a sudden flash the gourd presented itself to her thoughts
and tossing all her branches with extreme delight,
it seemed to her that she had found the companion
suited to her purpose, because the gourd is more apt
to bind others than to need binding; having come to
this conclusion she awaited eagerly some friendly
bird who should be the mediator of her wishes.
Presently seeing near her the magpie she said to him:
“O gentle bird! by the memory of the refuge
which you found this morning among my branches, when
the hungry cruel, and rapacious falcon wanted to devour
you, and by that repose which you have always found
in me when your wings craved rest, and by the pleasure
you have enjoyed among my boughs, when playing with
your companions or making love—I entreat
you find the gourd and obtain from her some of her
seeds, and tell her that those that are born of them
I will treat exactly as though they were my own flesh
and blood; and in this way use all the words you can
think of, which are of the same persuasive purport;
though, indeed, since you are a master of language,
I need not teach you. And if you will do me this
service I shall be happy to have your nest in the
fork of my boughs, and all your family without payment
of any rent.” Then the magpie, having made
and confirmed certain new stipulations with the willow,—and
principally that she should never admit upon her any
snake or polecat, cocked his tail, and put down his
head, and flung himself from the bough, throwing his
weight upon his wings; and these, beating the fleeting
air, now here, now there, bearing about inquisitively,
while his tail served as a rudder to steer him, he
came to a gourd; then with a handsome bow and a few
polite words, he obtained the required seeds, and
carried them to the willow, who received him with
a cheerful face. And when he had scraped away
with his foot a small quantity of the earth near the
willow, describing a circle, with his beak he planted
the grains, which in a short time began to grow, and
by their growth and the branches to take up all the
boughs of the willow, while their broad leaves deprived
it of the beauty of the sun and sky. And not
content with so much evil, the gourds next began,
by their rude hold, to drag the ends of the tender
shoots down towards the earth, with strange twisting
and distortion.
Then, being much annoyed, it shook itself in vain to throw off the gourd. After raving for some days in such plans vainly, because the firm union forbade it, seeing the wind come by it commended itself to him. The wind flew hard and opened the old and hollow stem of the willow in two down to the roots, so that it fell into two parts. In vain did it bewail itself recognising that it was born to no good end.
III.
JESTS AND TALES.
1280.
A JEST.