Brer
Rabbit Earns a Dollar-A-Minute
A Georgia Folktale
retold by
S.E. Schlosser
One fine morning, Brer Fox decided to plant him a
patch of goober peas. He set to with a will and before you know it, he had
raked and hoed out a beautiful patch of ground and he put in a fine planting of
peas. It didn't take too long before those goober vines grew tall and long and
the peas ripened up good and smart.
Now Brer Rabbit, he'd watched Brer Fox planting the
goobers and he told his children and Miz Rabbit where they could find the
patch. Soon as those peas were ripe, the little Rabbits and Brer Rabbit would
sneak on in and grab up them goobers by the handfuls. It got so bad that when
Brer Fox came to the goober patch, he could hardly find a pea to call his own.
Well, Brer Fox, he was plenty mad that he'd worked so
hard on those peas only to have them eaten by someone else. He suspected that
Brer Rabbit was to blame for this, but the rascally rabbit had covered his
tracks so well that Brer Fox couldn't catch him. So Brer Fox came up with a
plan. He found a smooth spot in his fence where a cunning rabbit could sneak
in, and he set a trap for Brer Rabbit at that spot. He tied a rope to a nearby
hickory sapling and bent it nearly double. Then he took the other end of the
rope and made a loop knot that he fastened with a trigger right around the hole
in the fence. If anybody came through the crack to steal his peas, the knot
would tighten around their body, the sapling would spring upright, and they
would be left hanging from the tree for everyone to see.
The next morning, Brer Rabbit came a-slipping through
the hole in the fence. At once, the trigger sprung, the knot tightened on his
forelegs, and the hickory tree snapped upright, quick as you please. Brer
Rabbit found himself swung aloft betwixt the heaven and the earth, swinging
from the hickory sapling. He couldn't go up and he couldn't go down. He just
went back and forth.
Brer Rabbit was in a fix, no mistake. He was trying to
come up with some glib explanation for Brer Fox when he heard someone
a-rumbling and a-bumbling down the road. It was Brer Bear, looking for a bee-tree
so he could get him some honey. As soon as Brer Rabbit saw Brer Bear, he came
up with a plan to get himself free.
"Howdy, Brer Bear," he called cheerfully.
Brer Bear squinted around here and there, wondering where the voice had come
from. Then he looked up and saw Brer Rabbit swinging from the sapling.
"Howdy Brer Rabbit," he rumbled. "How
are you this morning?"
"Middling, Brer Bear," Rabbit replied.
"Just middling."
Brer Bear was wondering why Brer Rabbit was up in the
tree, so he asked him about it. Brer Rabbit grinned and said that he was
earning a dollar-a-minute from Brer Fox.
"A dollar-a-minute!" Brer Bear exclaimed.
"What for?"
"I'm keeping the crows away from his goober
patch," Brer Rabbit explained, and went on to say that Brer Fox was paying
a dollar-a-minute to whomever would act as a scarecrow for him.
Well, Brer Bear liked the sound of that. He had a big
family to feed, and he could use the money. When Brer Rabbit asked him if he
would like to have the job, Brer Bear agreed. Brer Rabbit showed him how to
bend the sapling down and remove the knot from his forepaws. When Brer Rabbit
was free, Brer Bear climbed into the knot and soon he was hanging aloft betwixt
heaven and earth, swing to and from the sapling and growling at the birds to
keep them away from the goober patch.
Brer Rabbit laughed and laughed at the sight of Brer
Bear up in the sapling. He scampered down the road to Brer Fox's place and told
him that his trap was sprung and the goober thief was hanging from the hickory
tree. Brer Fox grabbed his walking stick and ran down the road after Brer
Rabbit. When he saw Brer Bear hanging there, Brer Fox called him a goober
thief. Brer Fox ranted and raved and threatened to hit Brer Bear with his
walking stick. He yelled so loud that Brer Bear didn't have time to explain
nothing!
Brer Rabbit knew that Brer Bear would be plenty mad at
him when he found out he had been tricked, and so he ran down the road and hid
in the mud beside the pond, so that only his eyeballs stuck out, making him
look like a big old bullfrog. By and by, a very grumpy Brer Bear came lumbering
down the road.
"Howdy, Brer Bullfrog," Brer Bear said when
he saw Brer Rabbit's eyes sticking out of the mud. "You seen Brer Rabbit
anywhere?"
"Brer Rabbit jest ran on down the road," he
told the grumpy Brer Bear in a deep croaking voice that sounded just like the
voice of a frog. Brer Bear thanked him and trotted down the road, growling
fiercely.
When Brer Bear was out of sight, Brer Rabbit jumped
out of the mud. He washed himself off in the pond and then scampered home,
chuckling to himself at how he'd escaped from Brer Fox and Brer Bear, and
already thinking up a new way to get into Brer Fox's goober patch to get him
some peas to eat.
No comments:
Post a Comment