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The Eels' Moving‑Night
T
HE Eels were as different from the Clams as people well
could be. It was not alone that they looked unlike,
but that they had such different ways of enjoying life.
The Clams were chubby people, each comfortably settled
in his own shell, which he could open or shut as he
chose. They never wanted to live anywhere else, or to
get beyond the edges of their own The Eels were long, slender, and slippery people, looking even more like snakes than they did like fishes. They were always careful to tell new acquaintances, though, that they were not even related to the snakes. "To be sure," they would say, "we do not wear our fins like most fishes, but that is only a matter of taste after all. We should find them dreadfully in the way if we did." And that was just like the Eels—they were always so ready to explain everything to their friends.
They were great talkers. They would talk about
themselves, and their friends, and the friends of their
friends, and the pond, and the weather, and the state
of the mud, and what everything was like yesterday, and
what it would be likely to be like The Clams, you know, were a quiet family. Unless a Clam was very, very much excited, he never said more than "Yes," "No," or "Indeed?" They were excellent listeners and some of the most popular people in the pond. Those who were in trouble told the Clams, and they would say, "Indeed," or "Ah," in such a nice way that their visitor was sure to leave feeling better. Others who wanted advice would go to them, and talk over their plans and tell them what they wanted to do, and the Clams would say, "Yes," and then the visitors would go away quite decided, and say, "We really didn't know what to do until we spoke to the Clams about it, but they agree with us perfectly." The Clams were also excellent people to keep secrets, and as the Eels were forever telling secrets, that was all very well. Mother Eel was fussy. She even said so herself. And if a thing bothered her, she would talk and talk and talk until even her own children were tired of hearing about it. Now she was worrying over the pond water.
"I do not think it nearly so clean as it
was last year," she said, "and the mud is getting
positively dirty. Our family are very particular about
that, and I think we may have to move. I do dread the
moving, though. It is so much work with a family the
size of mine, and
She was talking with Mother Mud Turtle when she said
this, and the little Eels were wriggling all around her
as she spoke. Then they began teasing her to go, until
she told them to swim away at once and play with the
young Minnows. "I'm afraid I shall have to go," said
she, "if only on account of the children. I want them
to see something of the world. It is so dull in this
pond. Were you ever out of it?" she asked, turning
suddenly to
"Oh, yes," answered she. "I go quite often, and one of my sons took a very long trip to the meadow. He went with some boys. It was most exciting."
"Is that the one with the—peculiar "Yes," replied Mother Mud Turtle sweetly. "He is very modest and does not care to talk about it much, but I am really quite pleased. Some people travel and show no sign of it afterward. One would never know that they had left home (Mother Eel wondered if she meant her), but with him it is different. He shows marks of having been in the great world outside."
Mother Eel wriggled a little uneasily. "I think I must
tell you after all," she said. "I have really made up
my mind to go. "And what does he say then?" asked the Mud Turtle Mother.
"Nothing," answered Mother Eel, with a smart little
wriggle. "There is nothing for him to say. Yes, we
shall certainly move. I am only waiting for the right
kind of night. It must not be too light, or the land
people would see us; not too dark, or we could not see
them. And then the grass must be dewy. It would never
do for us to get dry, you know, or we should all be
sick. But please don't speak of this, dear
So the Mud Turtle Mother remembered that it was a
secret, and told nobody except the "Did you say that it was a secret?" asked the Snapping Turtle. "Yes," said the Mud Turtle Father, "It is a great secret." "Humph!" said the Snapping Turtle. "Then why did you tell me?" That same day when the Stickleback Father came to look for nineteen or twenty of his children who were missing, Mother Eel told him about her plans. "I thought you would be interested in hearing of it," she said, "but I shall not mention it to anybody else."
"You may be sure I shall not speak of it," said he.
And probably he would not have told a person, if it had
not been that he forgot and talked of it with the
Snails. He also forgot to say that it was a secret,
and so they spoke freely of it to the Crayfishes and
the The Caddis Worms were playing with the Tadpoles soon after this, and one of them whispered to a Tadpole right before the others, although he knew perfectly well that it was rude for him to do so. "Now, don't you ever tell," said he aloud. "Uh-uh!" answered the Tadpole, and everybody knew that he meant "No," even if they hadn't seen him wave his hindlegs sidewise. Of course, not having the right kind of neck for it, he couldn't shake his head.
Then the other Tadpoles and Caddis Worms wanted to tell
secrets, and they kept whispering to each other and
saying out loud, "Now don't you ever tell."
When a The Eel Mother also spoke to the Biggest Frog, asking him to watch the grass for her and tell her when it was dewy enough for moving. He was afraid he might forget it, and so told his sister and asked her to help him remember. And she was afraid that she might forget, so she spoke to her friend, the Green Brown Frog, about it. The Yellow Brown Frog afterward said that he heard it from her.
One night it was neither too dark nor too light, and
the dew lay heavy on the grass. Then The little Eels were so excited that they couldn't keep still, and she had to wait for them to stop wriggling. When they were quiet, she went on. "All the Eels are going—your uncles and aunts and cousins—and you children must keep with the older ones. Be careful where you wriggle to, and don't get on anybody else's tail."
She led the way out of the water and wriggled
gracefully up the bank, although it was quite steep at
that place. "I came this way," she said, "because I
felt more as though this was the way to come." She
closed her mouth very firmly as she spoke.
When at last they were all together on the bank, the
Eel Father said to his wife, "Are you sure that the
Cranes and Fish Hawks don't know about our moving?
Because if they "I know," she said. "It would be dreadful if they found out; and we have been so late in getting started. We shall have to stop at the very first water we find now, whether we like it or not." She lay still and thought. "I have a feeling," said she, "that we should go this way." So that way they went, dragging their yellow bellies over the ground as carefully as they could, their dark green backs with their long fringes of back fins hardly showing in the grass. It was a good thing that their skin was so fat and thick, for sometimes they had to cross rough places that scraped it dreadfully and even rumpled the tiny scales that were in it, while their long fringes of belly fins became worn and almost ragged. "If your scales were on the outside," said their father, "like those of other fishes, you wouldn't have many left." Mother Eel was very tired and did not say much. Her friends began to fear that she was ill. At last she spoke, "I do not see," she said, "how people found out that we were to move." "You didn't tell anybody?" said Mr. Eel. "No indeed!" said she; and she really believed it. That was because she had talked so much that she couldn't remember what she did say. It is always so with those that talk too much. |
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