Reynard And Bruin [Europa's Fairy Book]
You must know that once upon a time
Reynard the Fox and Bruin the Bear went into partnership and kept house together.
Would you like to know the reason? Well, Reynard knew that Bruin had a beehive
full of honeycomb, and that was what he wanted; but Bruin kept so close a guard
upon his honey that Master Reynard didn't know how to get away from him and get
hold of the honey. So one day he said to Bruin, "Pardner, I have to go and
be gossip—that means god-father, you know—to one of my old friends."
"Why, certainly," said Bruin. So off Reynard goes into the woods, and
after a time he crept back and uncovered the beehive and had such a feast of
honey. Then he went back to Bruin, who asked him what name had been given to
the child. Reynard had forgotten all about the christening and could only say,
"Just-begun." "What a funny name," said Master Bruin.
A little while after Reynard thought he
would like another feast of honey. So he told Bruin that
he had to go to another christening; and off he went. And when he came back and
Bruin asked him what was the name given to the child Reynard said,
"Half-eaten." The third time the same thing occurred, and this time
the name given by Reynard to the child that didn't exist was
"All-gone,"—you can guess why.
A short time afterwards Master Bruin
thought he would like to eat up some of his honey and asked Reynard to come and
join him in the feast. When they got to the beehive Bruin was so surprised to
find that there was no honey left; and he turned round to Reynard and said,
"Just-begun, Half-eaten, All-gone—so that is what you meant; you have
eaten my honey." "Why no," said Reynard, "how could that
be? I have never stirred from your side except when I went a-gossiping, and
then I was far away from here. You must have eaten the honey yourself, perhaps
when you were asleep; at any rate we can easily tell; let us lie down here in
the sunshine, and if either of us has eaten the honey, the sun will soon sweat
it out of us." No sooner said than done, and the two lay side by side in
the sunshine. Soon Master Bruin commenced to doze, and Mr. Reynard took some
honey from the hive and smeared it round Bruin's snout; then he woke him up and
said, "See, the honey is oozing out of your snout; you must have eaten it
when you were asleep."
Some time after this Reynard saw a man
driving a cart full of fish, which made his mouth water. So he ran and he ran
and he ran till he got far away in front of the cart and lay down in the road
as still as if he were dead. When the man came up to him and saw him lying there
dead, as he thought, he said to himself, "Why, that will make a beautiful
red fox scarf and muff for my wife Ann." And he got down and seized hold
of Reynard and threw him into the cart all along with the fish, and then he
went driving on as before. Reynard began to throw the fish out till there were
none left, and then he jumped out himself without the man noticing it, who
drove up to his door and called out, "Ann, Ann, see what I have brought
you." And when his wife came to the door she looked into the cart and
said, "Why, there is nothing there."
Reynard in the meantime had brought all
his fish together and began eating some when up comes Bruin and asked for a
share. "No, no," said Reynard, "we only share food when we have
shared work. I fished for these, you go and fish for others."
"Why, how could you fish for these?
the water is all frozen over," said Bruin.
"I'll soon show you," said
Reynard, and brought him down to the bank of the river, and pointed to a hole
in the ice and said, "I put my tail in that, and the fish were so hungry I
couldn't draw them up quick enough. Why do you not do the
same?"
So Bruin put his tail down and waited and
waited but no fish came. "Have patience, man," said Reynard; "as
soon as one fish comes the rest will follow."
"Ah, I feel a bite," said
Bruin, as the water commenced to freeze round his tail and caught it in the
ice.
"Better wait till two or three have
been caught and then you can catch three at a time. I'll go back and finish my
lunch."
And with that Master Reynard trotted up
to the man's wife and said to her, "Ma'am, there's a big black bear caught
by the tail in the ice; you can do what you like with him." So the woman
called her husband and they took big sticks and went down to the river and
commenced whacking Bruin who, by this time, was fast in the ice. He pulled and
he pulled and he pulled, till at last he got away leaving
three quarters of his tail in the ice, and that is why bears have such short
tails up to the present day.
Meanwhile Master Reynard was having a great time in the man's house, golloping everything he could find till the man and his wife came back and found him with his nose in the cream jug. As soon as he heard them come in he tried to get away, but not before the man had seized hold of the cream jug and thrown it at him, just catching him on the tail, and that is the reason why the tips of foxes' tails are cream white to this very day.
