Not many years ago there lived on
a stony, barren New England farm a man and his wife.
They were sober, honest people, working hard from
early morning until dark to enable them to secure a
scanty living from their poor land.
Their house, a small, one-storied
building, stood upon the side of a steep hill, and
the stones lay so thickly about it that scarce anything
green could grow from the ground. At the foot
of the hill, a quarter of a mile from the house by
the winding path, was a small brook, and the woman
was obliged to go there for water and to carry it
up the hill to the house. This was a tedious task,
and with the other hard work that fell to her share
had made her gaunt and bent and lean.
Yet she never complained, but meekly
and faithfully performed her duties, doing the housework,
carrying the water and helping her husband hoe the
scanty crop that grew upon the best part of their
land.
One day, as she walked down the path
to the brook, her big shoes scattering the pebbles
right and left, she noticed a large beetle lying upon
its back and struggling hard with its little legs to
turn over, that its feet might again touch the ground.
But this it could not accomplish; so the woman, who
had a kind heart, reached down and gently turned the
beetle with her finger. At once it scampered from
the path and she went on to the brook.
The next day, as she came for water,
she was surprised to see the beetle again lying upon
its back and struggling helplessly to turn. Once
more the woman stopped and set him upon his feet; and
then, as she stooped over the tiny creature, she heard
a small voice say:
“Oh, thank you! Thank you so much for saving
me!”
Half frightened at hearing a beetle
speak in her own language, the woman started back
and exclaimed:
“La sakes! Surely you can’t
talk like humans!” Then, recovering from her
alarm, she again bent over the beetle, who answered
her:
“Why shouldn’t I talk, if I have anything
to say?
“’Cause you’re a bug,” replied
the woman.
“That is true; and you saved
my life saved me from my enemies, the sparrows.
And this is the second time you have come to my assistance,
so I owe you a debt of gratitude. Bugs value their
lives as much as human beings, and I am a more important
creature than you, in your ignorance, may suppose.
But, tell me, why do you come each day to the brook?”
“For water,” she answered,
staring stupidly down at the talking beetle.
“Isn’t it hard work?” the creature
inquired.
“Yes; but there’s no water on the hill,”
said she.
“Then dig a well and put a pump in it,”
replied the beetle.
She shook her head.
“My man tried it once; but there was no water,”
she said, sadly.
“Try it again,” commanded
the beetle; “and in return for your kindness
to me I will make this promise: if you do not
get water from the well you will get that which is
more precious to you. I must go now. Do
not forget. Dig a well.”
And then, without pausing to say good-by,
it ran swiftly away and was lost among the stones.
The woman returned to the house much
perplexed by what the beetle had said, and when her
husband came in from his work she told him the whole
story.
The poor man thought deeply for a
time, and then declared:
“Wife, there may be truth in
what the bug told you. There must be magic in
the world yet, if a beetle can speak; and if there
is such a thing as magic we may get water from the
well. The pump I bought to use in the well which
proved to be dry is now lying in the barn, and the
only expense in following the talking bug’s advice
will be the labor of digging the hole. Labor
I am used to; so I will dig the well.”
Next day he set about it, and dug
so far down in the ground that he could hardly reach
the top to climb out again; but not a drop of water
was found.
“Perhaps you did not dig deep
enough,” his wife said, when he told her of
his failure.
So the following day he made a long
ladder, which he put into the hole; and then he dug,
and dug, and dug, until the top of the ladder barely
reached the top of the hole. But still there was
no water.
When the woman next went to the brook
with her pail she saw the beetle sitting upon a stone
beside her path. So she stopped and said:
“My husband has dug the well; but there is no
water.”
“Did he put the pump in the well?” asked
the beetle.
“No,” she answered.
“Then do as I commanded; put
in the pump, and if you do not get water I promise
you something still more precious.”
Saying which, the beetle swiftly slid
from the stone and disappeared. The woman went
back to the house and told her husband what the bug
had said.
