<h2><SPAN name="st4" class="c011">THE BLIND DOE</SPAN></h2>
<p>Once upon a time there was a deer—a doe—who
gave birth to two little deers; and, as is
very rare with such animals, the little deers
were twins. However, a wildcat ate one of
them; and the second, a female, had to live
her childhood without a playmate.</p>
<p>She was such a beautiful little creature,
nevertheless, that all the mother deers in the
forest wished she belonged to them; and to
show their affection they were always nipping
gently at her ribs with their lips.</p>
<p>Every morning when the little deer got up
out of bed, her mother would make her say
the catechism which all deers learn when they
are babies:</p>
<p>I. I must smell of each green leaf before I
eat it; because some green leaves are
poisonous.</p>
<p>II. I must stop and look carefully up and
down the brook before I lower my head to
drink; for otherwise an alligator may eat
me.</p>
<p>III. I must lift my head every half hour and
sniff carefully in all directions; otherwise a
panther may steal up and catch me.</p>
<p>IV. I must look ahead of me when I am
grazing in a meadow; otherwise a snake may
bite me.</p>
<p>All good fawns learn this catechism by
heart; and when this little deer could say it
all by herself, her mother began to let her go
away from home alone.</p>
<p>One afternoon in summer, when the fawn
was wandering over the mountain side looking
for the tenderest tufts of grass, she saw a
tree with a hollow trunk in front of her. Inside
it a number of small slate-colored bags were
hanging.</p>
<p>“What in the world is that?” said the little
deer to herself. She had never seen anything
of just that kind! Now deers, like people,
are inclined to be a bit disrespectful towards
things they don’t understand. Those puffy
slate-colored bags seemed to her about the
most ridiculous things there was on earth!
So she butted them with all her might.</p>
<p>She now saw that she had made a great
dent in the bags, which began to drip with
drops of shining fluid. At the same time a
swarm of reddish flies, with narrow waists,
came out, buzzing around and walking about,
over their broken nest.</p>
<p>The little deer edged nearer. Curiously,
those red flies did not seem to mind at all! And
what about that juicy-looking stuff? Carefully,
gently, the fawn stretched out her head
till she was able to touch one of the drops
of fluid with the tip of her tongue.</p>
<p>What a surprise, what a wonderful surprise,
for such a little, and such an inexperienced
deer! She smacked her lips and licked her
nose with her tongue, hurrying to lap up
all the drops she could find. For they
were honey, honey of the sweetest kind.
And the red flies were bees! They did not
sting because they had no stingers! There
are bees like that, you know, in South
America.</p>
<p>Not content with the few drops that were
slowly oozing out of the cracks in the bags,
the little deer now broke all the nests down
and ate every bit of the honey in them; then,
leaping and jumping with pride and delight,
she hurried home to tell her mother all about
it.</p>
<p>But the mother deer frowned severely:</p>
<p>“Look out for bees’ nests, my child!” she
exclaimed earnestly. “Honey is very good
to eat; but it is dangerous to get at it. Keep
away from all the nests you see!”</p>
<p>“But bees don’t sting, mamma!” the little
deer objected gleefully. “Hornets sting, and
wasps sting; but bees, no!”</p>
<p>“That isn’t so, my dear!” the mother
answered. “You had good luck, that’s all.
Bees are quite as bad as wasps. Now mind
me, child, or some day you’ll be sorry.”</p>
<p>“All right, mamma, I’ll be careful,” said the
little deer.</p>
<p>But the first thing she did the very next
morning was to take one of the paths that
people had made over the mountains. She
had figured out that, running along in the
open, she could cover more ground and see
the bees’ nests better!</p>
<p>And at last the search of the little deer was
successful. She came upon a nest of bees—as
she thought—black ones this time, with
yellow sashes about their belts; and many of
them were walking over the outside of the
nest. The nest, also, was of a different color,
and much larger than the bags the little deer
had found the day before. But such things
made no difference to her. “If the nest is
larger,” she concluded simply, “the honey
is probably sweeter and there’s more of
it!”</p>
<p>But then she suddenly remembered all that
her mother had said. “Oh, mother is too
afraid! All mothers are too afraid!” And
she finished by giving a lusty butt at the
nest.</p>
<p>In a second or two she had bitterly repented
of her folly. The “bees” were ordinary bees
and there were thousands of them. They
rushed forth from the nest in a great swarm,
settled all over the head, neck, and shoulders
of the little deer, and even under her belly
and on her tail. And they stung her all over,
but worst of all about the eyes. There were
more than ten stings to each eye!</p>
<p>The little deer, wild with pain and fright,
began to run screaming away. She ran and
ran. But finally she had to stop, because
she could no longer see where she was going.
