第 2 节
作者:中国长城网      更新:2021-02-19 21:39      字数:9321
  affected that I wept tears such as a little mouse can weep; but they
  were tears of joy。 The night was far too short for me; there are no
  long nights there in summer; as we often have in this part of the
  world。 When the morning dawned; and the gentle breeze rippled the
  glassy mirror of the forest lake; all the delicate veils and flags
  fluttered away into thin air; the waving garlands of the spider's web;
  the hanging bridges and galleries; or whatever else they may be
  called; vanished away as if they had never been。 Six elves brought
  me back my sausage skewer; and at the same time asked me to make any
  request; which they would grant if in their power; so I begged them;
  if they could; to tell me how to make soup from a sausage skewer。
  〃'How do we make it?' said the chief of the elves with a smile。
  'Why you have just seen it; you scarcely knew your sausage skewer
  again; I am sure。'
  〃They think themselves very wise; thought I to myself。 Then I told
  them all about it; and why I had travelled so far; and also what
  promise had been made at home to the one who should discover the
  method of preparing this soup。 'What use will it be;' I asked; 'to the
  mouse…king or to our whole mighty kingdom that I have seen all these
  beautiful things? I cannot shake the sausage peg and say; Look; here
  is the skewer; and now the soup will come。 That would only produce a
  dish to be served when people were keeping a fast。'
  〃Then the elf dipped his finger into the cup of a violet; and said
  to me; 'Look here; I will anoint your pilgrim's staff; so that when
  you return to your own home and enter the king's castle; you have only
  to touch the king with your staff; and violets will spring forth and
  cover the whole of it; even in the coldest winter time; so I think I
  have given you really something to carry home; and a little more
  than something。'〃
  But before the little mouse explained what this something more
  was; she stretched her staff out to the king; and as it touched him
  the most beautiful bunch of violets sprang forth and filled the
  place with perfume。 The smell was so powerful that the mouse…king
  ordered the mice who stood nearest the chimney to thrust their tails
  into the fire; that there might be a smell of burning; for the perfume
  of the violets was overpowering; and not the sort of scent that
  every one liked。
  〃But what was the something more of which you spoke just now?〃
  asked the mouse…king。
  〃Why;〃 answered the little mouse; 〃I think it is what they call
  'effect;'〃 and thereupon she turned the staff round; and behold not
  a single flower was to be seen upon it! She now only held the naked
  skewer; and lifted it up as a conductor lifts his baton at a
  concert。 〃Violets; the elf told me;〃 continued the mouse; 〃are for the
  sight; the smell; and the touch; so we have only now to produce the
  effect of hearing and tasting;〃 and then; as the little mouse beat
  time with her staff; there came sounds of music; not such music as was
  heard in the forest; at the elfin feast; but such as is often heard in
  the kitchen… the sounds of boiling and roasting。 It came quite
  suddenly; like wind rushing through the chimneys; and seemed as if
  every pot and kettle were boiling over。 The fire…shovel clattered down
  on the brass fender; and then; quite as suddenly; all was still;…
  nothing could be heard but the light; vapory song of the tea…kettle;
  which was quite wonderful to hear; for no one could rightly
  distinguish whether the kettle was just beginning to boil or going
  to stop。 And the little pot steamed; and the great pot simmered; but
  without any regard for each; indeed there seemed no sense in the
  pots at all。 And as the little mouse waved her baton still more
  wildly; the pots foamed and threw up bubbles; and boiled over; while
  again the wind roared and whistled through the chimney; and at last
  there was such a terrible hubbub; that the little mouse let her
  stick fall。
  〃That is a strange sort of soup;〃 said the mouse…king; 〃shall we
  not now hear about the preparation?〃
  〃That is all;〃 answered the little mouse; with a bow。
  〃That all!〃 said the mouse…king; 〃then we shall be glad to hear
  what information the next may have to give us。〃
  WHAT THE SECOND MOUSE HAD TO TELL
  〃I was born in the library; at a castle;〃 said the second mouse。
  〃Very few members of our family ever had the good fortune to get
  into the dining…room; much less the store…room。 On my journey; and
  here to…day; are the only times I have ever seen a kitchen。 We were
