Hindu Tales from the Sanskrit eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 152 pages of information about Hindu Tales from the Sanskrit.

Hindu Tales from the Sanskrit eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 152 pages of information about Hindu Tales from the Sanskrit.

The fairies saw he was really in earnest this time, so they consented to let him go; but they were kind-hearted people and felt they ought to pay him in some way for all he had done for them.  They consulted together, and then one of them told him they wished to make him a present before he went away, and they would give him whatever he asked for.

15.  What do you think it was that made Subha Datta determine to go home when he found his wife and children could do without him?

16.  What would you have chosen if the fairies had told you you could have anything you liked?

CHAPTER IX

Directly the woodcutter heard he could have anything he asked for, he cried, “I will have the magic pitcher.”

You can just imagine what a shock this was to the fairies!  You know, of course, that fairies always keep their word.  If they could not persuade Subha Datta to choose something else, they would have to give him their beloved, their precious pitcher and would have to seek their food for themselves.  They all tried all they could to persuade the woodcutter to choose something else.  They took him to their own secret treasure-house, in an old, old tree with a hollow trunk, even the entrance to which no mortal had ever been allowed to see.  They blindfolded him before they started, so that he could never reveal the way, and one of them led him by the hand, telling him where the steps going down from the tree began.  When at last the bandage was taken from his eyes, he found himself in a lofty hall with an opening in the roof through which the light came.  Piled up on the floor were sparkling stones worth a great deal of gold and silver money, and on the walls hung beautiful robes.  Subha Datta was quite dazed with all lie saw, but he was only an ignorant woodcutter and did not realize the value of the jewels and clothes.  So when the fairies, said to him, “Choose anything you like here and let us keep our pitcher,” he shook his head and said:  “No! no! no!  The pitcher!  I will have the pitcher!” One fairy after another picked up the rubies and diamonds and other precious stones and held them in the light, that the woodcutter might see how lovely they were; and when he still only shook his head, they got down the robes and tried to make him put one of them on.  “No! the pitcher! the pitcher!” he said, and at last they had to give it up.  They bound his eyes again and led him back to the clearing and the pitcher.

17.  Would you have been tempted to give up the pitcher when you saw the jewels and the robes?

18.  What made Subha Datta so determined to have the pitcher?

CHAPTER X

Even when they were all back again in the clearing the fairies did not quite give up hope of keeping their pitcher.  This time they gave other reasons why Subha Datta should not have it.  “It will break very easily,” they told him, “and then it will be no good to you or any one else.  But if you take some of the money, you can buy anything you like with it.  If you take some of the jewels you can sell them for lots of money.”

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Hindu Tales from the Sanskrit from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.