Well, Reynard crept home and found Bruin
in such a state, who commenced to grumble and complain that it was all
Reynard's fault that he had lost his tail. So Reynard pointed to his own tail
and said, "Why, that's nothing; see my tail; they hit me so hard upon the
head my brains fell out upon my tail. Oh, how bad I feel;
won't you carry me to my little bed." So Bruin, who was a good-hearted
soul, took him upon his back and rolled with him towards the house. And as he
went on Reynard kept saying, "The sick carries the sound, the sick carries
the sound."
"What's that you are saying?"
asked Bruin.
"Oh, I have no brains left, I do not
know what I am saying," said Reynard but kept on singing, "The sick
carries the sound, ha, ha, the sick carries the sound."
Then Bruin knew that he had been done and
threw Reynard down upon the ground, and would have eaten him up but that the
fox slunk away and rushed into a briar bush. Bruin followed him closely into
the briar bush and caught Reynard's hind leg in his mouth. Then Reynard called
out, "That's right, you fool, bite the briar root, bite the briar
root."
Bruin thinking that he was biting the
briar root, let go Reynard's foot and snapped at the nearest briar root.
"That's right, now you've got me,
called out Reynard, and slunk away.
When Bruin heard Reynard's voice dying
away in the distance he knew that he had been done again,
and that was the end of their partnership.
Some time after this a man was plowing in
the field with his two oxen, who were very lazy that day. So the man called out
at them, "Get a move on or I'll give you to the Bear"; and when they
didn't quicken their pace he tried to frighten them by calling out, "Bear,
Bear, come and take these lazy oxen." Sure enough, Bruin heard him and
came out of the woods and said, "Here I am, give me the oxen, or else
it'll be worse for you." The man was in despair but said, "Yes, yes,
of course they are yours, but please let me finish my morning's plowing so I
may finish this acre." Bruin could not say "No" to that, and sat
down licking his chops and waiting for the oxen. The man went on plowing,
thinking what he should do, when just at the corner of the field Reynard came
up to him and said, "If you will give me two geese, I'll help you out of
this fix and deliver the Bear into your hands." The man agreed and he told
him what to do and went away into the woods. Soon after, the Bear and the man
heard a noise like "Bow-wow, Bow-wow"; and the Bear came to the man
and said, "What's that?" "Oh, that must be the lord's hounds out
hunting for bears." "Hide me, hide me," said Bruin, "and I
will let you off the oxen." Then Reynard called out from the wood,
"What's that black thing you've got there?" And the Bear said,
"Say it's the stump of a tree." So when the man had called this out to the Fox, Reynard called out, "Put it in the cart;
fix it with the chain; cut off the boughs, and drive your axe into the
stump." Then the Bear said to the man, "Pretend to do what he bids
you; heave me into the cart; bind me with the chain; pretend to cut off the
boughs, and drive the axe into the stump." So the man lifted Bruin into
the cart, bound him with the chain, then cut off his limbs and buried the axe
in his head.
Then Reynard came forward and asked for
his reward, and the man went back to his house to get the pair of geese that he
had promised.
"Wife, wife," he called out, as
he neared the house, "get me a pair of geese, which I have promised the
Fox for ridding me of the Bear."
"I can do better than that,"
said his wife Ann, and brought him out a bag with two struggling animals in it.
"Give these to Master Reynard,"
said she; "they will be geese enough for him." So the man took the
bag and went down to the field and gave the bag to Reynard; but when he opened
it out sprang two hounds, and he had great trouble in running away from them to
his den.
When he got to his den the Fox asked each
of his limbs, how they had helped him in his flight. His nose said, "I
smelt the hounds"; his eyes said, "We looked for the shortest
way"; his ears said, "We listened for the breathing of the
hounds"; and his legs said, "We ran away with you." Then he asked his tail what it had done, and it said,
"Why, I got caught in the bushes or made your leg stumble; that is all I
could do." So, as a punishment, the Fox stuck his tail out of his den, and
the hounds saw it and caught hold of it, and dragged the Fox out of his den by
it and ate him all up. So that was the end of Master Reynard, and well he
deserved it. Don't you think so?