  often obliged to suffer hunger in the library; but then we gained a
  great deal of knowledge。 The rumor reached us of the royal prize
  offered to those who should be able to make soup from a sausage
  skewer。 Then my old grandmother sought out a manuscript which;
  however; she could not read; but had heard it read; and in it was
  written; 'Those who are poets can make soup of sausage skewers。' She
  then asked me if I was a poet。 I felt myself quite innocent of any
  such pretensions。 Then she said I must go out and make myself a
  poet。 I asked again what I should be required to do; for it seemed
  to me quite as difficult as to find out how to make soup of a
  sausage skewer。 My grandmother had heard a great deal of reading in
  her day; and she told me three principal qualifications were
  necessary… understanding; imagination; and feeling。 'If you can manage
  to acquire these three; you will be a poet; and the sausage…skewer
  soup will be quite easy to you。'
  〃So I went forth into the world; and turned my steps towards the
  west; that I might become a poet。 Understanding is the most
  important matter in everything。 I knew that; for the two other
  qualifications are not thought much of; so I went first to seek for
  understanding。 Where was I to find it? 'Go to the ant and learn
  wisdom;' said the great Jewish king。 I knew that from living in a
  library。 So I went straight on till I came to the first great
  ant…hill; and then I set myself to watch; that I might become wise。
  The ants are a very respectable people; they are wisdom itself。 All
  they do is like the working of a sum in arithmetic; which comes right。
  'To work and to lay eggs;' say they; and to provide for posterity;
  is to live out your time properly;' and that they truly do。 They are
  divided into the clean and the dirty ants; their rank is pointed out
  by a number; and the ant…queen is number ONE; and her opinion is the
  only correct one on everything; she seems to have the whole wisdom
  of the world in her; which was just the important matter I wished to
  acquire。 She said a great deal which was no doubt very clever; yet
  to me it sounded like nonsense。 She said the ant…hill was the loftiest
  thing in the world; and yet close to the mound stood a tall tree;
  which no one could deny was loftier; much loftier; but no mention
  was made of the tree。 One evening an ant lost herself on this tree;
  she had crept up the stem; not nearly to the top; but higher than
  any ant had ever ventured; and when at last she returned home she said
  that she had found something in her travels much higher than the
  ant…hill。 The rest of the ants considered this an insult to the
  whole community; so she was condemned to wear a muzzle and to live
  in perpetual solitude。 A short time afterwards another ant got on
  the tree; and made the same journey and the same discovery; but she
  spoke of it cautiously and indefinitely; and as she was one of the
  superior ants and very much respected; they believed her; and when she
  died they erected an eggshell as a monument to her memory; for they
  cultivated a great respect for science。 I saw;〃 said the little mouse;
  〃that the ants were always running to and fro with her burdens on
  their backs。 Once I saw one of them drop her load; she gave herself
  a great deal of trouble in trying to raise it again; but she could not
  succeed。 Then two others came up and tried with all their strength
  to help her; till they nearly dropped their own burdens in doing so;
  then they were obliged to stop for a moment in their help; for every
  one must think of himself first。 And the ant…queen remarked that their
  conduct that day showed that they possessed kind hearts and good
  understanding。 'These two qualities;' she continued; 'place us ants in
  the highest degree above all other reasonable beings。 Understanding
  must therefore be seen among us in the most prominent manner; and my
  wisdom is greater than all。' And so saying she raised herself on her
  two hind legs; that no one else might be mistaken for her。 I could not
  therefore make an error; so I ate her up。 We are to go to the ants
  to learn wisdom; and I had got the queen。
  〃I now turned and went nearer to the lofty tree already mentioned;
  which was an oak。 It had a tall trunk with a wide…spreading top; and
  was very old。 I knew that a living being dwelt here; a dryad as she is
  called; who is born with the tree and dies with it。 I had heard this
  in the library; and here was just such a tree; and in it an
  oak…maiden。 She uttered a terrible scream when she caught sight of