Old Peter's Russian Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 252 pages of information about Old Peter's Russian Tales.

Old Peter's Russian Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 252 pages of information about Old Peter's Russian Tales.

The witch saw that the lamb went off by himself every morning and every evening.  She watched where he went, and when she knew she began to hate the lamb; and she gave orders for the sticks to be cut, and the iron cauldron to be heated, and the steel knives made sharp.  She sent a servant to catch the lamb; and she said to the fine gentleman, who thought all the time that she was Alenoushka, “It is time for the lamb to be killed, and made into a tasty stew.”

The fine gentleman was astonished.

“What,” says he, “you want to have the lamb killed?  Why, you called it your brother when first I found you by the hayrick in the plain.  You were always giving it caresses and sweet words.  You loved it so much that I was sick of the sight of it, and now you give orders for its throat to be cut.  Truly,” says he, “the mind of woman is like the wind in summer.”

The lamb ran away when he saw that the servant had come to catch him.  He heard the sharpening of the knives, and had seen the cutting of the wood, and the great cauldron taken from its place.  He was frightened, and he ran away, and came to the river bank, where the wind was sighing through the tall reeds.  And there he sang a farewell song to his sister, thinking he had not long to live.  The servant followed the lamb cunningly, and crept near to catch him, and heard his little song.  This is what he sang:—­

    “Alenoushka, little sister,
    They are going to slaughter me;
    They are cutting wooden fagots,
    They are heating iron cauldrons,
    They are sharpening knives of steel.”

And Alenoushka, lamenting, answered the lamb from the bottom of the river:—­

    “O my brother Ivanoushka,
    A heavy stone is round my throat,
    Silken grass grows through my fingers,
    Yellow sand lies on my breast.”

The servant listened, and marvelled at the miracle of the lamb singing, and the sweet voice answering him from the river.  He crept away quietly, and came to the fine gentleman, and told him what he had heard; and they set out together to the river, to watch the lamb, and listen, and see what was happening.

[Illustration:  He stepped on one of its fiery wings and pressed it to The ground.]

The little white lamb stood on the bank of the river weeping, so that his tears fell into the water.  And presently he sang again:—­

    “Alenoushka, little sister,
    They are going to slaughter me;
    They are cutting wooden fagots,
    They are heating iron cauldrons,
    They are sharpening knives of steel.”

And Alenoushka answered him, lamenting, from the bottom of the river:—­

    “O my brother Ivanoushka,
    A heavy stone is round my throat,
    Silken grass grows through my fingers,
    Yellow sand lies on my breast.”

The fine gentleman heard, and he was sure that the voice was the voice of his own dear wife, and he remembered how she had loved the lamb.  He sent his servant to fetch men, and fishing nets and nets of silk.  The men came running, and they dragged the river with fishing nets, and brought their nets empty to land.  Then they tried with nets of fine silk, and, as they drew them in, there was Alenoushka lying in the nets as if she were asleep.

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Old Peter's Russian Tales from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.