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C. F. F |
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NCE upon a time there were
two sisters, who lived together; but while the elder, Beansie by name, was a
hard quarrelsome creature, apt to disagree with everybody, Peasie, the younger,
was soft and most agreeable.
Now,
one day, Peasie, who was for ever trying to please somebody, said to her
sister, 'Beansie, my dear! don't you think we ought to pay a visit to our poor
old father? He must be dull now–it is harvest time, and he is left alone in the
house.'
'I
don't care if he is!' replied Beansie. 'Go yourself! I'm not going to walk
about in the heat to please any old man!'
So
kind Peasie set off alone, and on the way she met a plum-tree.[2] 'Oh, Peasie!' cried the
tree, 'stop a bit, there's a good soul, and tidy up my thorns a little; they
are scattered about so that I feel quite uncomfortable!'
'So
they are, I declare!' returned Peasie, and forthwith set to work with such a
will that ere long the tree was as neat as a new pin.
A
little farther on she met a fire, and the fire cried out, 'Oh, sweet Peasie!
tidy up my hearth a bit, for I am half choked in the ashes!'
'So
you are, I declare!' returned good-natured Peasie, setting herself to clear
them away, until the fire crackled and flamed with pleasure.
Farther
on she met a pîpal tree, and the pîpal called out,
'Oh, kind Peasie! bind up this broken branch for me, or it will die, and I
shall lose it!'
'Poor
thing! poor thing!' cried soft-hearted Peasie; and tearing a bandage from her
veil, she bound up the wounded limb carefully.
After
a while she met a stream, and the stream cried out, 'Pretty Peasie! clear away
the sand and dead leaves from my mouth, for I cannot run when I am stifled!'
'No
more you can!' quoth obliging Peasie; and in a trice she made the channel so clear
and clean that the water flowed on swiftly.
A
last she arrived, rather tired, at her old father's house, but his delight at
seeing her was so great that he would scarcely let her away in the evening, and
insisted on giving her a spinning-wheel, a buffalo, some brass pots, a bed, and
all sorts of things, just as if she had been a bride going to her husband.
These she put on the buffalo's back, and set off homewards.
Now,
as she passed the stream, she saw a web of fine cloth floating down.
'Take
it, Peasie, take it!' tinkled the stream; 'I have carried it far, as a reward
for your kindness.'
So
she gathered up the cloth, laid it on the buffalo, and went on her way.
By
and by she passed the pîpal tree, and lo! on the branch she had
tied up hung a string of pearls.
'Take
it, Peasie, take it!' rustled the pîpal; 'I caught it from a
Prince's turban as a reward for your kindness.'
Then
she took the pearls, fastened them round her pretty slender throat, and went on
her way rejoicing.
Farther
on she came to the fire, burning brightly, and on it was a girdle with a nice
hot sweet-cake.
'Take
it, Peasie, take it!' crackled the fire; 'I have cooked it to a turn, in reward
for your kindness.'
So
lucky Peasie took the nice hot cake, and, dividing it into two pieces, put one
aside for her sister, and ate the other while she went on her way.
Now
when she reached the plum-tree, the topmost branches were bending down, covered
with ripe yellow fruit.
'Take
some, Peasie, take some!' groaned the laden tree; 'I have ripened these as a
reward for your kindness.'
So
she gathered her veil full, and eating some, set the rest aside for her sister;
but when she arrived at home, instead of being pleased at her little sister's
good fortune and thoughtfulness, disagreeable Beansie nearly cried with spite
and envy, and was so cross, that poor little sweet Peasie became quite
remorseful over her own luck, and suggested that her sister might be equally
fortunate if she also went to visit her father.
So,
next morning, greedy Beansie set off to see what she could get from the old
man. But when she came to the plum-tree, and it cried out, 'Oh, Beansie! stop a
bit and tidy up my thorns a little, there's a good soul!' the disobliging
Beansie tossed her head, and replied, 'A likely story! Why, I could travel
three miles in the time it would take me to settle up your stupid old thorns!
Do it yourself!'
And
when she met the pîpal tree, and it asked her to tie up its broken
branch, she only laughed, saying, 'It doesn't hurt me, and I should have
walked three miles in the time it would take to set it right; so ask somebody
else!'
Then
when the fire said to her, 'Oh, sweet Beansie! tidy up my hearth a bit, for I
am half choked by my ashes,' the unkind girl replied, 'The more fool you for
having ashes! You don't suppose I am going to dawdle about helping people who
won't help themselves? Not a bit of it!'
So
when she met the stream, and it asked her to clear away the sand and the dead
leaves which choked it, she replied, 'Do you imagine I'm going to stop my walk
that you may run? No, no!–every one for himself!'
At
last she reached her father's house, full of determination not to go away
without a heavy load for at least two buffaloes, when, just as she was entering
the courtyard, her brother and his wife fell upon her, and whacked her most
unmercifully, crying, 'So this is your plan, is it? Yesterday comes Peasie,
while we were hard at work, and wheedles her doting old father out of his best
buffalo, and goodness knows that else besides, and to-day you come to
rob us! Out of the house, you baggage!'
With
that they hounded her away, hot, tired, bruised, and hungry.
'Never
mind!' said she, to console herself, 'I shall get the web of cloth yet!'
Sure
enough, when she crossed the stream, there was a web, three times as fine as
Peasie's, floating close to the shore, and greedy Beansie went straight to get
it; but, alas! the water was so deep that she was very nearly drowned, while
the beautiful cloth floated past her very fingers. Thus all she got for her
pains was a ducking.
'Never
mind!' thought she, 'I'll have the string of pearls!'
Yes,
there it hung on the broken branch; but when Beansie jumped to catch it, branch
and all fell right on her head, so that she was stunned. When she came to
herself, some one else had walked off with the pearls, and she had only a bump
on her head as big as an egg.
All
these misfortunes had quite wearied her out; she was starving with hunger, and
hurried on to the fire, hoping for a nice hot sweet girdle-cake.
Yes,
there it was, smelling most deliciously, and Beansie snatched at it so hastily
that she burnt her fingers horribly and the cake rolled away. Before she had
done blowing at her fingers and hopping about in pain, a crow had carried off
the cake, and she was left lamenting.
'At
any rate, I'll have the plums!' cried miserable Beansie, setting off at a run,
her mouth watering at the sight of the luscious yellow fruit on the top-most
branches. First she held on to a lower branch with her left hand, and reached
for the fruit with the right; then, when that was all scratched and torn by the
thorns, she held on with her right, and tried to get the fruit with the left,
but all to no avail; and when face and hands were all bleeding and full of
prickles, she gave up the useless quest, and went home, bruised, beaten, wet,
sore, hungry, and scratched all over, where I have no doubt her kind sister
Peasie put her to bed, and gave her gruel and posset.