| |  | Currently Watching Drugstore Cowboy By Matt Dillon, Kelly Lynch, James LeGros, Heather Graham, Eric Hull, Max Perlich, James Remar, John Kelly (II), Grace Zabriskie, George Catalano, Janet Baumhover, Ted D'Arms, Neal Thomas, Stephen Rutledge, Beah Richards, William S. Burroughs, Robert Lee Pitchlynn, Roger Hancock, Michael Parker, Ray Monge see related | I decided that, since I'm otherwise not going to post a real entry for a while, I'll post the following excerpt. It's from Watership Down, and it's the first few pages (out of 400) of the book. The rest of the book is nothing like this - this is just an interesting "just-so story" that Richard Adams put at the beginning.
Note: El-ahrairah is essentially the Lord of the Rabbits.
The Story of the Blessing of El-ahrairah (as
told by Dandelion)Long ago, Frith made the world. He
made all the stars, too, and the world is one of the stars. He made them by
scattering his droppings over the sky and this is why the grass and the trees
grow so thick on the world. Frith makes the rivers flow. They follow him as he
goes through the sky, and when he leaves the sky they look for him all night.
Frith made all the animals and birds, but when he first made them they were all
the same. The sparrow and the kestrel were friends and they both ate seeds and
flies. And the fox and the rabbit were friends and they both ate grass. And
there was plenty of grass and plenty of flies, because the world was new and
Frith shone down bright and warm all day.
Now,
El-ahrairah was among the animals in those days and he had many wives. He had
so many wives that there was no counting them, and the wives had so many young
that even Frith could not count them, and they ate the grass and the dandelions
and the lettuces and the clover, and El-ahrairah was the father of them all.
And after a time the grass began to grow thin and the rabbits wandered
everywhere, multiplying and eating as they went.
Then Frith
said to El-ahrairah, “Prince Rabbit, if you cannot control your people, I shall
find ways to control them. So mark what I say.” But El-ahrairah would not
listen and he said to Frith, “My people are the strongest in the world, for
they breed faster and eat more than any of the other people. And this shows how
much they love Lord Frith, for of all the animals they are the most responsive
to his warmth and brightness. You must realize, my lord, how important they are
and not hinder them in their beautiful lives.”
Frith could
have killed El-ahrairah at once, but he had a mind to keep him in the world,
because he needed him to sport and jest and play tricks. So he determined to
get the better of him, not by means of his great power but by means of a trick.
He gave out that he would hold a great meeting and that at that meeting he
would give a present to every animal and bird, to make each one different from
the rest. And all the creatures set out to go to the meeting place. But they
all arrived at different times, because Frith made sure that it would happen
so. And when the blackbird came, he gave him his beautiful song, and when the
cow came, he gave her sharp horns and the strength to be afraid of no other
creature. And so in their turn came the fox and the stoat and the weasel. And
to each of them Frith gave the cunning and the fierceness and the desire to
hunt and slay and eat the children of El-ahrairah. And so they went away from
Frith full of nothing but hunger to kill the rabbits. Now, all
this time El-ahrairah was dancing and mating and boasting that he was going to
Frith’s meeting to receive a great gift. And at least he set out for the
meeting place. But as he was going there, he stopped to rest on a soft, sandy
hillside. And while he was resting, over the hill came flying the dark swift,
screaming as he went, “News! News! News!” For you know, this is what he has
said ever since that day. So El-ahrairah called up to him and
said, “What news?”
“Why,” said
the swift, “I would not be you, El-ahrairah. For Frith has given to the fox and
the weasel cunning hearts and sharp teeth, and to the cat he has given silent
feet and eyes that can see in the dark, and they are gone away from Frith’s
place to kill and devour all that belongs to El-ahrairah.” And he dashed on
over the hills.
And at that moment El-ahrairah
heard the voice of Frith calling, “Where is El-ahrairah? For all the others
have taken their gifts and gone and I have come to look for him.”
Then
El-ahrairah knew that Frith was too clever for him and he was frightened. He
thought that the fox and the weasel were coming with Frith and he turned to the
face of the hill and began to dig. He dug a hole, but he had dug only a little
of it when Frith came over the hill alone. And he saw El-ahrairah’s bottom
sticking out of the hole and the sand flying out in showers as the digging went
on. When he saw that, he called out, “My friend, have you seen El-ahrairah, for
I am looking for him to give him my gift?”
“No,”
answered El-ahrairah, without coming out, “I have not seen him. He is far away.
He could not come.”
So Frith said, “Then come out of
that hole and I will bless you instead of him.”
“No, I cannot,” said El-ahrairah,
“I am busy. The fox and the weasel are coming. If you want to bless me you can
bless my bottom, for it is sticking out of the hole.”
Then Frith
felt himself in friendship with El-ahrairah, who would not give up even when he
thought the fox and the weasel were coming. And he said, “Very well, I will
bless your bottom as it sticks out of the hole. Bottom, be strength and warning
and speed forever and save the life of your master. Be it so!” And as he spoke,
El-ahrairah’s tail grew shining white and flashed like a star: and his back
legs grew long and powerful and he thumped the hillside until the very beetles
fell off the grass stems. He came out of the hole and tore across the hill
faster than any creature in the world. And Frith called after him,
“El-ahrairah, your people cannot rule the world, for I will not have it so. All
the world will be your enemy, Prince with a Thousand Enemies, and whenever they
catch you, they will kill you. But first they must catch you, digger, listener,
runner, prince with the swift warning. Be cunning and full of tricks and your
people shall never be destroyed.” And El-ahrairah knew then that although he
would not be mocked, yet Frith was his friend. And every evening, when Frith
has done his day’s work and lies calm and easy in the red sky, El-ahrairah and
his children and his children’s children come out of their holes and feed and
play in his sight, for they are his friends and he has promised them that they
can never be destroyed.
Excerpted from Watership Down (pp. 34-37) by Richard
Adams, printed by Rex Collings, Ltd. in 1972.
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