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PAGE 5

Silver Saucer And The Transparent Apple
by [?]

So the little one picks up all three baskets and runs off after the others, the bad ones, with black hearts under their necklaces and new dresses.

They went deep into the forest, picking berries, and the little one picked so fast that she soon had a basket full. She was picking and picking, and did not see what the bad ones were doing. They were fetching the axe.

The little one stood up to straighten her back, which ached after so much stooping, and she saw her two sisters standing in front of her, looking at her cruelly. Their baskets lay on the ground quite empty. They had not picked a berry. The eldest had the axe in her hand.

The little one was frightened.

“What is it, sisters?” says she; “and why do you look at me with cruel eyes? And what is the axe for? You are not going to cut berries with an axe.”

“No, Little Stupid,” says the first, “we are not going to cut berries with the axe.”

“No, Little Stupid,” says the second; “the axe is here for something else.”

The little one begged them not to frighten her.

Says the first, “Give me your transparent apple.”

Says the second, “Give me your silver saucer.”

“If you don’t give them up at once, we shall kill you.” That is what the bad ones said.

The poor little one begged them. “O darling sisters, do not kill me! I haven’t got the saucer or the apple with me at all.”

“What a lie!” say the bad ones. “You never would leave it behind.”

And one caught her by the hair, and the other swung the axe, and between them they killed the little pretty one, who was called Little Stupid because she was so good.

Then they looked for the saucer and the apple, and could not find them. But it was too late now. So they made a hole in the ground, and buried the little one under a birch tree.

When the sun went down the bad ones came home, and they wailed with false voices, and rubbed their eyes to make the tears come. They made their eyes red and their noses too, and they did not look any prettier for that.

“What is the matter with you, little pigeons?” said the old merchant and his wife. I would not say “little pigeons” to such bad ones. Black-hearted crows is what I would call them.

And they wail and lament aloud,–

“We are miserable for ever. Our poor little sister is lost. We looked for her everywhere. We heard the wolves howling. They must have eaten her.”

The old mother and father cried like rivers in springtime, because they loved the little pretty one, who was called Little Stupid because she was so good.

But before their tears were dry the bad ones began to ask for the silver saucer and the transparent apple.

“No, no,” says the old man; “I shall keep them for ever, in memory of my poor little daughter whom God has taken away.”

So the bad ones did not gain by killing their little sister.

“That is one good thing,” said Vanya.

“But is that all, grandfather?” said Maroosia.

“Wait a bit, little pigeons. Too much haste set his shoes on fire. You listen, and you will hear what happened,” said old Peter. He took a pinch of snuff from a little wooden box, and then he went on with his tale.

Time did not stop with the death of the little girl. Winter came, and the snow with it. Everything was all white, just as it is now. And the wolves came to the doors of the huts, even into the villages, and no one stirred farther than he need. And then the snow melted, and the buds broke on the trees, and the birds began singing, and the sun shone warmer every dry. The old people had almost forgotten the little pretty one who lay dead in the forest. The bad ones had not forgotten, because now they had to do the work, and they did not like that at all.