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.

7.  Do you think there was any chance of a cat and a mouse becoming real friends?

8.  Can you give two or three instances you know of presence of mind in danger?

CHAPTER V

When the cat heard what the mouse said, she could hardly believe her ears.  She was of course ready to promise anything to anyone who would help her, so she said at once: 

“You dear little mouse, to wish to help me.  If only you will nibble through that string which is killing me, I promise that I will always love you, always be your friend, and however hungry I may be, I will starve rather than hurt your tender little body.”

On hearing this, the mouse, without hesitating a moment, climbed up on to the cat’s back, and cuddled down in the soft fur near her neck, feeling very safe and warm there.  The owl would certainly not attack him there, he thought, and the cat could not possibly hurt him.  It was one thing to pounce down on a defenceless little creature running on the ground amongst the barley, quite another to try and snatch him from the very neck of a cat.

The cat of course expected the mouse to begin to nibble through the string at once, and became very uneasy when she felt the little creature nestle down as if to go to sleep, instead of helping her.  Poor Pussy could not turn her head so as to see the mouse without drawing the string tighter, and she did not dare to speak angrily lest she should offend him.  “My dear little friend,” she said, “do you not think it is high time to keep your promise and set me free?”

Hearing this, the mouse pretended to bite the string, but took care not to do so really; and the cat waited and waited, getting more miserable every minute.  All through the long night the same thing went on:  the mouse taking a little nap now and then, the cat getting weaker and weaker.  “Oh,” she thought to herself, “if only I could get free, the first thing I would do would be to gobble up that horrid little mouse.”  The moon rose, the stars came out, the wind murmured amongst the branches of the banyan tree, making the unfortunate cat long to be safe in her cosy home in the trunk.  The cries of the wild animals which prowl about at night seeking their food were heard, and the cat feared one of them might find her and kill her.  A mother tiger perhaps would snatch her, and take her to her hungry cubs, hidden away in the deep forest, or a bird of prey might swoop down on her and grip her in his terrible claws.  Again and again she entreated the mouse to be quick, promising that, if only he would set her at liberty, she would never, never, never forget it or do any harm to her beloved friend.

9.  What do you suppose the mouse was thinking all this time?

10.  If you had been the mouse, would you have trusted to what the cat said in her misery?

CHAPTER VI

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