solemnly, as if he wanted them to pay great attention to what he was going to say. Then he answered: "I have not really learned anything, but I have almost learned to cry."
"To cry, Gillibloom?" called the fairies. "What is that?"