COBWEBS FROM AN EMPTY SKULL

BY DOD GRILE

ILLUSTRATED WITH ENGRAVINGS

BY DALZIEL BROTHERS

To my friend,

 SHERBURNE B. EATON.

PREFACE.

The matter of which this volume is composed appeared originally in the columns of 'FUN,' when the wisdom of the Fables and the truth of the Tales tended to wholesomely diminish the levity of that jocund sheet. Their publication in a new form would seem to be a fitting occasion to say something as to their merit.

Homer's 'Iliad,' it will be remembered, was but imperfectly appreciated by Homer's contemporaries. Milton 's 'Paradise Lost' was so lightly regarded when first written, that the author received but twenty-five pounds for it. Ben Jonson was for some time blind to the beauties of Shakespeare, and Shakespeare himself had but small esteem for his own work.

Appearing each week in 'FUN,' these Fables and Tales very soon attracted the notice of the Editor, who was frank enough to say, afterward, that when he accepted the manuscript he did not quite perceive the quality of it. The printers, too, into whose hands it came, have since admitted that for some days they felt very little interest in it, and could not even make out what it was all about. When to these evidences I add the confession that at first I did not myself observe anything extraordinary in my work, I think I need say no more: the discerning public will note the parallel, and my modesty be spared the necessity of making an ass of itself.

D.G.

FABLES OF ZAMBRI, THE PARSEE.

I.

A certain Persian nobleman obtained from a cow gipsy a small oyster. Holding him up by the beard, he addressed him thus:

'You must try to forgive me for what I am about to do; and you might as well set about it at once, for you haven't much time. I should never think of swallowing you if it were not so easy; but opportunity is the strongest of all temptations. Besides, I am an orphan, and very hungry.'

'Very well,' replied the oyster; 'it affords me genuine pleasure to comfort the parentless and the starving. I have already done my best for our friend here, of whom you purchased me; but although she has an amiable and accommodating stomach, we couldn't agree. For this trifling incompatibility-would you believe it?-she was about to stew me! Saviour, benefactor, proceed.'

'I think,' said the nobleman, rising and laying down the oyster, 'I ought to know something more definite about your antecedents before succouring you. If you couldn't agree with your mistress, you are probably no better than you should be.'

People who begin doing something from a selfish motive frequently drop it when they learn that it is a real benevolence.

II.

A rat seeing a cat approaching, and finding no avenue of escape, went boldly up to her, and said:

'Madam, I have just swallowed a dose of powerful bane, and in accordance with instructions upon the label, have come out of my hole to die. Will you kindly direct me to a spot where my corpse will prove peculiarly offensive?'

'Since you are so ill,' replied the cat, 'I will myself transport you to a spot which I think will suit.'

So saying, she struck her teeth through the nape of his neck and trotted away with him. This was more than he had bargained for, and he squeaked shrilly with the pain.

'Ah!' said the cat, 'a rat who knows he has but a few minutes to live, never makes a fuss about a little agony. I don't think, my fine fellow, you have taken poison enough to hurt either you or me.'

So she made a meal of him.

If this fable does not teach that a rat gets no profit by lying, I should be pleased to know what it does teach.

III.

A frog who had been sitting up all night in neighbourly converse with an echo of elegant leisure, went out in the grey of the morning to obtain a cheap breakfast. Seeing a tadpole approach,

'Halt!' he croaked, 'and show cause why I should not eat you.'

The tadpole stopped and displayed a fine tail.

'Enough,' said the frog: 'I mistook you for one of us; and if there is anything I like, it is frog. But no frog has a tail, as a matter of course.'

While he was speaking, however, the tail ripened and dropped off, and its owner stood revealed in his edible character.

'Aha!' ejaculated the frog, 'so that is your little game! If, instead of adopting a disguise, you had trusted to my mercy, I should have spared you. But I am down upon all manner of deceit.'

And he had him down in a moment.

Learn from this that he would have eaten him anyhow.

IV.

An old man carrying, for no obvious reason, a sheaf of sticks, met another donkey whose cargo consisted merely of a bundle of stones.

'Suppose we swop,' said the donkey.

'Very good, sir,' assented the old man; 'lay your load upon my shoulders, and take off my parcel, putting it upon your own back.'

The donkey complied, so far as concerned his own encumbrance, but neglected to remove that of the other.

'How clever!' said the merry old gentleman, 'I knew you would do that. If you had done any differently there would have been no point to the fable.'

And laying down both burdens by the roadside, he trudged away as merry as anything.

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