Her eyes were all swollen; so swollen she
could not open them. Trembling with
fear and smarting with pain, she stopped
where she was and began to cry piteously:</p>
<p>“Mamma!... Mamma!”</p>
<p>The mother deer was much worried when
the afternoon wore on and her child did not
come home; and at last she started out to
look for her, following by smell, as deers can,
the tracks of her little one over the hillsides.
What was her despair when, finally, she heard
the disobedient fawn weeping in the distance;
and how much blacker her despair became
when she found that the child was blind!</p>
<p>Slowly the two deers started home again,
the fawn’s nose resting on her mother’s hip.
And along the road all the old bucks and does
came up to examine the little one’s eyes and
give their opinions as to a cure. The mother
deer did not know what to do. She had no
plasters nor poultices to soothe the pain in
her child’s eyes. She learned ultimately that
across the mountains lived a man who was
skillful with remedies. This man was a
hunter, and traded in venison. But, from
all reports, she concluded that he was quite a
kind-hearted person.</p>
<p>Though the doe shivered at the thought of
visiting a man who made his living on the
slaughter of deer, she was willing to risk anything
for her offspring. However, she had
never met the man personally, and she thought
it best to ask for a letter of introduction from
the Anteater, who was supposed to be on
very good terms with all the human kind.</p>
<p>It was night; and the panthers and wildcats
were rampant through all the forest; but
the mother deer did not wait an instant.
She covered her little one carefully with
branches so that no one could find her, and
then made off toward the Anteater’s house.
She went so fast and so far that she was faint
with fatigue when she arrived there; and
once, on the road, she escaped only by
merest chance from the fangs of a mountain
lion.</p>
<p>The Anteater was one of the smaller members
of his tribe—a yellow little fellow with a
black cape thrown over his shoulders and
reaching down to the waist, where it was tied
under his belly with black strings.</p>
<p>Just how or why the Anteater became so
friendly with the hunter, no one in the forest
knew; but some day the truth will be known,
doubtless.</p>
<p>At any rate, the poor doe arrived at the
house where the Anteater lived.</p>
<p>“Tan! Tan! Tan!” she knocked, panting.</p>
<p>“Who’s that?” answered the Anteater
sleepily.</p>
<p>“It’s me!” said the doe; though she corrected
herself almost immediately, and
said: “It is I—a deer, the mother of the
twins!”</p>
<p>“I see,” said the Anteater. “So it’s
you! Well, what do you want?”</p>
<p>“I want you to introduce me to the hunter.
The fawn, my daughter, is blind!”</p>
<p>“You don’t say so? That little fawn that
everybody makes so much of? She’s a dear
little thing! I don’t have to be asked twice
to do a favor when that child is concerned!
I’ll introduce you gladly. But you won’t
need a letter. Just show the man this, and
he’ll do all you ask.”</p>
<p>The Anteater rummaged around in the
leaves for a while and at last stretched his
tail out. On the tip of it was the head of a
snake, completely dried, and with the poison
fangs still in it.</p>
<p>“Thanks ever so much,” exclaimed the
doe. “But that man is a venison hunter!
Do you think this is all I need?”</p>
<p>“Quite!” the Anteater averred.</p>
<p>“You are a very kind-hearted Anteater,”
the doe replied, her eyes filling with tears. But
she did not prolong the conversation. It
was getting to be very late, and she had to be
at the hunter’s lodge by daybreak.</p>
<p>She hurried back to her house and got the
fawn, who still lay there weeping in her bed.
Together they made their way toward the
village where the hunter lived. They stole
along very softly, keeping close to the walls of
the houses, so that the dogs would not see nor
hear them.</p>
<p>At the door of the hunter’s cottage the
mother knocked loudly:</p>
<p>“Tan! Tan! Tan!”</p>
<p>And the little deer knocked as loudly as she
could.</p>
<p>“Ta! Ta! Ta!”</p>
<p>“Who’s there?” a voice called from within.</p>
<p>“It’s us,” said the fawn.</p>
<p>“It’s we,” corrected the mother. “We
are friends of the Anteater, and we have the
snake’s head!”</p>
<p>“I see,” said the hunter opening the door.
“What can I do for you?”</p>
<p>“My daughter, this little fawn here, is
blind. Can you help her?”</p>
<p>And the mother deer told the whole story
about her child and the bees.</p>
<p>“Hum!” said the man. “Just let me see
what ails this nice young lady!”</p>
<p>Reentering the cottage, the hunter soon
came back with a rather high stool, on which
he set the fawn in such a manner that he
could examine her eyes without bending over.
