The
cock said to the hen,
"It is nutting time, let us go together
to the mountains and have a good feast for once, before the squirrels come
and carry all away."
"Yes," answered the hen, "come along; we
will have a jolly time together."
Then they set off together to the
mountains, and as it was a fine day they stayed there till the evening. Now
whether it was that they had eaten so much, or because of their pride and
haughtiness, I do not know, but they would not go home on foot; so the cock
set to work to make a little carriage out of nutshells. When it was ready,
the hen seated herself in it, and said to the cock,
"Now you can harness yourself to it."
"That's all very fine," said the cock,
"I would sooner go home on foot than do such a thing: and I never agreed to
it. I don't mind being coachman, and sitting on the box; but as to drawing
it myself, it's quite out of the question."
As they were wrangling, a duck came
quacking,
"You thieving vagabonds, who told you
you might go to my mountain? Look out, or it will be the worse for you!" and
flew at the cock with bill wide open. But the cock was not backward, and he
gave the duck a good dig in the body, and hacked at her with his spurs so
valiantly that she begged for mercy, and willingly allowed herself to be
harnessed to the carriage. Then the cock seated himself on the box and was
coachman; so off they went at a great pace, the cock crying out "Run, duck,
as fast as you can!"
When they had gone a part of the way
they met two foot-passengers, a pin and a needle. They cried "Stop! stop!"
and said that it would soon be blindman's holiday; that they could not go a
step farther; that the ways were very muddy; might they just get in for a
little? they had been standing at the door of the tailors' house of call and
had been delayed because of beer.
The cock, seeing they were slender folks
that would not take up a great deal of room, let them both step in, only
they must promise not to tread on his toes nor on the hen's.
Late in the evening they came to an inn,
and there they found that they could not go any farther that night, as the
duck's paces were not good, she waddled so much from side to side; so they
turned in. The landlord at first made some difficulty; his house was full
already, and he thought they had no very distinguished appearance; at last,
however, when they had made many fine speeches, and had promised him the egg
that the hen had laid on the way, and that he should keep the duck, who laid
one every day, he agreed to let them stay the night; and so they had a very
gay time.
Early in the morning, when it was
beginning to grow light, and everybody was still asleep, the cock waked up
the hen, fetched the egg, and made a hole in it, and they ate it up between
them, and put the eggshell on the hearth. Then they went up to the needle,
who was still sleeping, picked him up by his head, and stuck him in the
landlord's chair-cushion, and having also placed the pin in his towel, off
they flew over the hills and far away. The duck, who had chosen to sleep in
the open air, and had remained in the yard, heard the rustling of their
wings, and, waking up, looked about till she found a brook, down which she
swam a good deal faster than she had drawn the carriage.
A few hours later the landlord woke,
and, leaving his feather-bed, began washing himself; but when he took the
towel to dry himself he drew the pin all across his face, and made a red
streak from ear to ear. Then he went into the kitchen to light his pipe, but
when he stooped towards the hearth to take up a coal the eggshell flew in
his eyes.
"Everything goes wrong this morning,"
said he, and let himself drop, full of vexation, into his grandfather's
chair; but up he jumped in a moment, crying, "Oh dear!" for the needle had
gone into him.
Now he became angry, and had his
suspicions of the guests who had arrived so late the evening before; and
when he looked round for them they were nowhere to be seen.
Then he swore that he would never more
harbour such vagabonds, that consumed so much, paid nothing, and played such
nasty tricks into the bargain. |