the man unfastened his cloak;
then he threw it back; at last he took it off! The Sun had won.
THE LITTLE JACKAL AND THE ALLIGATOR
The little Jackal was very fond of shell-fish. He used to go down by
the river and hunt along the edges for crabs and such things. And
once, when he was hunting for crabs, he was so hungry that he put his
paw into the water after a crab without looking first,--which you never
should do! The minute he put in his paw, SNAP!--the big Alligator who
lives in the mud down there had it in his jaws.
"Oh, dear!" thought the little Jackal; "the big Alligator has my paw in
his mouth! In another minute he will pull me down and gobble me up!
What shall I do? what shall I do?" Then he thought, suddenly, "I'll
deceive him!"
So he put on a very cheerful voice, as if nothing at all were the
matter, and he said,--
"Ho! ho! Clever Mr. Alligator! Smart Mr. Alligator, to take that old
bulrush root for my paw! I'll hope you'll find it very tender!"
The old Alligator was hidden away beneath the mud and bulrush leaves,
and he couldn't see anything. He thought, "Pshaw! I've made a
mistake." So he opened his mouth and let the little Jackal go.
The little Jackal ran away as fast as he could, and as he ran he called
out,--
"Thank you, Mr. Alligator! Kind Mr. Alligator! SO kind of you to let
me go!"
The old Alligator lashed with his tail and snapped with his jaws, but
it was too late; the little Jackal was out of reach.
After this the little Jackal kept away from the river, out of danger.
But after about a week he got such an appetite for crabs that nothing
else would do at all; he felt that he must have a crab. So he went
down by the river and looked all around, very carefully. He didn't see
the old Alligator, but he thought to himself, "I think I'll not take
any chances." So he stood still and began to talk out loud to himself.
He said,--
"When I don't see any little crabs on the land I most generally see
them sticking out of the water, and then I put my paw in and catch
them. I wonder if there are any fat little crabs in the water today?"
The old Alligator was hidden down in the mud at the bottom of the
river, and when he heard what the little Jackal said, he thought, "Aha!
I'll pretend to be a little crab, and when he puts his paw in, I'll
make my dinner of him." So he stuck the black end of his snout above
the water and waited.
The little Jackal took one look, and
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