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THE ENCHANTED GROUSE
[Decoration]
There was once an old couple who lived with their married son and his wife. The son's name was h.e.l.li. He was a dutiful son but his wife was a scold. She was always finding fault with the old people and with her husband and for that matter with everybody else as well.
One morning when she saw her husband taking out his bow and arrows she said:
"Where are you going now?"
"I'm going hunting," he told her.
"Isn't that just like you!" she cried. "You're going off to have a good time hunting and you don't give a thought to me who have to stay home alone with two stupid old people!"
"If I didn't go hunting," h.e.l.li said, "and shoot something, we'd have nothing to put in the pot for dinner and then you would have reason to scold."
At that the woman burst into tears.
"Of course, as usual blame me! Whatever happens it's my fault!"
Poor h.e.l.li hurried off, hoping that by the time he returned his wife would be in a calmer state of mind. He had small success with his hunting. He shot arrow after arrow but always missed his mark. Then when he had only one arrow left he saw a Grouse standing in some brushwood so near that there was little likelihood of his missing it.
He took good aim but before he could fire the Grouse said:
"Don't shoot me, brother! Take me home alive."
h.e.l.li paused, then he shook his head.
"I've got to shoot you for we've nothing to put in the pot for dinner."
Again he aimed his arrow and again the Grouse said:
"Don't shoot me, brother! Take me home alive."
For the second time h.e.l.li paused.
"I'd like to spare you," he said, "but what would my wife say if I came home empty-handed?"
He took aim again and a third time the Grouse said:
"Don't shoot me, brother! Take me home alive."
At that h.e.l.li dropped his arrow.
"I don't care what she says! I can't shoot a creature that begs so pitifully for its life! Very well, Mr. Grouse, I'll do as you say: I'll take you home alive. But don't blame me if my wife wrings your neck."
He took the Grouse up in his arms and started homewards.
"Feed me for a year," the Grouse said, "and I'll reward you."
When they reached home and h.e.l.li's wife saw the Grouse, she cried out petulantly:
"Is that all you've got and out hunting all morning! That won't be dinner enough for four!"
"This Grouse isn't to be killed," h.e.l.li announced. "I'm going to keep it for a year and feed it."
"It won't take much to feed a Grouse," the old man remarked.
But the wife flew into a pa.s.sion.
"What! Feed a useless bird when there isn't enough to feed your own flesh and blood!"
But h.e.l.li was firm and despite her threats his wife did not dare to maltreat the Grouse.
At the end of a year the Grouse grew a copper feather in its tail which it dropped in the dooryard. Then it disappeared.
"Ha!" laughed h.e.l.li's wife. "A copper feather! That's your reward for feeding that thankless bird a whole year! And now it's escaped!"
But the next day the Grouse returned.
"Feed me for another year," it said to h.e.l.li, "and I'll reward you."
His wife raised an awful to-do over this, but h.e.l.li was firm and for another year he fed and petted the Grouse.
At the end of the second year the Grouse grew a silver feather in its tail which it dropped in the dooryard. Then it disappeared.
"One silver feather!" h.e.l.li's wife cried. "So that's all you get for feeding that thankless bird a whole year! And now it's escaped!"
But it hadn't. It returned the very next day.
"Feed me for another year," it said to h.e.l.li, "and I'll reward you."
At the end of the third year the Grouse grew a golden feather in its tail and when it dropped that in the dooryard the scolding wife hadn't so much to say, for a golden feather was after all pretty good pay for a few handfuls of grain.
For a day the Grouse disappeared and then when it returned it said to h.e.l.li:
"Get on my back and I'll reward you."
h.e.l.li did so and the Grouse, rising high in the air, flew far away.
On, on it flew until it reached the broad Ocean. Over the Ocean it flew until h.e.l.li could see nothing but water in whatever direction he looked.
[Ill.u.s.tration: _On it flew until it reached the broad Ocean_]
"Ha!" he said to himself with a shudder, "I hope I can hold on!"
As he spoke, the Grouse slipped from beneath him and he fell down, down, down. However, before he touched water the Grouse swooped under him and caught him up again high into the air. He had this same terrible experience a second time and a third time and each time he thought his last moment had arrived.
"Now," the Grouse told him, "you know what my feelings were when you threatened three times to shoot me with your arrow."