The Bee-Man of Orn and Other Fanciful Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 200 pages of information about The Bee-Man of Orn and Other Fanciful Tales.

The Bee-Man of Orn and Other Fanciful Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 200 pages of information about The Bee-Man of Orn and Other Fanciful Tales.

The Prince’s party was now in a doleful plight.  Every one was very hungry; they were in an open plain, no house was visible, and they knew not which way to go.  They wandered about for some time, looking for a brook or a spring where they might quench their thirst; and then a rabbit sprang out from some bushes.  The whole party immediately started off in pursuit of the rabbit.  They chased it here, there, backward and forward, through hollows and over hills, until it ran quite away and disappeared.  Then they were more tired, thirsty, and hungry than before; and, to add to their miseries, when night came on the sky was cloudy, and the course-marker could not set his instrument by the stars.  It would be difficult to find sixteen more miserable people than the Prince and his companions when they awoke the next morning from their troubled sleep on the hard ground.  Nearly starved, they gazed at one another with feelings of despair.

“I feel,” said the Prince, in a weak voice, “that there is nothing I would not do to obtain food.  I would willingly become a slave if my master would give me a good breakfast.”

“So would I,” ejaculated each of the others.

About an hour after this, as they were all sitting disconsolately upon the ground, they saw, slowly approaching, a large cart drawn by a pair of oxen.  On the front of the cart, which seemed to be heavily loaded, sat a man, with a red beard, reading a book.  The boys, when they saw the cart, set up a feeble shout, and the man, lifting his eyes from his book, drove directly toward the group on the ground.  Dismounting, he approached Prince Hassak, who immediately told him his troubles and implored relief.  “We will do any thing,” said the Prince, “to obtain food.”

Standing for a minute in a reflective mood, the man with the red beard addressed the Prince in a slow, meditative manner:  “How would you like,” he said, “to form a nucleus?”

“Can we get any thing to eat by it?” eagerly asked the Prince.

“Yes,” replied the man, “you can.”

“We’ll do it!” immediately cried the whole sixteen, without waiting for further information.

“Which will you do first,” said the man, “listen to my explanations, or eat?”

“Eat!” cried the entire sixteen in chorus.

The man now produced from his cart a quantity of bread, meat, wine, and other provisions, which he distributed generously, but judiciously, to the hungry Prince and his followers.  Every one had enough, but no one too much.  And soon, revived and strengthened, they felt like new beings.

“Now,” said the Prince, “we are ready to form a nucleus, as we promised.  How is it done?”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Bee-Man of Orn and Other Fanciful Tales from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.