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Tales of Old Japan - Maybe You Like It

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"Oh!" answered the hare, "this is called the Crackling Mountain.<br />

There's always this noise here."<br />

And as the fire gathered strength, and went pop! pop! pop! the badger<br />

said again—<br />

"Oh dear! what can this noise be?"<br />

"This is called the 'Pop! Pop! Mountain,'" answered the hare.<br />

All at once the fire began to singe the badger's back, so that he fled,<br />

howling with pain, and jumped into a river hard by. But, although the<br />

water put out the fire, his back was burnt as black as a cinder. The hare,<br />

seeing an opportunity for torturing the badger to his heart's content,<br />

made a poultice <strong>of</strong> cayenne pepper, which he carried to the badger's<br />

house, and, pretending to condole with him, and to have a sovereign<br />

remedy for burns, he applied his hot plaister to his enemy's sore back.<br />

Oh! how it smarted and pained! and how the badger yelled and cried!<br />

When, at last, the badger got well again, he went to the hare's house,<br />

thinking to reproach him for having caused him so much pain. When he<br />

got there, he found that the hare had built himself a boat.<br />

"What have you built that boat for, Mr. Hare?" said the badger. "I'm<br />

going to the capital <strong>of</strong> the moon," 65 answered the hare; "won't you come<br />

with me?"<br />

"I had enough <strong>of</strong> your company on the Crackling Mountain, where<br />

you played me such tricks. I'd rather make a boat for myself," replied the<br />

badger, who immediately began building himself a boat <strong>of</strong> clay.<br />

The hare, seeing this, laughed in his sleeve; and so the two launched<br />

their boats upon the river. The waves came plashing against the two<br />

boats; but the hare's boat was built <strong>of</strong> wood, while that <strong>of</strong> the badger was<br />

made <strong>of</strong> clay, and, as they rowed down the river, the clay boat began to<br />

crumble away; then the hare, seizing his paddle, and brandishing it in<br />

the air, struck savagely at the badger's boat, until he had smashed it to<br />

pieces, and killed his enemy.<br />

When the old man heard that his wife's death had been avenged, he<br />

was glad in his heart, and more than ever petted and loved the hare,<br />

whose brave deeds had caused him to welcome the returning spring.<br />

65.The mountains in the moon are supposed to resemble a hare in shape. Hence there<br />

is a fanciful connection between the hare and the moon.<br />

149

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