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    Ch. 25 - The Swine - Page 2

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    "brah, brah!" The raven and the crow
    sat on the topmost bough: they have a large family, and they all said:
    "brah, brah! caw, caw!" and the majority is always right.

    There was a great miry pool under the tall trees in the hollow, and
    here lay the whole herd of swine, great and small--they found the
    place so excellent. "Oui! oui!" said they, for they knew no more
    French, but that, however, was something. They were so wise, and so
    fat, and altogether lords in the forest.

    The old ones lay still, for they thought; the young ones, on the
    contrary, were so brisk--busy, but apparently uneasy. One little pig
    had a curly tail--that curl was the mother's delight. She thought that
    they all looked at the curl, and thought only of the curl; but that
    they did not. They thought of themselves, and of what was useful, and
    of what the forest was for. They had always heard that the acorns they
    ate grew on the roots of the trees, and therefore they had always
    rooted there; but now there came a little one--for it is always the
    young ones that come with news--and he asserted that the acorns fell
    down from the branches: he himself had felt one fall right on his
    head, and that had given him the idea, so he had made observations,
    and now he was quite sure of what he asserted. The old ones laid their
    heads together. "Uff," said the swine, "uff! the finery is past! the
    twittering of the birds is past! we will have fruit! whatever can be
    eaten is good, and we eat everything!"

    "Oui! oui!" said they altogether.

    But the mother sow looked at her little pig with the curly tail.

    "One must not, however, forget the beautiful!" said she.

    "Caw! caw!" screamed the crow, and flew down, in order to be appointed
    nightingale: one there should be--and so the crow was directly
    appointed.

    "Past! past!" sighed the Rose King, "all the beautiful is past!"

    It was wet; it was gloomy; there was cold and wind, and the rain
    pelted down over the fields, and through the forest, like long water
    jets. Where are the birds that sang? where are the flowers in the
    meadows, and the sweet berries in the wood?--past! past!

    A light shone from the forester's house: it twinkled like a star, and
    shed its long rays out between the trees. A song was heard from
    within; pretty children played around their old grandfather, who sat
    with the Bible on his lap and read about God, and eternal life, and
    spoke of the spring that would come again: he spoke of the forest that
    would renew its green leaves, of the roses that would flower, of the
    nightingales that would sing, and of the beautiful that would again be
    paramount.

    But the
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