“Well,” replied the simple
fellow, “there can be no harm in trying.”
So he got the pump from the barn and
placed it in the well, and then he took hold of the
handle and began to pump, while his wife stood by
to watch what would happen.
No water came, but after a few moments
a gold piece dropped from the spout of the pump, and
then another, and another, until several handfuls
of gold lay in a little heap upon the ground.
The man stopped pumping then and ran
to help his wife gather the gold pieces into her apron;
but their hands trembled so greatly through excitement
and joy that they could scarcely pick up the sparkling
coins.
At last she gathered them close to
her bosom and together they ran to the house, where
they emptied the precious gold upon the table and
counted the pieces.
All were stamped with the design of
the United States mint and were worth five dollars
each. Some were worn and somewhat discolored from
use, while others seemed bright and new, as if they
had not been much handled. When the value of
the pieces was added together they were found to be
worth three hundred dollars.
Suddenly the woman spoke.
“Husband, the beetle said truly
when he declared we should get something more precious
than water from the well. But run at once and
take away the handle from the pump, lest anyone should
pass this way and discover our secret.”
So the man ran to the pump and removed
the handle, which he carried to the house and hid
underneath the bed.
They hardly slept a wink that night,
lying awake to think of their good fortune and what
they should do with their store of yellow gold.
In all their former lives they had never possessed
more than a few dollars at a time, and now the cracked
teapot was nearly full of gold coins.
The following day was Sunday, and
they arose early and ran to see if their treasure
was safe. There it lay, heaped snugly within the
teapot, and they were so willing to feast their eyes
upon it that it was long before the man could leave
it to build the fire or the woman to cook the breakfast.
While they ate their simple meal the woman said:
“We will go to church to-day
and return thanks for the riches that have come to
us so suddenly. And I will give the pastor one
of the gold pieces.”
“It is well enough to go to
church,” replied her husband, “and also
to return thanks. But in the night I decided how
we will spend all our money; so there will be none
left for the pastor.”
“We can pump more,” said the woman.
“Perhaps; and perhaps not,”
he answered, cautiously. “What we have
we can depend upon, but whether or not there be more
in the well I cannot say.”
“Then go and find out,”
she returned, “for I am anxious to give something
to the pastor, who is a poor man and deserving.”
So the man got the pump handle from
beneath the bed, and, going to the pump, fitted it
in place. Then he set a large wooden bucket under
the spout and began to pump. To their joy the
gold pieces soon began flowing into the pail, and,
seeing it about to run over the brim, the woman brought
another pail. But now the stream suddenly stopped,
and the man said, cheerfully:
“That is enough for to-day,
good wife! We have added greatly to our treasure,
and the parson shall have his gold piece. Indeed,
I think I shall also put a coin into the contribution
box.”
Then, because the teapot would hold
no more gold, the farmer emptied the pail into the
wood-box, covering the money with dried leaves and
twigs, that no one might suspect what lay underneath.
Afterward they dressed themselves
in their best clothing and started for the church,
each taking a bright gold piece from the teapot as
a gift to the pastor.
Over the hill and down into the valley
beyond they walked, feeling so gay and light-hearted
that they did not mind the distance at all. At
last they came to the little country church and entered
just as the services began.
Being proud of their wealth and of
the gifts they had brought for the pastor, they could
scarcely wait for the moment when the deacon passed
the contribution box. But at last the time came,
and the farmer held his hand high over the box and
dropped the gold piece so that all the congregation
could see what he had given. The woman did likewise,
feeling important and happy at being able to give the
good parson so much.
The parson, watching from the pulpit,
saw the gold drop into the box, and could hardly believe
that his eyes did not deceive him. However, when
the box was laid upon his desk there were the two gold
pieces, and he was so surprised that he nearly forgot
his sermon.
When the people were leaving the church
at the close of the services the good man stopped
the farmer and his wife and asked:
“Where did you get so much gold?”
The woman gladly told him how she
had rescued the beetle, and how, in return, they had
been rewarded with the wonderful pump. The pastor
listened to it all gravely, and when the story was
finished he said:
“According to tradition strange
things happened in this world ages ago, and now I
find that strange things may also happen to-day.
For by your tale you have found a beetle that can
speak and also has power to bestow upon you great
wealth.” Then he looked carefully at the
gold pieces and continued: “Either this
money is fairy gold or it is genuine metal, stamped
at the mint of the United States government.
If it is fairy gold it will disappear within 24 hours,
and will therefore do no one any good. If it is
real money, then your beetle must have robbed some
one of the gold and placed it in your well. For
all money belongs to some one, and if you have not
earned it honestly, but have come by it in the mysterious
way you mention, it was surely taken from the persons
who owned it, without their consent. Where else
could real money come from?”
The farmer and his wife were confused
by this statement and looked guiltily at each other,
for they were honest people and wished to wrong no
one.
“Then you think the beetle stole
the money?” asked the woman.
“By his magic powers he probably
took it from its rightful owners. Even bugs which
can speak have no consciences and cannot tell the
difference between right and wrong. With a desire
to reward you for your kindness the beetle took from
its lawful possessors the money you pumped from the
well.”
“Perhaps it really is fairy
gold,” suggested the man. “If so,
we must go to the town and spend the money before
it disappears.”
“That would be wrong,”
answered the pastor; “for then the merchants
would have neither money nor goods. To give them
fairy gold would be to rob them.”
“What, then, shall we do?”
asked the poor woman, wringing her hands with grief
and disappointment.
“Go home and wait until to-morrow.
If the gold is then in your possession it is real
money and not fairy gold. But if it is real money
you must try to restore it to its rightful owners.
Take, also, these pieces which you have given me,
for I cannot accept gold that is not honestly come
by.”
Sadly the poor people returned to
their home, being greatly disturbed by what they had
heard. Another sleepless night was passed, and
on Monday morning they arose at daylight and ran to
see if the gold was still visible.
“It is real money, after all!”
cried the man; “for not a single piece has disappeared.”
When the woman went to the brook that
day she looked for the beetle, and, sure enough, there
he sat upon the flat stone.
“Are you happy now?” asked
the beetle, as the woman paused before him.
“We are very unhappy,”
she answered; “for, although you have given
us much gold, our good parson says it surely belongs
to some one else, and was stolen by you to reward
us.”
“Your parson may be a good man,”
returned the beetle, with some indignation, “but
he certainly is not overwise. Nevertheless, if
you do not want the gold I can take it from you as
easily as I gave it.”
“But we do want it!” cried
the woman, fearfully. “That is,” she
added, “if it is honestly come by.”
“It is not stolen,” replied
the beetle, sulkily, “and now belongs to no
one but yourselves. When you saved my life I thought
how I might reward you; and, knowing you to be poor,
I decided gold would make you happier than anything
else.
“You must know,” he continued,
“that although I appear so small and insignificant,
I am really king of all the insects, and my people
obey my slightest wish. Living, as they do, close
to the ground, the insects often come across gold
and other pieces of money which have been lost by
men and have fallen into cracks or crevasses or become
covered with earth or hidden by grass or weeds.
Whenever my people find money in this way they report
the fact to me; but I have always let it lie, because
it could be of no possible use to an insect.
“However, when I decided to
give you gold I knew just where to obtain it without
robbing any of your fellow creatures. Thousands
of insects were at once sent by me in every direction
to bring the pieces of lost gold to his hill.
It cost my people several days of hard labor, as you
may suppose; but by the time your husband had finished
the well the gold began to arrive from all parts of
the country, and during the night my subjects dumped
it all into the well. So you may use it with
a clear conscience, knowing that you wrong no one.”
This explanation delighted the woman,
and when she returned to the house and reported to
her husband what the beetle had said he also was overjoyed.
So they at once took a number of the
gold pieces and went to the town to purchase provisions
and clothing and many things of which they had long
stood in need; but so proud were they of their newly
acquired wealth that they took no pains to conceal
it. They wanted everyone to know they had money,
and so it was no wonder that when some of the wicked
men in the village saw the gold they longed to possess
it themselves.
“If they spend this money so
freely,” whispered one to another, “there
must be a great store of gold at their home.”
“That is true,” was the
answer. “Let us hasten there before they
return and ransack the house.”
So they left the village and hurried
away to the farm on the hill, where they broke down
the door and turned everything topsy turvy until they
had discovered the gold in the wood-box and the teapot.
It did not take them long to make this into bundles,
which they slung upon their backs and carried off,
and it was probably because they were in a great hurry
that they did not stop to put the house in order again.
Presently the good woman and her husband
came up the hill from the village with their arms
full of bundles and followed by a crowd of small boys
who had been hired to help carry the purchases.
Then followed others, youngsters and country louts,
attracted by the wealth and prodigality of the pair,
who, from simple curiosity, trailed along behind like
the tail of a comet and helped swell the concourse
into a triumphal procession. Last of all came
Guggins, the shopkeeper, carrying with much tenderness
a new silk dress which was to be paid for when they
reached the house, all the money they had taken to
the village having been lavishly expended.
The farmer, who had formerly been
a modest man, was now so swelled with pride that he
tipped the rim of his hat over his left ear and smoked
a big cigar that was fast making him ill. His
wife strutted along beside him like a peacock, enjoying
to the full the homage and respect her wealth had
won from those who formerly deigned not to notice
her, and glancing from time to time at the admiring
procession in the rear.
But, alas for their new-born pride!
when they reached the farmhouse they found the door
broken in, the furniture strewn in all directions
and their treasure stolen to the very last gold piece.
The crowd grinned and made slighting
remarks of a personal nature, and Guggins, the shopkeeper,
demanded in a loud voice the money for the silk dress
he had brought.
Then the woman whispered to her husband
to run and pump some more gold while she kept the
crowd quiet, and he obeyed quickly. But after
a few moments he returned with a white face to tell
her the pump was dry, and not a gold piece could now
be coaxed from the spout.
The procession marched back to the
village laughing and jeering at the farmer and his
wife, who had pretended to be so rich; and some of
the boys were naughty enough to throw stones at the
house from the top of the hill. Mr. Guggins carried
away his dress after severely scolding the woman for
deceiving him, and when the couple at last found themselves
alone their pride had turned to humiliation and their
joy to bitter grief.
Just before sundown the woman dried
her eyes and, having resumed her ordinary attire,
went to the brook for water. When she came to
the flat stone she saw the King Beetle sitting upon
it.
“The well is dry!” she cried out, angrily.
“Yes,” answered the beetle,
calmly, “you have pumped from it all the gold
my people could find.”
“But we are now ruined,”
said the woman, sitting down in the path beginning
to weep; “for robbers have stolen from us every
penny we possessed.”
“I’m sorry,” returned
the beetle; “but it is your own fault. Had
you not made so great a show of your wealth no one
would have suspected you possessed a treasure, or
thought to rob you. As it is, you have merely
lost the gold which others have lost before you.
It will probably be lost many times more before the
world comes to an end.”
“But what are we to do now?” she asked.
“What did you do before I gave you the money?”
“We worked from morning ’til night,”
said she.
“Then work still remains for
you,” remarked the beetle, composedly; “no
one will ever try to rob you of that, you may be sure!”
And he slid from the stone and disappeared for the
last time.
This story should teach us to accept
good fortune with humble hearts and to use it with
moderation. For, had the farmer and his wife
resisted the temptation to display their wealth ostentatiously,
they might have retained it to this very day.