The Boy Who Knew What The Birds Said.
by Padraic Colum.
How He Came to Know What the Birds Said
[Ill.u.s.tration]
There is one thing that all the Birds are afraid of, and that is the thing that will happen when the Bird That Follows the Cuckoo flies into the Cuckoo"s mouth.
And what will happen then, asks my kind foster-child.
When the Bird that Follows the Cuckoo flies into the Cuckoo"s mouth the World will come to an end.
All the Birds know that, but not all the People know it.
Well, one day the Cuckoo was sitting on a bush and her Mouth was open.
The Bird That Follows the Cuckoo flew straight at it. And into it he must have flown only for the Boy....
The Boy was in the tree and he flung his cap at the Cuckoo and he covered the Cuckoo and the Cuckoo"s open mouth.
The Bird That Follows the Cuckoo flew into the Crow"s mouth instead, and the Crow gave that bird a squeeze, I can tell you. The Cuckoo pushed off the Boy"s cap with her wings and flew into the forest.
All the Birds of the King"s Garden were there at the time. There were--
The Crow, the Woodp.e.c.k.e.r, The Wren and the Eagle, The Blackbird and Swallow, The Jackdaw and Starling, And the wonderful Peac.o.c.k; The Lapwing and Peewit, The bold Yellowhammer, The bad w.i.l.l.y-wagtail, The Raven so awful, And the c.o.c.k with his Hens; Stone-checker, Hedge-sparrow, And Lint-white and Lark, The Tom-t.i.t and Linnet, And brisk little Sparrow, The King-fisher too, And my own little Goldfinch.
All the Birds in the King"s Garden were overjoyed that the Bird that Follows the Cuckoo did not get into the Cuckoo"s Mouth.
"What shall we do for the Boy who prevented the World from coming to an End?" asked the good-natured Corncrake. She was there too, but I forgot to mention her.
"Nothing," said the w.i.l.l.y-wagtail. "The Boy who would throw a cap would throw a stone. Do nothing at all for him."
"I"ll sing for him," said the Goldfinch.
"I"ll teach him what the Birds say," said the Crow.
"If he knew the Language of the Birds he would be like King Solomon,"
said the Raven.
"Let us make him like King Solomon," said the Goldfinch.
"Yes, yes, yes," said all the Birds in the King"s Garden.
The Boy had not gone far when the Crow flew after him and lighted on his shoulder. The Crow spoke to him in the Boy"s own language. The Boy was surprised. The Crow flew to a standing stone and went on speaking plain words to him.
"O," said the Boy, "I didn"t know you could speak."
"Why shouldn"t I know how to speak," said the Crow, "haven"t I, for a hundred years and more, been watching men and listening to their words? Why shouldn"t I be able to speak?"
"And you can speak well, ma"am," said the Boy, not forgetting his manners.
"You know one language, but I know many languages," said the Crow, "for I know what People say, and I know what all the Birds say."
The old Crow sat there looking so wise and so friendly that the Boy began to talk to her at his ease. And after a while the Boy said, "Ma"am, do you think I could ever learn what the Birds say?"
"You would, if you had me to teach you," said the Crow.
"And will you teach me, ma"am?" said the Boy.
"I will," said the Crow.
Then every day after that the Crow would sit upon the Standing Stone and the Boy would stand beside it. When the Crow had eaten the boiled potato that the Boy always brought she would tell him about the languages of the different Birds. The two were teaching and learning from day to day, and indeed you might say that the Boy went to school to the Crow. He learnt the language of this Bird and that Bird, and as he learnt their languages, many"s and many"s the good story he heard them tell each other.
[Ill.u.s.tration]
[Ill.u.s.tration: The Stone of Victory]
The Stone of Victory
AND HOW FEET-IN-THE-ASHES, THE SWINEHERD"S SON, CAME TO FIND IT
[Ill.u.s.tration]
"If we went there, if we went there, maybe we"d find it," said the c.o.c.k-grouse to the Hen-grouse as they went together, clucking through the heather.
"And if we found it, if we found it, what good would the Stone of Victory do us?" said the Hen-grouse to the c.o.c.k-grouse, answering him back.
"And what good did the Stone of Victory do to the youth who was called Feet-in-the-Ashes, and who was only the Swineherd"s Son?" said the c.o.c.k-grouse to the Hen-grouse.
"Tell me, tell me, and then I shall know," said the Hen-grouse to the c.o.c.k-grouse, answering him back. They went together, clucking through the heather and the Boy who knew what the Birds said followed them.
He lay upon a rock and the c.o.c.k-grouse and the Hen-grouse discoursed below him, the c.o.c.k-grouse always lifting his voice above the hen"s.
The Boy heard what they said and he remembered every word of it. And, by the tongue in my mouth, here is the story he heard:--
"Cluck-ee, Cluck-ee, cluck-ee, cloo, cloo, cloo." The King of Ireland stood outside the gate of his Castle and his powerful captains and his strong-armed guards were all around him. And one of his captains went to the mound before him and he gave a shout to the East and a shout to the West, and a shout to the North and a shout to the South. When the King asked him why he did it the Captain said "I want the four quarters of the World to know that the King of Ireland stands here with his powerful Captains and his strong armed guards that no one dare come from the East or West, the North or the South and lay the weight of a finger upon him." And when he said this the other captains flashed their swords and the guards clashed their shields and the King of Ireland said, "Well and faithfully am I guarded indeed and luckier am I than any other King on the earth for no one can come from the East or the West, the North or the South and lay the weight of their finger upon me."
But no sooner did he say that than they saw a Giant coming across the hill and towards the place where they were standing. And when the Giant came to them he lifted up his hand and he doubled his hand into a fist and he struck the King of Ireland full in the mouth and he knocked out three of his teeth. He picked the King"s teeth up, put them in his pouch, and without one word walked past them and went down to the sea.
"Who will avenge the insult put upon me?" said the King of Ireland, "and which of my captains will go and win back for me the three best teeth I had?" But not one of his captains made a step after the Giant.
"I know now," said the King, "How well you serve and how well you guard me. Well, if none of you will help me and if none of you will avenge me, I"ll find those who will. And now I"ll make a proclamation and I"ll solemnly declare that whoever avenges the insult offered to me, and, in addition brings back to me the three that were the best teeth in my head, even though he be a servant or the son of a servant, I"ll give him my daughter in marriage and a quarter of my kingdom, and, more than that," said he, "I"ll make him full captain over all my guards."
The proclamation was sent all over the Castle and in the end it came to the ears of the Swineherd"s Son who was called Feet-in-the-Ashes. And when he heard it he rubbed the ashes out of his hair and he said to his grandmother--"If there is anything in the world I want it is the King"s daughter in marriage and a quarter of the Kingdom. I"ll want provision for my journey," said he, "so, grandmother, bake a cake for me." "I"ll do better than that for you, honey, if you are going to win back the King"s teeth and marry the King"s daughter," said his grandmother. "I have a few things of my own that no one knows anything about, and I"ll give them to you with your cake. Here," said she, "is my crutch. Follow the Giant"s tracks until you come to the sea, throw the crutch into the sea and it will become a boat, step into the boat and in it you can sail over to the Green Island that the Giant rules. And here"s this pot of balsam. No matter how deep or deadly the sword-cut or the spear-thrust wound is, if you rub this balsam over it, it will be cured. Here"s your cake too. Leave good-luck behind you and take good-luck with you, and be off now on your journey."