<h2><SPAN name="st6" class="c011">HOW THE FLAMINGOES GOT THEIR STOCKINGS</SPAN></h2>
<p>Once the snakes decided that they would
give a costume ball; and to make the affair
a truly brilliant one they sent invitations
to the frogs, the toads, the alligators and the
fish.</p>
<p>The fish replied that since they had no
legs they would not be able to do much dancing;
whereupon, as a special courtesy to them,
the ball was held on the shore of the Parana.
The fish swam up to the very beach and sat
looking on with their heads out of water.
When anything pleased them they splashed
with their tails.</p>
<p>To make as good an appearance as possible,
the alligators put necklaces of bananas around
their throats; and they came to the ball
smoking big Paraguay cigars. The toads
stuck fish scales all over their bodies; and
when they walked, they moved their forelegs
out and in as though they were swimming.
They strutted up and down the beach with
very glum, determined faces; and the fish kept
calling to them, making fun of their scales.
The frogs were satisfied to leave their smooth
green skins just as they were; but they bathed
themselves in perfume and walked on their
hind legs. Besides, each one carried a lightning
bug, which waved to and fro like a lantern,
at the end of a string in the frog’s hand.</p>
<p>But the best costumes of all were worn by
the snakes. All of them, without exception,
had dancing gowns of the color of their skins.
There were red snakes, and brown snakes, and
pink snakes, and yellow snakes—each with a
garment of tulle to match. The <i>yarara</i>, who
is a kind of rattler, came in a single-piece
robe of gray tulle with brick-colored stripes—for
that is the way the <i>yarara</i> dresses even
when he is not going to a ball. The coral
snakes were prettier still. They draped themselves
in a gauze of reds, whites and blacks;
and when they danced, they wound
themselves round and round like corkscrews, rising
on the tips of their tails, coiling and uncoiling,
balancing this way and that. They were the
most graceful and beautiful of all the snakes,
and the guests applauded them wildly.</p>
<p>The flamingoes were the only ones who
seemed not to be having a good time. Stupid
birds that they were, they had not thought
of any costumes at all. They came with the
plain white legs they had at that time and the
thick, twisted bills they have even now.
Naturally they were envious of all the gowns
they saw, but most of all, of the fancy dress of
the coral snakes. Every time one of these
went by them, courtesying, pirouetting, balancing,
the flamingoes writhed with jealousy.
For no one, meanwhile, was asking them to
dance.</p>
<p>“I know what we must do,” said one of the
flamingoes at last. “We must go and get
some stockings for our legs—pink, black and
white like the coral snakes themselves—then
they will all fall in love with us!”</p>
<p>The whole flock of them took wing immediately
and flew across the river to a village
nearby. They went to the store and knocked:</p>
<p>“Tan! Tan! Tan!”</p>
<p>“Who is it?” called the storekeeper.</p>
<p>“We’re the flamingoes. We have come to
get some stockings—pink, black, and white.”</p>
<p>“Are you crazy?” the storekeeper answered.
“I keep stockings for people, not for silly
birds. Besides, stockings of such colors! You
won’t find any in town, either!”</p>
<p>The flamingoes went on to another store:</p>
<p>“Tan! Tan! Tan! We are looking for stockings—pink,
black and white. Have you any?”</p>
<p>“Pink, black and white stockings! Don’t
you know decent people don’t wear such
things? You must be crazy! Who are you,
anyway?”</p>
<p>“We are the flamingoes,” the flamingoes
replied.</p>
<p>“In that case you are silly flamingoes!
Better go somewhere else!”</p>
<p>They went to still a third store:</p>
<p>“Tan! Tan! Pink, black and white stockings!
Got any?”</p>
<p>“Pink, black and white nonsense!” called
the storekeeper. “Only birds with big noses
like yours could ask for such a thing. Don’t
make tracks on my floor!”</p>
<p>And the man swept them into the street
with a broom.</p>
<p>So the flamingoes went from store to store,
and everywhere people called them silly, stupid
birds.</p>
<p>However, an owl, a mischievous <i>tatu</i>, who
had just been down to the river to get some
water, and had heard all about the ball and
the flamingoes, met them on his way back and
thought he would have some fun with them.</p>
<p>“Good evening, good evening, flamingoes,”
he said, making a deep bow, though, of course,
it was just to ridicule the foolish birds. “I
know what you are looking for. I doubt if
you can get any such stockings in town. You
might find them in Buenos Aires; but you
would have to order them by mail. My
sister-in-law, the barn owl, has stockings like
that, however. Why don’t you go around and
see her? She can give you her own and
borrow others from her family.”</p>
<p>“Thanks! Thanks, ever so much!” said
the flamingoes; and they flew off to the cellar
of a barn where the barn owl lived.</p>
<p>“Tan! Tan! Good evening, Mrs. Owl,”
they said. “A relation of yours, Mr. Tatu,
advised us to call on you. Tonight, as you
know, the snakes are giving a costume ball,
and we have no costumes. If you could lend
us your pink, black and white stockings, the
coral snakes would be sure to fall in love with
us!”</p>
<p>“Pleased to accommodate you,” said the
barn owl. “Will you wait just a moment?”</p>
<p>She flew away and was gone some time.
