The Bittern and the Hoopoe
"Where
do you like best to feed your flocks?" said a man to an old
cow-herd. "Here, sir, where the grass is neither too rich nor too poor, or
else it is no use." "Why
not?" asked the man. "Do you hear that melancholy
cry from the meadow there?" answered the shepherd, "that is the bittern;
he was once a shepherd, and so was the hoopoe also,—I will tell you
the story. The bittern pastured his flocks on rich green meadows where
flowers grew in abundance, so his cows became wild and unmanageable. The
hoopoe drove his cattle on to high barren hills, where the wind plays
with the sand, and his cows became thin, and got no strength. When it
was evening, and the shepherds wanted to drive their cows homewards,
the bittern could not get his together again; they were too high-
spirited, and ran away from him. He called, "Come, cows, come," but it
was of no use; they took no notice of his calling. The hoopoe, however,
could not even get his cows up on their legs, so faint and weak had they
become. "Up, up, up," screamed he, but it was in vain, they remained
lying on the sand. That is the way when one has no moderation. And to
this day, though they have no flocks now to watch, the bittern cries,
"Come, cows, come," and the hoopoe, "Up, up, up."
|