Then he took out a big lens and began to
look at the stings, while the mother deer
stood by, holding a lantern around her neck
so that the “doctor” could see better. For
the sun had not yet risen.</p>
<p>“Oh, there’s nothing to worry about,” the
hunter said to the fond parent, helping her
little one out of the chair. “It’s only a
matter of time and care. Wrap her head up,
and keep a bandage with this ointment across
her eyes. Then keep her in the dark for
twenty days. After that, have her wear these
yellow glasses for a week or two; and by that
time she will be all right.”</p>
<p>“Thanks, many, many thanks,” said the
mother deer warmly and gratefully. “And
now, sir, how much do I owe you?”</p>
<p>“Nothing at all, nothing at all, madam,”
the hunter replied with a smile. “But one
thing more: look out for the dogs in the
next house. A man lives there who keeps
hounds especially for chasing deer.”</p>
<p>At this news the mother deer and her child
were so scared they hardly dared breathe;
and as they went away they walked on tiptoe,
and stopped every few feet. Even at that the
dogs heard them and gave chase for nearly a
mile into the forest. But the mother deer
found a narrow path, opening into the bush
where the blind fawn could run quite safely;
and they made good their escape.</p>
<p>The little deer got well, just as the hunter
had said she would; though the care and
trouble it cost the mother to keep her fawn
shut up for twenty long days inside a hollow
tree, she only knew. Inside there you could
not have seen your hand before your face!
But at last, one morning, the mother deer
brushed aside the branches she had woven
across the hole in the tree so tightly as to
keep out all light; and the fawn, now with the
yellow glasses on her nose, came out into the
broad day.</p>
<p>“Oh, I can see now, mamma, I can see all
right!”</p>
<p>And the mother deer, to tell the truth, had
to go and hide her head in a clump of bushes
to conceal the tears of joy that came to
her eyes when she saw her little one cured
at last. In two weeks, the glasses were laid
aside.</p>
<p>As time wore on, the fawn, though happy
to be quite herself again, began to grow sad.
She was anxious to repay the hunter for his
kindness to her; and she could think of no
possible way of doing it.</p>
<p>One day, however, an idea occurred to her.
As she was trotting along the shore of a pond
she came upon a feather which a blue heron
had let fall there. “I wonder if that good
man would like it?” she thought. And she
picked it up.</p>
<p>Then, one night when it was raining hard
and the dogs would probably be under cover,
she started out for the hunter’s cottage.</p>
<p>The man was reading in his bedroom,
feeling quite cozy besides, for he had just
completed a thatched roof for his cabin when
the rain began. Now he was quite safe and
dry out of reach of the storm.</p>
<p>“Tan! Tan! Tan!”</p>
<p>When he opened the door, the little deer,
whom he had treated and of whom he had
often thought since then, was standing there
in the rain, with the heron’s plume, all wet
and drooping, in her mouth.</p>
<p>“Here is something I have brought for
you,” the fawn explained.</p>
<p>But the hunter began to laugh.</p>
<p>The little deer went off home in great shame
and sorrow. She thought the man had
laughed in ridicule of her poor gift! So
thereafter she went looking for a better, bigger
feather to give her benefactor; and this time
she found some plumes that were truly
splendid ones; and she was careful to keep
them clean and dry.</p>
<p>Again she went back, one night, to the
hunter’s cabin; and this time he did not
laugh. He was a courteous, polite man;
and he understood that, the other time, he
had hurt his little friend’s feelings by laughing
at her. Instead, he now invited her indoors,
drew the high chair up to the table and gave
her a saucerful of honey. Gobble, gobble!
The little deer lapped the sweet up in mad
delight.</p>
<p>From that time on, the two became great
friends. The fawn spent a great deal of her
time collecting heron plumes, which the man
sold for a large sum of money. And every
time she came in with a feather, the hunter
gave her a jar of honey; and occasionally he
offered her a cigar, which the little deer ate,
but, of course, did not smoke. Smoking is
bad even for deers.</p>
<p>Whole nights the two friends thus spent
together, talking in front of the open fire,
while the wind was howling outside; for the
deer made her visits only in stormy weather
when dogs would be sure not to be about. In
a short time whenever the skies were dark and
gave promise of a bad night, the hunter began
to expect these visits. He would light a
lamp, set a jar of honey on the table, take out
a book and begin to read, waiting for the
“Tan! Tan! Tan!” of the little deer, who
remained his loyal friend all her life.</p>
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