THE BABOON AND THE TORTOISE
Source: Horned Animals Only: Rapid Reading series
There was a time when the baboon and the tortoise were friends,
stealing figs from the farmers tree, braving the terrors of the
farmer's gun and his fierce snarling dogs.
This exciting way of life did not appeal to the tortoise who suggested
to the baboon one day that they would plant their own fig trees, far
away from the farmer, his gun, and his fierce snarling dogs. The baboon
agreed that this was a splendid idea but being a lazy animal he
neglected his tree once he had planted it, while the tortoise watered
his every day.
It is not surprising that while the tortoise's tree was sprouting
branches and leaves, the tree belonging to the baboon seemed to be
dying. Finally it wilted, withered and was no more than a dry stick in
the ground.
When the figs appeared on the tortoise's tree, his mouth watered at the
thought of eating them, and because he could not climb the tree himself
he asked the baboon to help him. "Certainly," said the baboon, climbing
up the tree, picking the ripest figs and munching them till the juice
was running out of his mouth.
"But you are eating my figs," cried the tortoise, looking up. "Throw some down for me."
"I'm seeking the ripest ones for you," shouted back the baboon. "I'm
testing them by tasting them. You'll get your share by and by." And he
went on eating.
Finally, he came down. "I couldn't find any really ripe ones so I
didn't bring any down for you." And turning three somersaults while he
laughed and laughed, he ran off.
The tortoise was looking very sad indeed when a robin redbreast came a
hop-hop-hopping along the sand towards him, asking, "Why so sad,
tortoise?
You look as if you've lost something."
"I have. All the figs are ripe on my tree but I can't climb up to get them.
I asked baboon to help me but he clambered up and guzzled himself and
didn't even give me the skin of one fig. Be a good citizen, robin
redbreast, and help me now."
The robin winged his way up to the topmost branches and started pecking
holes in the ripe figs. "Do you like ripe figs, tortoise?"
"Yes, indeed, the riper the better."
"Well, only unripe ones are left now, Do you like unripe figs, tortoise?"
"Yes, please, I like unripe figs as well."
"Sorry, there are no unripe figs left now."
And chirping merrily, the well-fed bird fluttered away, leaving the
hungry tortoise with the corners of his mouth dropping farther down in
his sadness and hunger. Since that day, it is said, tortoises have
never lost their sad look, and nobody has ever seen a tortoise smiling
or heard him laughing.
Next day the baboon was there again, eating his fill and mocking the
tortoise who by now was hungry, miserable, and very very angry.
The day after that the shepherd came along, heard the tortoise's sad
story, and offered to help him to get his own back on the crafty
baboon. After he had plucked some figs for the tortoise he loaded his
gun and placed it high in the tree. To the trigger he tied a long
string that hung down to the ground.
In no time at all the baboon came to the tree and seeing the string
asked the tortoise what it was for. "Well," said the tortoise, pointing
to the gun in the tree, "do you see that stick up there? If I pull the
string one way, it causes the stick to bring ripe figs falling down. If
I pull it another way, it causes thunder and lightning and clouds."
"Thunder and lightning and clouds!" roared the baboon, "Ha! Ha! You
must think me as foolish as the owl who let the swallow escape." And he
pulled the string.
"Bang! Bang!" both barrels of the gun went off, and the baboon saw
lightning and thunder and clouds and in his fright ran screaming across
the sands.
Since that time, baboons have always been frightened of guns. They can't stand the sight of them.
Deep down inside, the tortoise was laughing, but his face itself looked
as sad as it will always. His revenge, he felt, was not complete, and
he wanted to punish the baboon still further.
Next time they met, the tortoise was standing next to a bees-nest, listening.
"What are you listening to?" inquired the baboon.
"To the music that's coming from this hole."
"But it's so soft, no more than a gentle humming."
"Of course it's soft. That's a church."
"It's so soft you can hardly hear it."
"Well, if you like them to hum more loudly, take this stick, shove it
through the door, move it up and down, and bang on the church with your
fist."
The baboon did so. The humming grew suddenly louder, anger came in the
sound, and the bees came swarming out of their nest, a cloud of angry
bees who attacked the baboon, stinging him all over his head and body.
Screaming with pain, he staggered down to the river, the swarm buzzing
after him. Splash! He dived into the water to escape from his pursuers,
but every time his head came out of the water so that he could breathe,
the hovering swarm was on him again, stinging, stinging, until their
anger had died and they droned back to their nest.
Back on dry land, the baboon - who now had bumps all over his face and body
- started to pull out the stings (for a bee always leaves a sting
behind) and began scratching himself all over as the pain grew. And
baboons, as you may have noticed, have been scratching themselves ever
since.
By the time he returned to the tortoise, wishing to bite him for what
he had done, the little fellow was gazing up at a mango tree. "You'll
wish you'd never been born when I've finished with you," he shouted;
but the tortoise said - calmly, though he was really trembling - "Just
a moment, my friend. I did not tell you to move that stick up and down
with such force, nor did I tell you to bang on the church so hard that
you almost punched a hole through it. You cannot really blame me for
what happened." And he went on gazing at the mango tree while the
baboon's anger calmed down and he became inquisitive.
"What are you gazing at so intently, tortoise?"
"I'm looking up at the nice juicy mangoes hanging up there, almost crying to be eaten."
Now the baboon's eyelids were all swollen from the stinging so he
couldn't see well enough to realize that what the tortoise said were
mangoes were actually the nests of wasps hanging from the branches of
the tree. His mouth watered and he forgot his pain and climbed into the
tree, grabbing at the 'mangoes'. When the wasps attacked him, the pain
was even greater than the stinging of the bees, and with cries of pain
he fell to the ground and shouted at the tortoise, "You'll suffer for
this. I'll bite off your head before I'm through with you."
"Please," said the tortoise, "again you are blaming me for something I
haven't done. I pointed out the mangoes to you, and you go and grab the
wasps' nests. No wonder they turned on you. Wouldn't you have done the
same in their position?"
Before the baboon could reply, a cricket came hopping and chirping by.
Now, as you know, baboons are fond of eating crickets, so the baboon
chased the insect who went hop-hop into the hole in a hollow tree.
"Watch me catch him," said the baboon, putting his hand into the hole and groping around to find the cricket.
A big snake came out of the hole, bit the baboon and flung his long
body around him and squeezed tight, saying while the baboon screamed
for mercy, "Why are you baboons such busybodies, always disturbing
other animals? Let me teach you a lesson that might help you to mend
your ways." And he squeezed again while the poor baboon roared with
pain. The tortoise felt that his revenge was now complete.
From that day on, bees, wasps, snakes and tortoises have all been
friends together. And the bees, who ate of the sweetness of the
tortoise's figs, have ever since then been mad about fruit and anything
that is sweet. The snake who lived in the hole in the tree never went
back there after being disturbed by the baboon, but decided to live
instead in the branches of the tree so that he could always observe his
enemies approaching. The baboon is much less of a busybody than he used
to be. And, as I said before, he never stops scratching himself.