How Bear Lost His Tail
Back in the old days, Bear had a tail
which was his proudest possession. It was long and black
and glossy and Bear used to wave it around just so that people would look at it.
Fox saw this.
Fox, as everyone knows, is a trickster and likes nothing better than fooling
others. So it was that
he decided to play a trick on Bear.
It was the time of year when Hatho, the Spirit of Frost, had swept across the
land, covering the
lakes with ice and pounding on the trees with his big hammer. Fox made a hole in
the ice, right
near a place where Bear liked to walk. By the time Bear came by, all around Fox,
in a big circle,
were big trout and fat perch. Just as Bear was about to ask Fox what he was
doing, Fox twitched
his tail which he had sticking through that hole in the ice and pulled out a
huge trout.
"Greetings, Brother," said Fox. "How are you this fine
day?"
"Greetings," answered Bear, looking at the big circle of fat fish.
" I am well, Brother. But what
are you doing?"
"I am fishing," answered Fox. "Would you like to try?"
"Oh, yes," said Bear, as he started to lumber over to Fox's fishing
hole.
But Fox stopped him. "Wait, Brother," he said, "This place will
not be good. As you can see, I
have already caught all the fish. Let us make you a new fishing spot where you
can catch many
big trout."
Bear agreed and so he followed Fox to the new place, a place where, as Fox knew
very well,
the lake was too shallow to catch the winter fish--which always stay in the
deepest water when
Hatho has covered their ponds. Bear watched as Fox made the hole in the ice,
already tasting the
fine fish he would soon catch. "Now," Fox said, "you must do just
as I tell you. Clear your mind
of all thoughts of fish. Do not even think of a song or the fish will hear you.
Turn your back to the
hole and place your tail inside it. Soon a fish will come and grab your tail and
you can pull him
out."
"But how will I know if a fish has grabbed my tail if my back is
turned?" asked Bear.
"I will hide over here where the fish cannot see me," said Fox.
"When a fish grabs your tail, I
will shout. Then you must pull as hard as you can to catch your fish. But you
must be very
patient. Do not move at all until I tell you."
Bear nodded, "I will do exactly as you say." He sat down next to the
hole, placed his long
beautiful black tail in the icy water and turned his back.
Fox watched for a time to make sure that Bear was doing as he was told and then,
very quietly,
sneaked back to his own house and went to bed. The next morning he woke up and
thought of
Bear. "I wonder if he is still there," Fox said to himself. "I'll
just go and check."
So Fox went back to the ice covered pond and what do you think he saw? He saw
what looked
like a little white hill in the middle of the ice. It had snowed during the
night and covered Bear,
who had fallen asleep while waiting for Fox to tell him to pull his tail and
catch a fish. And Bear
was snoring. His snores were so loud that the ice was shaking. It was so funny
that Fox rolled
with laughter. But when he was through laughing, he decided the time had come to
wake up poor
Bear. He crept very close to Bear's ear, took a deep breath, and then shouted:
"Now, Bear!!!"
Bear woke up with a start and pulled his long tail hard as he could. But his
tail had been caught
in the ice which had frozen over during the night and as he pulled, it broke off
-- Whack! -- just
like that. Bear turned around to look at the fish he had caught and instead saw
his long lovely tail
caught in the ice.
"Ohhh," he moaned, "ohhh, Fox. I will get you for this." But
Fox, even though he was laughing fit
to kill was still faster than Bear and he leaped aside and was gone.
So it is that even to this day Bears have short tails and no love at all for
Fox. And if you ever hear a
bear moaning, it is probably because he remembers the trick Fox played on him
long ago and he is
mourning for his lost tail.
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