<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page141" id="page141"></SPAN></span>
<h3>THE CRACKLING MOUNTAIN</h3>
<p>Once upon a time there lived an old man and an old woman,
who kept a pet white hare, by which they set great store. One
day, a badger, that lived hard by, came and ate up the food
which had been put out for the hare; so the old man, flying
into a great rage, seized the badger, and, tying the beast up
to a tree, went off to the mountain to cut wood, while the old
woman stopped at home and ground the wheat for the evening
porridge. Then the badger, with tears in his eyes, said to the
old woman—</p>
<p>"Please, dame, please untie this rope!"</p>
<p>The dame, thinking that it was a cruel thing to see a poor
beast in pain, undid the rope; but the ungrateful brute was no
sooner loose, than he cried out—</p>
<p>"I'll be revenged for this," and was off in a trice.</p>
<p>When the hare heard this, he went off to the mountain to
warn the old man; and whilst the hare was away on this errand,
the badger came back, and killed the dame. Then the beast,
having assumed the old woman's form, made her dead body into
broth, and waited for the old man to come home from the
mountain. When he returned, tired and hungry, the pretended old
woman said—</p>
<p>"Come, come; I've made such a nice broth of the badger you
hung up. Sit down, and make a good supper of it."</p>
<p>With these words she set out the broth, and the old man made
a hearty meal, licking his lips over it, and praising the
savoury mess. But as soon as he had finished eating, the
badger, reassuming its natural shape, cried out—</p>
<p>"Nasty old man! you've eaten your own wife. Look at her
bones, lying in the kitchen sink!" and, laughing
contemptuously, the badger ran away, and disappeared.</p>
<p>Then the old man, horrified at what he had done, set up a
great lamentation; and whilst he was bewailing his fate, the
hare came home, and, seeing how matters stood, determined to
avenge the death of his mistress. So he went back to the
mountain, and, falling in with the badger, who was carrying a
faggot of sticks on his back, he struck a light and set fire to
the sticks, without letting the badger see him. When the badger
heard the crackling noise of the faggot burning on his back, he
called out—</p>
<p>"Holloa! what is that noise?"</p>
<p>"Oh!" answered the hare, "this is called the Crackling
Mountain. There's always this noise
here."</p>
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page142" id="page142"></SPAN></span>
<p>And as the fire gathered strength, and went pop! pop! pop!
the badger said again—</p>
<p>"Oh dear! what can this noise be?"</p>
<p>"This is called the 'Pop! Pop! Mountain,'" answered the
hare.</p>
<div class="figcenter"
style="width:50%;">
<SPAN href="images/142.jpg"
name="image142"
target="blank" id="image142"><ANTIMG width-obs="100%"
src="images/142.jpg" alt="THE HARE AND THE BADGER." /></SPAN> THE HARE AND THE
BADGER.</div>
<p>All at once the fire began to singe the badger's back, so
that he fled, howling with pain, and jumped into a river hard
by. But, although the water put out the fire, his back was
burnt as black as a cinder. The hare, seeing an opportunity for
torturing the badger to his heart's content, made a poultice of
cayenne <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page143" id="page143"></SPAN></span> pepper, which he carried to
the badger's house, and, pretending to condole with him, and
to have a sovereign remedy for burns, he applied his hot
plaister to his enemy's sore back. Oh! how it smarted and
pained! and how the badger yelled and cried!</p>
<div class="figcenter"
style="width:50%;">
<SPAN href="images/143.jpg"
name="image143"
target="blank" id="image143"><ANTIMG width-obs="100%"
src="images/143.jpg" alt="THE HARE AND THE BADGER. (2)" /></SPAN> THE HARE AND
THE BADGER. (2)</div>
<p>When, at last, the badger got well again, he went to the
hare's house, thinking to reproach him for having caused him so
much pain. When he got there, he found that the hare had built
himself a boat.</p>
<p>"What have you built that boat for, Mr. Hare?" said the
badger. <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page144" id="page144"></SPAN></span> "I'm going to the capital
of the moon,"<SPAN id="footnotetag52"
name="footnotetag52"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote52"><sup>52</sup></SPAN>
answered the hare; "won't you come with me?"</p>
<p>"I had enough of your company on the Crackling Mountain,
where you played me such tricks. I'd rather make a boat for
myself," replied the badger, who immediately began building
himself a boat of clay.</p>
<p>The hare, seeing this, laughed in his sleeve; and so the two
launched their boats upon the river. The waves came plashing
against the two boats; but the hare's boat was built of wood,
while that of the badger was made of clay, and, as they rowed
down the river, the clay boat began to crumble away; then the
hare, seizing his paddle, and brandishing it in the air, struck
savagely at the badger's boat, until he had smashed it to
pieces, and killed his enemy.</p>
<p>When the old man heard that his wife's death had been
avenged, he was glad in his heart, and more than ever petted
and loved the hare, whose brave deeds had caused him to welcome
the returning
spring.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />