Oh, what a day!
The dew had fallen early in the morning,
and when the sun rose and cast its slanting beams
across the forest of grass, there was such a sparkling
and glistening and gleaming that you didn’t
know what to say or do for sheer ecstasy, it was so
beautiful, so beautiful!
The moment Maya awoke, glad sounds
greeted her from all round. Some came out of
the trees, from the throats of the birds, the dreaded
creatures who could yet produce such exquisite song;
other happy calls came out of the air, from flying
insects, or out of the grass and the bushes, from
bugs and flies, big ones and little ones.
Maya had made it very comfortable
for herself in a hole in a tree. It was safe
and dry, and stayed warm the greater part of the night
because the sun shone on the entrance all day long.
Once, early in the morning, she had heard a woodpecker
rat-a-tat-tatting on the bark of the trunk, and had
lost no time getting away. The drumming of a
woodpecker is as terrifying to a little insect in
the bark of a tree as the breaking open of our shutters
by a burglar would be to us. But at night she
was safe in her lofty nook. At night no creatures
came prying.
She had sealed up part of the entrance
with wax, leaving just space enough to slip in and
out; and in a cranny in the back of the hole, where
it was dark and cool, she had stored a little honey
against rainy days.
This morning she swung herself out
into the sunshine with a cry of delight, all anticipation
as to what the fresh, lovely day might bring.
She sailed straight through the golden air, looking
like a brisk dot driven by the wind.
“I am going to meet a human
being to-day,” she cried. “I feel
sure I am. On days like this human beings must
certainly be out in the open air enjoying nature.”
Never had she met so many insects.
There was a coming and going and all sorts of doings;
the air was alive with a humming and a laughing and
glad little cries. You had to join in, you just
had to join in.
After a while Maya let herself down
into a forest of grass, where all sorts of plants
and flowers were growing. The highest were the
white tufts of yarrow and butterfly-weed the
flaming milkweed that drew you like a magnet.
She took a sip of nectar from some clover and was
about to fly off again when she saw a perfect droll
of a beast perched on a blade of grass curving above
her flower. She was thoroughly scared he
was such a lean green monster but then
her interest was tremendously aroused, and she remained
sitting still, as though rooted to the spot, and stared
straight at him.
At first glance you’d have thought
he had horns. Looking closer you saw it was his
oddly protuberant forehead that gave this impression.
Two long, long feelers fine as the finest thread grew
out of his brows, and his body was the slimmest imaginable,
and green all over, even to his eyes. He had dainty
forelegs and thin, inconspicuous wings that couldn’t
be very practical, Maya thought. Oddest of all
were his great hindlegs, which stuck up over his body
like two jointed stilts. His sly, saucy expression
was contradicted by the look of astonishment in his
eyes, and you couldn’t say there was any meanness
in his eyes either. No, rather a lot of good
humor.
“Well, mademoiselle,”
he said to Maya, evidently annoyed by her surprised
expression, “never seen a grasshopper before?
Or are you laying eggs?”
“The idea!” cried Maya
in shocked accents. “It wouldn’t occur
to me. Even if I could, I wouldn’t.
It would be usurping the sacred duties of our queen.
I wouldn’t do such a foolish thing.”
The grasshopper ducked his head and
made such a funny face that Maya had to laugh out
loud in spite of her chagrin.
“Mademoiselle,” he began,
then had to laugh himself, and said: “You’re
a case! You’re a case!”
The fellow’s behavior made Maya impatient.
“Why do you laugh?” she
asked in a not altogether friendly tone. “You
can’t be serious expecting me to lay eggs, especially
out here on the grass.”
There was a snap. “Hoppety-hop,”
said the grasshopper, and was gone.
Maya was utterly non-plussed.
Without the help of his wings he had swung himself
up in the air in a tremendous curve. Foolhardiness
bordering on madness, she thought.
But there he was again. From
where, she couldn’t tell, but there he was,
beside her, on a leaf of her clover.
He looked her up and down, all round,
before and behind.
“No,” he said then, pertly,
“you certainly can’t lay eggs. You’re
not equipped for it. You haven’t got a borer.”
“What borer?”
Maya covered herself with her wings and turned so
that the stranger could see nothing but her face.
“Borer, that’s what I
said. Don’t fall off your base,
mademoiselle. You’re a wasp, aren’t
you?”
To be called a wasp! Nothing
worse could happen to little Maya.
“I never!” she cried.
“Hoppety-hop,” answered he, and was off
again.
“The fellow makes me nervous,”
she thought, and decided to fly away. She couldn’t
remember ever having been so insulted in her life.
What a disgrace to be mistaken for a wasp, one of those
useless wasps, those tramps, those common thieves!
It really was infuriating.
But there he was again!
“Mademoiselle,” he called
and turned round part way, so that his long hindlegs
looked like the hands of a clock standing at five
minutes before half-past seven, “mademoiselle,
you must excuse me for interrupting our conversation
now and then. But suddenly I’m seized.
I must hop. I can’t help it, I must hop,
no matter where. Can’t you hop, too?”
He smiled a smile that drew his mouth
from ear to ear. Maya couldn’t keep from
laughing.
“Can you?” said the grasshopper,
and nodded encouragingly.
“Who are you?”
asked Maya. “You’re terribly exciting.”
“Why, everybody knows who I
am,” said the green oddity, and grinned almost
beyond the limits of his jaws.
Maya never could make out whether
he spoke in fun or in earnest.
“I’m a stranger in these
parts,” she replied pleasantly, “else
I’m sure I’d know you. But
please note that I belong to the family of bees, and
am positively not a wasp.”
“My goodness,” said the
grasshopper, “one and the same thing.”
Maya couldn’t utter a sound, she was so excited.
“You’re uneducated,”
she burst out at length. “Take a good look
at a wasp once.”
“Why should I?” answered
the green one. “What good would it do if
I observed differences that exist only in people’s
imagination? You, a bee, fly round in the air,
sting everything you come across, and can’t
hop. Exactly the same with a wasp. So where’s
the difference? Hoppety-hop!” And he was
gone.
“But now I am going to fly away,” thought
Maya.
There he was again.
“Mademoiselle,” he called,
“there’s going to be a hopping-match to-morrow.
It will be held in the Reverend Sinpeck’s garden.
Would you care to have a complimentary ticket and watch
the games? My old woman has two left over.
She’ll trade you one for a compliment.
I expect to break the record.”
“I’m not interested in
hopping acrobatics,” said Maya in some disgust.
“A person who flies has higher interests.”
The grasshopper grinned a grin you
could almost hear.
“Don’t think too
highly of yourself, my dear young lady. Most
creatures in this world can fly, but only a very, very
few can hop. You don’t understand other
people’s interests. You have no vision.
Even human beings would like a high elegant hop.
The other day I saw the Reverend Sinpeck hop a yard
up into the air to impress a little snake that slid
across his road. His contempt for anything that
couldn’t hop was so great that he threw away
his pipe. And reverends, you know, cannot live
without their pipes. I have known grasshoppers members
of my own family who could hop to a height
three hundred times their length. Now you’re
impressed. You haven’t a word to say.
And you’re inwardly regretting the remarks you
made and the remarks you intended to make. Three
hundred times their own length! Just imagine.
Even the elephant, the largest animal in the world,
can’t hop as high as that. Well? You’re
not saying anything. Didn’t I tell you
you wouldn’t have anything to say?”
“But how can I say anything
if you don’t give me a chance?”
“All right, then, talk,”
said the grasshopper pleasantly. “Hoppety-hop.”
He was gone.
Maya had to laugh in spite of her irritation.
The fellow had certainly furnished
her with a strange experience. Buffoon though
he was, still she had to admire his wide information
and worldly wisdom; and though she could not agree
with his views of hopping, she was amazed by all the
new things he had taught her in their brief conversation.
If he had been more reliable she would have been only
too glad to ask him questions about a number of different
things. It occurred to her that often people
who are least equipped to profit by experiences are
the very ones who have them.
He knew the names of human beings.
Did he, then, understand their language? If he
came back, she’d ask him. And she’d
also ask him what he thought of trying to go near
a human being or of entering a human being’s
house.
“Mademoiselle!” A blade
of grass beside Maya was set swaying.
“Goodness gracious! Where do you keep coming
from?”
“The surroundings.”
“But do tell, do you hop out
into the world just so, without knowing where you
mean to land?”
“Of course. Why not?
Can you read the future? No one can.
Only the tree-toad, but he never tells.”
“The things you know! Wonderful,
simply wonderful! Do you understand the
language of human beings?”
“That’s a difficult question
to answer, mademoiselle, because it hasn’t been
proved as yet whether human beings have a language.
Sometimes they utter sounds by which they seem to reach
an understanding with each other but such
awful sounds! So unmelodious! Like nothing
else in nature that I know of. However, there’s
one thing you must allow them: they do seem to
try to make their voices pleasanter. Once I saw
two boys take a blade of grass between their thumbs
and blow on it. The result was a whistle which
may be compared with the chirping of a cricket, though
far inferior in quality of tone, far inferior.
However, human beings make an honest effort.
Is there anything else you’d like to ask?
I know a thing or two.”
He grinned his almost-audible grin.
But the next time he hopped off, Maya
waited for him in vain. She looked about in the
grass and the flowers; he was nowhere to be seen.