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Title: Grimm's Fairy Tales: The Tom-Tit and the Bear
Date of first publication: 1930
Author: Jacob Grimm (1785-1863)
Author: Wilhelm Grimm (1786-1859)
Illustrator: Noel Pocock (1880-1955)
Date first posted: November 9 2012
Date last updated: November 9 2012
Faded Page eBook #20121124

This ebook was produced by: David Edwards, Delphine Lettau
& the Online Distributed Proofreading Canada Team at http://www.pgdpcanada.net

(This file was produced from images generously made available by
The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries).




The Tom-Tit and the Bear


One summer day, as the wolf and the bear were walking together in a
wood, they heard a bird singing most delightfully. "Brother," said the
bear, "what can that bird be that is singing so sweetly?" "O!" said the
wolf, "that is his majesty the king of the birds, we must take care to
show him all possible respect." (Now I should tell you that this bird
was after all no other than the tom-tit.) "If that is the case," said
the bear, "I should like to see the royal palace; so pray come along
and show it to me." "Gently, my friend," said the wolf, "we cannot see
it just yet, we must wait till the queen comes home."

Soon afterwards the queen came with food in her beak, and she and the
king began to feed their young ones. "Now for it!" said the bear; and
was about to follow them, to see what was to be seen. "Stop a little,
master Bruin," said the wolf, "we must wait now till their majesties are
gone again." So they marked the hole where they had seen the nest, and
went away. But the bear, being very eager to see the royal palace, soon
came back again, and peeping into the nest, saw five or six young birds
lying at the bottom of it. "What nonsense!" said Bruin, "this is not a
royal palace: I never saw such a filthy place in my life; and you are
no royal children, you little base-born brats!" As soon as the young
tom-tits heard this they were very angry, and screamed out "We are not
base-born, you stupid bear! our father and mother are honest good sort
of people: and depend upon it you shall suffer for your insolence!" At
this the wolf and the bear grew frightened, and ran away to their dens.
But the young tom-tits kept crying and screaming; and when their father
and mother came home and offered them food, they all said, "We will not
touch a bit; no, not the leg of a fly, though we should die of hunger,
till that rascal Bruin has been punished for calling us base-born brats."
"Make yourselves easy, my darlings," said the old king, "you may be sure
he shall meet with his deserts."

So he went out and stood before the bear's den, and cried out with a
loud voice, "Bruin the bear! thou hast shamefully insulted our lawful
children: we therefore hereby declare bloody and cruel war against thee
and thine, which shall never cease until thou hast been punished as thou
so richly deservest." Now when the bear heard this, he called together
the ox, the ass, the stag, and all the beasts of the earth, in order to
consult about the means of his defence. And the tom-tit also enlisted
on his side all the birds of the air, both great and small, and a very
large army of hornets, gnats, bees, and flies, and other insects.

As the time approached when the war was to begin, the tom-tit sent out
spies to see who was the commander-in-chief of the enemy's forces; and
the gnat, who was by far the cleverest spy of them all, flew backwards
and forwards in the wood where the enemy's troops were, and at last hid
himself under a leaf on a tree, close by which the orders of the day
were given out. And the bear, who was standing so near the tree that
the gnat could hear all he said, called to the fox and said, "Reynard,
you are the cleverest of all the beasts; therefore you shall be our
general and lead us to battle: but we must first agree upon some signal,
by which we may know what you want us to do." "Behold," said the fox,
"I have a fine, long, bushy tail, which is very like a plume of red
feathers, and gives me a very warlike air: now remember, when you see
me raise up my tail, you may be sure that the battle is won, and you
have then nothing to do but to rush down upon the enemy with all your
force. On the other hand, if I drop my tail, the day is lost, and you
must run away as fast as you can." Now when the gnat had heard all this,
she flew back to the tom-tit and told him everything that had passed.

At length the day came when the battle was to be fought; and as soon as
it was light, behold! the army of beasts came rushing forward with such
a fearful sound that the earth shook. And his majesty the tom-tit, with
his troops, came flying along in warlike array, flapping and fluttering,
and beating the air, so that it was quite frightful to hear; and both
armies set themselves in order of battle upon the field. Now the tom-tit
gave orders to a troop of hornets that at the first onset they should
march straight towards Captain Reynard, and fixing themselves about his
tail, should sting him with all their might and main. The hornets did as
they were told: and when Reynard felt the first sting, he started aside
and shook one of his legs, but still held up his tail with wonderful
bravery; at the second sting he was forced to drop his tail for a moment;
but when the third hornet had fixed itself, he could bear it no longer,
but clapped his tail between his legs and scampered away as fast as he
could. As soon as the beasts saw this, they thought of course all was
lost, and scoured across the country in the greatest dismay, leaving
the birds masters of the field.

And now the king and queen flew back in triumph to their children,
and said, "Now, children, eat, drink, and be merry, for the victory
is ours!" But the young birds said, "No: not till Bruin has humbly
begged our pardon for calling us base-born." So the king flew back to
the bear's den, and cried out, "Thou villain bear! come forthwith to my
abode, and humbly beseech my children to forgive thee the insult thou
hast offered them; for, if thou wilt not do this, every bone in thy
wretched body shall be broken to pieces." So the bear was forced to
crawl out of his den very sulkily, and do what the king bade him: and
after that the young birds sat down together, and ate and drank and made
merry till midnight.


[The end of _Grimm's Fairy Tales: The Tom-Tit and the Bear_
by the Brothers Grimm]
