<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87">87</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="dcp-chap13">
<p style='padding-top: 320px;'> </p>
<h2 style='padding-right: 220px;'>A PUZZLED CICADA</h2>
<p style='padding-right: 220px;'>Seventeen years is a long,
long time to be getting ready
to fly; yet that is what the
Seventeen-year Locusts, or
Cicadas, have to expect.
First, they lie for a long
time in eggs, down in
the earth. Then, when
they awaken, and crawl
out of their shells, they
must grow strong
enough to dig before
they can make their
way out to where the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88">88</SPAN></span>
beautiful green grass is growing and waving
in the wind.</p>
<p style='padding-right: 220px;'>The Cicada who got so very much puzzled
had not been long out of his home in
the warm, brown earth. He was the only
Cicada anywhere around, and it was very
lonely for him. However, he did not
mind that so much when he was eating,
or singing, or resting in the sunshine, and
as he was either eating, or singing, or resting
in the sunshine most of the time, he
got along fairly well.</p>
<p style='padding-right: 220px;'>Because he was young and healthy he
grew fast. He grew so very fast that
after a while he began to feel heavy and
stiff, and more like sitting still than like
crawling around. Beside all this, his skin
got tight, and you can imagine how uncomfortable
it must be to have one's skin
too tight. He was sitting on the branch
of a bush one day, thinking about the
wonderful great world, when—pop!—his
skin had cracked open right down the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89">89</SPAN></span>
middle of his back! The poor Cicada
was badly frightened at first, but then it
seemed so good and roomy that he took a
deep breath, and—pop!—the crack was
longer still!</p>
<p>The Cicada found that he had another
whole skin under the outside one which
had cracked, so he thought, "How much
cooler and more comfortable I shall be if
I crawl out of this broken covering," and
out he crawled.</p>
<p>It wasn't very easy work, because he
didn't have anybody to help him. He
had to hook the claws of his outer skin
into the bark of the branch, hook them
in so hard that they couldn't pull out,
and then he began to wriggle out of the
back of his own skin. It was exceedingly
hard work, and the hardest of all was the
pulling his legs out of their cases. He
was so tired when he got free that he
could hardly think, and his new skin was
so soft and tender that he felt limp and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">90</SPAN></span>
queer. He found that he had wings of a
pretty green, the same color as his legs.
He knew these wings must have been growing
under his old skin, and he stretched
them slowly out to see how big they were.
This was in the morning, and after he had
stretched his wings he went to sleep for a
long time.</p>
<p>When he awakened, the sun was in the
western sky, and he tried to think who he
was. He looked at himself, and instead
of being green he was a dull brown and
black. Then he saw his old skin clinging
to the branch and staring him in the face.
It was just the same shape as when he was
in it, and he thought for a minute that he
was dreaming. He rubbed his head hard
with his front legs to make sure he was
awake, and then he began to wonder which
one he was. Sometimes he thought that
the old skin which clung to the bush was
the Cicada that had lain so long in the
ground, and sometimes he thought that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91">91</SPAN></span>
the soft, fat, new-looking one was the
Cicada. Or were both of them the Cicada?
If he were only one of the two,
what would he do with the other?</p>
<p>While he was wondering about this in
a sleepy way, an old Cicada from across
the river flew down beside him. He
thought he would ask her, so he waved
his feelers as politely as he knew how, and
said, "Excuse me, Madam Cicada, for I
am much puzzled. It took me seventeen
years to grow into a strong, crawling Cicada,
and then in one day I separated.
The thinking, moving part of me is here,
but the outside shell of me is there on
that branch. Now, which part is the real
Cicada?"</p>
<p>"Why, that is easy enough," said the
Madam Cicada; "You are <i>you</i>, of course.
The part that you cast off and left clinging
to the branch was very useful once.
It kept you warm on cold days and cool
on warm days, and you needed it while<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92">92</SPAN></span>
you were only a crawling creature. But
when your wings were ready to carry you
off to a higher and happier life, then the
skin that had been a help was in your way,
and you did right to wriggle out of it. It
is no longer useful to you. Leave it
where it is and fly off to enjoy your new
life. You will never have trouble if you
remember that the thinking part is the
real <i>you</i>."</p>
<p>And then Madam Cicada and her new
friend flew away to her home over the
river, and he saw many strange sights before
he returned to the meadow.</p>
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