The hunters had hunted the wood for
so many years that no wild animal was any more to
be found in it. You might walk from one end to
the other without ever seeing a hare, or a deer, or
a boar, or hearing the cooing of the doves in their
nest. If they were not dead, they had flown elsewhere.
Only three creatures remained alive, and they had hidden
themselves in the thickest part of the forest, high
up the mountain. These were a grey-furred, long-tailed
tanuki, his wife the fox, who was one of his own family,
and their little son.
The fox and the tanuki were very clever,
prudent beasts, and they also were skilled in magic,
and by this means had escaped the fate of their unfortunate
friends. If they heard the twang of an arrow or
saw the glitter of a spear, ever so far off, they
lay very still, and were not to be tempted from their
hiding-place, if their hunger was ever so great, or
the game ever so delicious. ’We are not
so foolish as to risk our lives,’ they said
to each other proudly. But at length there came
a day when, in spite of their prudence, they seemed
likely to die of starvation, for no more food was
to be had. Something had to be done, but they
did not know what.
Suddenly a bright thought struck the
tanuki. ‘I have got a plan,’ he cried
joyfully to his wife. ’I will pretend to
be dead, and you must change yourself into a man,
and take me to the village for sale. It will
be easy to find a buyer, tanukis’ skins are always
wanted; then buy some food with the money and come
home again. I will manage to escape somehow,
so do not worry about me.’
The fox laughed with delight, and
rubbed her paws together with satisfaction. ‘Well,
next time I will go,’ she said, ’and you
can sell me.’ And then she changed herself
into a man, and picking up the stiff body of the tanuki,
set off towards the village. She found him rather
heavy, but it would never have done to let him walk
through the wood and risk his being seen by somebody.
As the tanaki had foretold, buyers
were many, and the fox handed him over to the person
who offered the largest price, and hurried to get
some food with the money. The buyer took the tanuki
back to his house, and throwing him into a corner
went out. Directly the tanaki found he was alone,
he crept cautiously through a chink of the window,
thinking, as he did so, how lucky it was that he was
not a fox, and was able to climb. Once outside,
he hid himself in a ditch till it grew dusk, and then
galloped away into the forest.
While the food lasted they were all
three as happy as kings; but there soon arrived a
day when the larder was as empty as ever. ’It
is my turn now to pretend to be dead,’ cried
the fox. So the tanuki changed himself into a
peasant, and started for the village, with his wife’s
body hanging over his shoulder. A buyer was not
long in coming forward, and while they were making
the bargain a wicked thought darted into the tanuki’s
head, that if he got rid of the fox there would be
more food for him and his son. So as he put the
money in his pocket he whispered softly to the buyer
that the fox was not really dead, and that if he did
not take care she might run away from him. The
man did not need twice telling. He gave the poor
fox a blow on the head, which put an end to her, and
the wicked tanuki went smiling to the nearest shop.
In former times he had been very fond
of his little son; but since he had betrayed his wife
he seemed to have changed all in a moment, for he
would not give him as much as a bite, and the poor
little fellow would have starved had he not found
some nuts and berries to eat, and he waited on, always
hoping that his mother would come back.
At length some notion of the truth
began to dawn on him; but he was careful to let the
old tanuki see nothing, though in his own mind he
turned over plans from morning till night, wondering
how best he might avenge his mother.
One morning, as the little tanuki
was sitting with his father, he remembered, with a
start, that his mother had taught him all she knew
of magic, and that he could work spells as well as
his father, or perhaps better. ‘I am as
good a wizard as you,’ he said suddenly, and
a cold chill ran through the tanuki as he heard him,
though he laughed, and pretended to think it a joke.
But the little tanaki stuck to his point, and at last
the father proposed they should have a wager.
‘Change yourself into any shape
you like,’ said he, ’and I will undertake
to know you. I will go and wait on the bridge
which leads over the river to the village, and you
shall transform yourself into anything you please,
but I will know you through any disguise.’
The little tanuki agreed, and went down the road which
his father had pointed out. But instead of transforming
himself into a different shape, he just hid himself
in a corner of the bridge, where he could see without
being seen.
He had not been there long when his
father arrived and took up his place near the middle
of the bridge, and soon after the king came by, followed
by a troop of guards and all his court.
’Ah! he thinks that now he has
changed himself into a king I shall not know him,’
thought the old tanuki, and as the king passed in his
splendid carriage, borne by his servants, he jumped
upon it crying: ’I have won my wager; you
cannot deceive me.’ But in reality it was
he who had deceived himself. The soldiers, conceiving
that their king was being attacked, seized the tanuki
by the legs and flung him over into the river, and
the water closed over him.
And the little tanoki saw it all,
and rejoiced that his mother’s death had been
avenged. Then he went back to the forest, and
if he has not found it too lonely, he is probably
living there still.
[From Japanische Mahrchen.]