When she came back she had the stockings
with her. But they were not real stockings.
They were nothing but skins from coral
snakes which the owl had caught and eaten
during the previous days.</p>
<p>“Perhaps these will do,” she remarked.
“But if you wear them at the ball, I advise
you to do strictly as I say: dance all night
long, and don’t stop a moment. For if
you do, you will get into trouble, I assure
you!”</p>
<p>The flamingoes listened to what she said;
but, stupidly, did not try to guess what she
could have meant by such counsel. They saw
no danger in the pretty stockings. Delightedly
they doubled up their claws like fists,
stuck them through the snakeskins, which
were like so many long rubber tubes, and
flew back as quickly as they could to the ball.</p>
<p>When the guests at the dance saw the
flamingoes in such handsome stockings, they
were as jealous as could be. You see, the
coral snakes were the lions of the evening,
and after the flamingoes came back, they
would dance with no one but the flamingoes.
Remembering the instructions of the barn
owl, the flamingoes kept their feet going all
the time, and the snakes could not see very
clearly just what those wonderful stockings
were.</p>
<p>After a time, however, they grew suspicious.
When a flamingo came dancing by, the snakes
would get down off the ends of their tails to
examine its feet more closely. The coral
snakes, more than anybody else, began to
get uneasy. They could not take their eyes
off those stockings, and they got as near as
they could, trying to touch the legs of the
flamingoes with the tips of their tongues—for
snakes use their tongues to feel with, much as
people use their hands. But the flamingoes
kept dancing and dancing all the while,
though by this time they were getting so tired
they were about ready to give up.</p>
<p>The coral snakes understood that sooner
or later the flamingoes would have to stop.
So they borrowed the lightning bugs from
the frogs, to be ready when the flamingoes fell
from sheer exhaustion.</p>
<p>And in fact, it was not long before one of
the birds, all tired out, tripped over the cigar
in an alligator’s mouth, and fell down on her
side. The coral snakes all ran toward her
with their lanterns, and held the lightning
bugs up so close that they could see the feet
of the flamingo as clearly as could be.</p>
<p>“Aha! Aha! Stockings, eh? Stockings,
eh?” The coral snakes began to hiss so loudly
that people could hear them on the other side
of the Parana.</p>
<p>The cry was taken up by all the snakes:
“They are not wearing stockings! We know
what they have done! The flamingoes have
been killing brothers of ours, and they are
wearing their skins as stockings! Those
pretty legs each stand for the murder of a
coral snake!”</p>
<p>At this uproar, the flamingoes took fright
and tried to fly away. But they were so
tired from all the dancing that not one of
them could move a wing. The coral snakes
darted upon them, and began to bite at their
legs, tearing off the false stockings bit by
bit, and, in their rage, sinking their fangs
deep into the feet and legs of the flamingoes.</p>
<p>The flamingoes, terrified and mad with
pain, hopped this way and that, trying to
shake their enemies off. But the snakes did
not let go till every last shred of stocking had
been torn away. Then they crawled off, to
rearrange their gauze costumes that had been
much rumpled in the fray. They did not try
to kill the flamingoes then and there; for
most coral snakes are poisonous; and they
were sure the birds they had bitten would die
sooner or later anyway.</p>
<p>But the flamingoes did not die. They
hopped down to the river and waded out into
the water to relieve their pain. Their feet and
legs, which had been white before, had now
turned red from the poison in the bites. They
stood there for days and days, trying to cool
the burning ache, and hoping to wash out the
red.</p>
<ANTIMG src="images/illus-003.jpg" alt="" class="ig004" />
<p>But they did not succeed. And they have
not succeeded yet. The flamingoes still pass
most of their time standing on their red legs
out in the water. Occasionally they go ashore
and walk up and down for a few moments to
see if they are getting well. But the pain
comes again at once, and they hurry back
into the water. Even there they sometimes
feel an ache in one of their feet; and they lift
it out to warm it in their feathers. They stand
that way on one leg for hours, I suppose because
the other one is so stiff and lame.</p>
<p>That is why the flamingoes have red legs
instead of white. And the fishes know it too.
They keep coming up to the top of the water
and crying “Red legs! Red legs! Red legs!”
to make fun of the flamingoes for having tried
to borrow costumes for a ball. On that
account, the flamingoes are always at war
with the fishes. As they wade up and down,
and a fish comes up too close in order to
shout “Red legs” at them, they dip their
long bills down and catch it if they can.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />