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<h2> The Bones of Djulung </h2>
<p>In a beautiful island that lies in the southern seas, where chains of gay
orchids bind the trees together, and the days and nights are equally long
and nearly equally hot, there once lived a family of seven sisters. Their
father and mother were dead, and they had no brothers, so the eldest girl
ruled over the rest, and they all did as she bade them. One sister had to
clean the house, a second carried water from the spring in the forest, a
third cooked their food, while to the youngest fell the hardest task of
all, for she had to cut and bring home the wood which was to keep the fire
continually burning. This was very hot and tiring work, and when she had
fed the fire and heaped up in a corner the sticks that were to supply it
till the next day, she often threw herself down under a tree, and went
sound asleep.</p>
<p>One morning, however, as she was staggering along with her bundle on her
back, she thought that the river which flowed past their hut looked so
cool and inviting that she determined to bathe in it, instead of taking
her usual nap. Hastily piling up her load by the fire, and thrusting some
sticks into the flame, she ran down to the river and jumped in. How
delicious it was diving and swimming and floating in the dark forest,
where the trees were so thick that you could hardly see the sun! But after
a while she began to look about her, and her eyes fell on a little fish
that seemed made out of a rainbow, so brilliant were the colours he
flashed out.</p>
<p>'I should like him for a pet,' thought the girl, and the next time the
fish swam by, she put out her hand and caught him. Then she ran along the
grassy path till she came to a cave in front of which a stream fell over
some rocks into a basin. Here she put her little fish, whose name was
Djulung-djulung, and promising to return soon and bring him some dinner,
she went away.</p>
<p>By the time she got home, the rice for their dinner was ready cooked, and
the eldest sister gave the other six their portions in wooden bowls. But
the youngest did not finish hers, and when no one was looking, stole off
to the fountain in the forest where the little fish was swimming about.</p>
<p>'See! I have not forgotten you,' she cried, and one by one she let the
grains of rice fall into the water, where the fish gobbled them up
greedily, for he had never tasted anything so nice.</p>
<p>'That is all for to-day,' she said at last, 'but I will come again
to-morrow,' and biding him good-bye she went down the path.</p>
<p>Now the girl did not tell her sisters about the fish, but every day she
saved half of her rice to give him, and called him softly in a little song
she had made for herself. If she sometimes felt hungry, no one knew of it,
and, indeed, she did not mind that much, when she saw how the fish enjoyed
it. And the fish grew fat and big, but the girl grew thin and weak, and
the loads of wood felt heavier every day, and at last her sisters noticed
it.</p>
<p>Then they took counsel together, and watched her to see what she did, and
one of them followed her to the fountain where Djulung lived, and saw her
give him all the rice she had saved from her breakfast. Hastening home the
sister told the others what she had witnessed, and that a lovely fat fish
might be had for the catching. So the eldest sister went and caught him,
and he was boiled for supper, but the youngest sister was away in the
woods, and did not know anything about it.</p>
<p>Next morning she went as usual to the cave, and sang her little song, but
no Djulung came to answer it; twice and thrice she sang, then threw
herself on her knees by the edge, and peered into the dark water, but the
trees cast such a deep shadow that her eyes could not pierce it.</p>
<p>'Djulung cannot be dead, or his body would be floating on the surface,'
she said to herself, and rising to her feet she set out homewards, feeling
all of a sudden strangely tired.</p>
<p>'What is the matter with me?' she thought, but somehow or other she
managed to reach the hut, and threw herself down in a corner, where she
slept so soundly that for days no one was able to wake her.</p>
<p>At length, one morning early, a cock began to crow so loud that she could
sleep no longer and as he continued to crow she seemed to understand what
he was saying, and that he was telling her that Djulung was dead, killed
and eaten by her sisters, and that his bones lay buried under the kitchen
fire. Very softly she got up, and took up the large stone under the fire,
and creeping out carried the bones to the cave by the fountain, where she
dug a hole and buried them anew. And as she scooped out the hole with a
stick she sang a song, bidding the bones grow till they became a tree—a
tree that reached up so high into the heavens that its leaves would fall
across the sea into another island, whose king would pick them up.</p>
<p>As there was no Djulung to give her rice to, the girl soon became fat
again, and as she was able to do her work as of old, her sisters did not
trouble about her. They never guessed that when she went into the forest
to gather her sticks, she never failed to pay a visit to the tree, which
grew taller and more wonderful day by day. Never was such a tree seen
before. Its trunk was of iron, its leaves were of silk, its flowers of
gold, and its fruit of diamonds, and one evening, though the girl did not
know it, a soft breeze took one of the leaves, and blew it across the sea
to the feet of one of the king's attendants.</p>
<p>'What a curious leaf! I have never beheld one like it before. I must show
it to the king,' he said, and when the king saw it he declared he would
never rest until he had found the tree which bore it, even if he had to
spend the rest of his life in visiting the islands that lay all round.
Happily for him, he began with the island that was nearest, and here in
the forest he suddenly saw standing before him the iron tree, its boughs
covered with shining leaves like the one he carried about him.</p>
<p>'But what sort of a tree is it, and how did it get here?' he asked of the
attendants he had with him. No one could answer him, but as they were
about to pass out of the forest a little boy went by, and the king stopped
and inquired if there was anyone living in the neighbourhood whom he might
question.</p>
<p>'Seven girls live in a hut down there,' replied the boy, pointing with his
finger to where the sun was setting.</p>
<p>'Then go and bring them here, and I will wait,' said the king, and the boy
ran off and told the sisters that a great chief, with strings of jewels
round his neck, had sent for them.</p>
<p>Pleased and excited the six elder sisters at once followed the boy, but
the youngest, who was busy, and who did not care about strangers, stayed
behind, to finish the work she was doing. The king welcomed the girls
eagerly, and asked them all manner of questions about the tree, but as
they had never even heard of its existence, they could tell him nothing.
'And if we, who live close by the forest, do not know, you may be sure no
one does,' added the eldest, who was rather cross at finding this was all
that the king wanted of them.</p>
<p>'But the boy told me there were seven of you, and there are only six
here,' said the king.</p>
<p>'Oh, the youngest is at home, but she is always half asleep, and is of no
use except to cut wood for the fire,' replied they in a breath.</p>
<p>'That may be, but perhaps she dreams,' answered the king. 'Anyway, I will
speak to her also.' Then he signed to one of his attendants, who followed
the path that the boy had taken to the hut.</p>
<p>Soon the man returned, with the girl walking behind him. And as soon as
she reached the tree it bowed itself to the earth before her, and she
stretched out her hand and picked some of its leaves and flowers and gave
them to the king.</p>
<p>'The maiden who can work such wonders is fitted to be the wife of the
greatest chief,' he said, and so he married her, and took her with him
across the sea to his own home, where they lived happily for ever after.</p>
<p>From 'Folk Lore,' by A. F. Mackenzie.</p>
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