Read Ebook: The Genealogy of Morals The Complete Works Volume Thirteen edited by Dr. Oscar Levy. by Nietzsche Friedrich Wilhelm Levy Oscar Editor Kennedy J M John McFarland Translator Samuel Horace Barnett Translator
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PAGE HOW THEY HAPPENED 1
THE STORY OF A BOLD RABBIT WITH COCK EYES AND A SHORT TAIL 3
THE STORY OF LITTLE CACINELLA 13
THE STORY OF MOSQUITO LONG-NOSE AND FUZZY BEAR, MISHKA SHORT-TAIL 25
VANKA'S BIRTHDAY 40
THE STORY OF MASTER SPARROW, MASTER STICKELBACK AND THE JOLLY CHIMNEY-SWEEP, YASHA 62
THE STORY OF THE LAST FLY 82
THE STORY OF A BLACK-HEADED CROW AND A LITTLE YELLOW CANARY 106
THE WISEST OF ALL 129
THE STORY OF LITTLE MILK, LITTLE CEREAL AND GRAY KITTEN, MOORKA 153
BED TIME 166
VEROTCHKA'S TALES
HOW THEY HAPPENED
Lulla-lullaby. Verotchka's one little eye is sleeping, the other little eye is still open. Verotchka's one little ear is sleeping, the other little ear is still listening. Sleep, Verotchka, sleep, my pretty one, and father will tell you these stories. I think they are all here. The Siberian cat, Vasca; the shaggy village dog, Postoika; the gray mousie-gnawers; the cricket behind the stove; the iridescent starling in the cage; and the cock, the bully.
Sleep, Verotchka, the story begins. The full moon in the heaven looks into the window. The cock-eyed rabbit hops on his haunches and the wolf's eyes flash yellow fire lights. The bear, Mishka, is sucking his paw, and the old sparrow flies up to the window, pecks the pane with his bill, and asks, "How soon, now?"
I think they're all here now, waiting for Verotchka's Tale.
Verotchka's one little eye is asleep, the other little eye is still open. Verotchka's one little ear is asleep, the other little ear is still listening. Lulla-Lullaby.
THE STORY OF A BOLD RABBIT WITH COCK EYES AND A SHORT TAIL
This rabbit was born in the woods and was scared of everything. If a branch cracked anywhere or a bird flew past or a lump of snow fell from a tree, his rabbit heart went down, down, down into his furry boots. Now this little rabbit was afraid for a day, for two days, for a week, for a whole year. But when he was grown up, he just got tired of being a scared rabbit.
"I am not afraid of anybody!" he shouted through the woods. "I am not afraid at all! I am not afraid of anything or of anybody, and that's all there is to it!"
One day, the rabbits gathered to listen to him. The little ones ran, the old rabbits hobbled along to hear Long-Ear, Cock-Eye, Short-Tail's boastings.
They listened and couldn't believe their own ears, for there never had been anything like a rabbit, unafraid of anything or anybody before.
"Oh, you Cock-Eye," called one, "do you mean to say you aren't even afraid of a wolf?"
"Not even a wolf, nor a fox, nor a bear. I am afraid of no one," said Cock-Eye.
Now this was altogether too amusing. The little rabbits giggled, covering their faces with their front paws. The kind old mother rabbits laughed and even the wise old rabbits, who had had a taste of the paws of the fox, and had felt the fangs of the wolf, smiled. So very funny was this rabbit that suddenly everyone was seized with merriment. They started jumping, tumbling, turning somersaults, and playing tag as if they had all suddenly gone mad.
"What is the use of talking so much," finally shouted Cock-Eye, drunk with his own boldness. "I tell you if I were to meet a wolf, I'd eat him up myself."
"My, what a funny rabbit!" said the crowd. "And what a foolish rabbit, too." They all knew he was funny and foolish; still they laughed at him and jested with him about the wolf. And as they were speaking of the wolf, the wolf stood right there listening, though they did not see him.
The wolf was walking through the forest on his own wolfish business. Then he grew hungry and began to think how fine it would be to have a bit of fresh rabbit. Suddenly quite near by, he heard rabbits talking, laughing and shouting his name. He stopped short, sniffed the air and crept nearer and nearer. When he was very near the merry-making rabbits, he learned that they were making sport of him, and that Cock-Eye, Long-Ear, Short-Tail was laughing at him more than anyone else.
"Eh, Brother! Just wait and I'll gobble you up," said the Gray Wolf to himself, as he tried to spy out the boastful, bold rabbit.
Meanwhile, the rabbits, aware of nothing, made merry and merrier. Finally, the boaster climbed up on the stump of a tree, sat on his hind legs, and said,
The words were frozen on his lips, for just then he saw the wolf looking, looking straight at him. The other rabbits did not see the wolf, but Cock-Eye did and he didn't dare to breathe.
Then happened the most extraordinary thing. Through sheer fear, the Boaster jumped up like a rubber ball, fell on the wide forehead of the wolf, rolled over his back, turned a somersault in the air, landed on his feet, and ran as if he were trying to run out of his skin.
Long, long did the unfortunate rabbit run. It seemed to him the wolf was right behind him and that in another moment he would feel the wolf's fangs. The poor limp rabbit ran on until he had no strength left and finally he closed his eyes and fell under a bush, dead with weariness.
Meanwhile, the wolf was running in another direction. When the rabbit fell on his forehead, the wolf thought he had been hit by a gun shot and he ran away as fast as he could, saying to himself, "There are plenty of other rabbits in the forest. This one seems quite crazy anyway and not fit to eat."
Now for a long time the other rabbits did not realize what had happened. Some ran into the bushes, some hid behind stumps, others crawled into their holes. After a while they grew tired of hiding and little by little, they crept out and looked around.
Then said one, "Our rabbit certainly scared that wolf. If it had not been for him, few of us would have escaped alive. But where is he, our Fearless One?"
And everyone began looking for him. They looked everywhere, but Cock-Eye was nowhere to be found. They began to think the Gray Wolf had eaten him up, when they discovered him, lying in a hole under a bush, almost dead from fear.
"Good for you, Cock-Eye," shouted the rabbits all in one voice. "You certainly frightened that wolf very cleverly. We thought you were boasting all the time, when you were telling us you were not afraid of anything or anybody."
At once the bold rabbit came to life. He crept out of the hole, shook himself, squinted his eyes, and said:
"And what did you think, you cowards?"
And from that day, the bold rabbit was convinced that he was really not afraid of anyone.
THE STORY OF LITTLE CACINELLA
How and where little Cacinella was born, no one knows. It happened one sunny day in spring. Little Cacinella looked around and said, "Very nice." She stretched her tiny wings, rubbed one little thin leg against the other, looked around again and said:
"How very, very nice! How warm the sun! How blue the sky! How green the grass! How very, very nice! and all this is mine!"
Rubbing one little leg against the other once more, little Cacinella began to fly. She flew and looked around and rejoiced. Beneath her, the grass was green, and hidden in its bosom, was a crimson flower.
"Little Cacinella, come to me," called the flower.
Cacinella came down to the ground, climbed into the flower and sipped its sweet nectar.
"How kind you are, little flower," said Cacinella, rubbing her mouth with one of her little thin legs.
"Yes, I may be kind, but I cannot walk," complained the flower.
"Still, the world is lovely," said little Cacinella, "and it is all mine, too."
She had hardly finished, when a hairy drone flew down upon the flower with a loud buzz.
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