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The Foolhardy Frogs and The Stork
by Anonymous
There
was once a pond full of young frogs. These frogs peeped up out of
the water, and made a great noise, each trying to cry louder than
the rest. Why they did this, I don't know; but then, many children
make a noise, too, and don't know why they do it. Only one old frog
sat quite silent, moving his head and eyes anxiously, first on one
side and then on the other. Suddenly he called out, - "Silence!
Duck your heads; the stork's coming!"
Then, in a moment
there was a dead silence, and all the round heads and goggle-eyes
disappeared under the water. For, although they had not seen the
stork until now, the old frog had often told them about him - how
he was a terrible fellow, with long legs, long neck,and long beak;
and how he could make a hideous clappering with the said beak, which
he used, moreover, to drag out of the water all the frogs he could
snap up,and whom he subsequently devoured. But the stork who came
that day, and of whose arrival the old frog had warned his comrades,
had already eaten as much as he wanted in some other pond; consequently,
he walked gravely to and fro by the side of the water, without looking
round to seek for a frog; and then, establishing himself by the
shore, he drew up one leg, and bent down his head and beak, as it
is the custom of storks to do, when about to go to sleep. And, standing
thus, he looked exactly like a bag of feathers on a long stick.
For a time there was a perfect silence in the pond;
but then the young frog-people began to find the time hang heavy
on their paws, so they opened their eyes, which they had at first
closed in great terror, and began to look round them. And one of
them whispered to another, - "Just look and see if the stork
is still there." "Yes," said the other, "there
he stands." "That's not the stork," cried two or
three together; "for they say the stork has a long neck and
a long beak." But the old frog said, in a warning voice, '
"Don't wake the stork, for frogs he doth kill: The danger that
sleeps is a danger still."
Now, most of the frogs listened to these words of
warning. But one of them, named Cax, a forward fellow, who liked
to hear himself croak, exclaimed, - "Nonsense! The old chap
only wants to make us afraid, because he does not like to hear the
sound of our voices. That thing by the water's edge looks much more
like a scarecrow than a bird."
"It may frighten sparrows, but no valiant frog
will be afraid of it," croaked another frog, whose name was
Kix, and who like to say and do whatever Cax said and did.
"Whoever has courage, follow me!" cried
Cax. "We'll have a closer look at the thing yonder, and, as
sure as my name's Cax, I'll jump upon it!" The old frog raised
his voice in these warning words, -

"Foolhardy frogs, foolhardy pack,
Listen to me! quack quack! quack quack!
Beware, beware! for danger is near,
And those must feel who will not hear!"
But those who would not hear were, in this case, Kix
and Cax. Cax hopped away in advance, and Kix followed after him,
till they came to the place where the stork stood. The affair now
began to seem a little formidable to them, as generally happens
to boasters when danger is near.
"After all", they thought, "it looks
very much like the stork." But they felt ashamed to turn back,
so Cax said, "You jump first, Kix, you're the younger of us
two." "No," replied Kix; "you should jump first,
for you're the elder of us two. I'm in no hurry." "No
more am I," said Cax. And so, for a time, they both sat quite
still.
The stork, meanwhile, was fast asleep, dreaming of
the nest he had built the year before far away in Africa, and of
the young he had brought up there, and of the wife who had helped
him to feed and educate them. When Kix and Cax saw that he did not
move at all, they began to take courage. Cax stuck up his head out
of the water, and quacked at the stork in a low voice. Kix followed
his comrade's example. The stork never moved. Now they began to
quack in a louder tone, and at last to dabble about in the water,
and to splash the stork with their legs. When the other frogs, who
had been watching these proceedings at a distance, saw that the
sport seemed a safe one, they came hopping up to take part in it;
only the wary old frog remained behind.
At last the increasing noise woke up the stork, but
as he was somewhat drowsy with sleep and with the meal he had lately
made, he let the frogs cry out to their hearts' content for a time,
and splash about just as they liked, for he thought, "Wait
a little - I'll have you presently!" At last Cax said to the
rest, - "Look at me now! I'll jump upon the thing, as I told
you I would."
And Kix added, "And so will I, as I told you
I would." But when they both jumped up at the stork, he suddenly
thrust out his bill, with a snap to the left and a snap to the right,
and in a twinkling Kix and Cax were eaten up and swallowed down.
Then the stork turned round three times in the pond, clapped his
beak, as a man might clap his hands, and said, -
"Klipp, clap! klipp, clap!
Fish and frog, snail and crab!
I hope you all wil act like these,
That I may eat you at my ease."
Then
the other frogs scampered away as fast as ever they could, and there
was a great silence in the pond for a long time. The stork went
to sleep again, seeing that nothing more seemed inclined to jump
in his mouth; but the old frog repeated his warning to his young
friends, and they all listened, with very grave faces indeed, while
he sang, -
"Fool-hardy frogs, foolhardy
pack,
Listen to me! quack, quack! quack, quack!
Beware, beware! for danger is near,
And those must feel who will not hear!"
And
then, wishing to improve the terrible disaster which had just taken
place, he added a new verse, which was considered by all the other
frogs to be a masterpiece. It ran thus, -
"My dear young friends, my
dear young freinds,
You've seen, quack quack! how boasting ends;
If one of you discretion lacks,
Let him think of the fate of Kix and Cax."
And the young frogs listened to these words
of wisdom and were so thoroughly determined to profit by the sage
advice they had received, that not one head poked up over the water
during the whole evening, and early next morning the stork went
away in disgust, wondering what had become of all the frogs in the
pond. But the old frog, to the last day of his life, looked upon
himself as the preserver of all the frogs in the pond, and was very
proud when he thought what a beautiful talent it was to be able
to make such verses as those he had recited to his young friends.

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