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<h2> THE BEGINNING OF THE ARMADILLOS </h2>
<p>THIS, O Best Beloved, is another story of the High and Far-Off Times. In
the very middle of those times was a Stickly-Prickly Hedgehog, and he
lived on the banks of the turbid Amazon, eating shelly snails and things.
And he had a friend, a Slow-Solid Tortoise, who lived on the banks of the
turbid Amazon, eating green lettuces and things. And so that was all
right, Best Beloved. Do you see?</p>
<p>But also, and at the same time, in those High and Far-Off Times, there was
a Painted Jaguar, and he lived on the banks of the turbid Amazon too; and
he ate everything that he could catch. When he could not catch deer or
monkeys he would eat frogs and beetles; and when he could not catch frogs
and beetles he went to his Mother Jaguar, and she told him how to eat
hedgehogs and tortoises.</p>
<p>She said to him ever so many times, graciously waving her tail, ‘My son,
when you find a Hedgehog you must drop him into the water and then he will
uncoil, and when you catch a Tortoise you must scoop him out of his shell
with your paw.’ And so that was all right, Best Beloved.</p>
<p>One beautiful night on the banks of the turbid Amazon, Painted Jaguar
found Stickly-Prickly Hedgehog and Slow-Solid Tortoise sitting under the
trunk of a fallen tree. They could not run away, and so Stickly-Prickly
curled himself up into a ball, because he was a Hedgehog, and Slow-Solid
Tortoise drew in his head and feet into his shell as far as they would go,
because he was a Tortoise; and so that was all right, Best Beloved. Do you
see?</p>
<p>‘Now attend to me,’ said Painted Jaguar, ‘because this is very important.
My mother said that when I meet a Hedgehog I am to drop him into the water
and then he will uncoil, and when I meet a Tortoise I am to scoop him out
of his shell with my paw. Now which of you is Hedgehog and which is
Tortoise? because, to save my spots, I can’t tell.’</p>
<p>‘Are you sure of what your Mummy told you?’ said Stickly-Prickly Hedgehog.
‘Are you quite sure? Perhaps she said that when you uncoil a Tortoise you
must shell him out the water with a scoop, and when you paw a Hedgehog you
must drop him on the shell.’</p>
<p>‘Are you sure of what your Mummy told you?’ said Slow-and-Solid Tortoise.
‘Are you quite sure? Perhaps she said that when you water a Hedgehog you
must drop him into your paw, and when you meet a Tortoise you must shell
him till he uncoils.’</p>
<p>‘I don’t think it was at all like that,’ said Painted Jaguar, but he felt
a little puzzled; ‘but, please, say it again more distinctly.’</p>
<p>‘When you scoop water with your paw you uncoil it with a Hedgehog,’ said
Stickly-Prickly. ‘Remember that, because it’s important.’</p>
<p>‘But,’ said the Tortoise, ‘when you paw your meat you drop it into a
Tortoise with a scoop. Why can’t you understand?’</p>
<p>‘You are making my spots ache,’ said Painted Jaguar; ‘and besides, I
didn’t want your advice at all. I only wanted to know which of you is
Hedgehog and which is Tortoise.’</p>
<p>‘I shan’t tell you,’ said Stickly-Prickly, ‘but you can scoop me out of my
shell if you like.’</p>
<p>‘Aha!’ said Painted Jaguar. ‘Now I know you’re Tortoise. You thought I
wouldn’t! Now I will.’ Painted Jaguar darted out his paddy-paw just as
Stickly-Prickly curled himself up, and of course Jaguar’s paddy-paw was
just filled with prickles. Worse than that, he knocked Stickly-Prickly
away and away into the woods and the bushes, where it was too dark to find
him. Then he put his paddy-paw into his mouth, and of course the prickles
hurt him worse than ever. As soon as he could speak he said, ‘Now I know
he isn’t Tortoise at all. But’—and then he scratched his head with
his un-prickly paw—‘how do I know that this other is Tortoise?’</p>
<p>‘But I am Tortoise,’ said Slow-and-Solid. Your mother was quite right. She
said that you were to scoop me out of my shell with your paw. Begin.’</p>
<p>‘You didn’t say she said that a minute ago, said Painted Jaguar, sucking
the prickles out of his paddy-paw. ‘You said she said something quite
different.’</p>
<p>‘Well, suppose you say that I said that she said something quite
different, I don’t see that it makes any difference; because if she said
what you said I said she said, it’s just the same as if I said what she
said she said. On the other hand, if you think she said that you were to
uncoil me with a scoop, instead of pawing me into drops with a shell, I
can’t help that, can I?’</p>
<p>‘But you said you wanted to be scooped out of your shell with my paw,’
said Painted Jaguar.</p>
<p>‘If you’ll think again you’ll find that I didn’t say anything of the kind.
I said that your mother said that you were to scoop me out of my shell,’
said Slow-and-Solid.</p>
<p>‘What will happen if I do?’ said the Jaguar most sniffily and most
cautious.</p>
<p>‘I don’t know, because I’ve never been scooped out of my shell before; but
I tell you truly, if you want to see me swim away you’ve only got to drop
me into the water.</p>
<p>‘I don’t believe it,’ said Painted Jaguar. ‘You’ve mixed up all the things
my mother told me to do with the things that you asked me whether I was
sure that she didn’t say, till I don’t know whether I’m on my head or my
painted tail; and now you come and tell me something I can understand, and
it makes me more mixy than before. My mother told me that I was to drop
one of you two into the water, and as you seem so anxious to be dropped I
think you don’t want to be dropped. So jump into the turbid Amazon and be
quick about it.’</p>
<p>‘I warn you that your Mummy won’t be pleased. Don’t tell her I didn’t tell
you,’ said Slow-Solid.</p>
<p>‘If you say another word about what my mother said—’ the Jaguar
answered, but he had not finished the sentence before Slow-and-Solid
quietly dived into the turbid Amazon, swam under water for a long way, and
came out on the bank where Stickly-Prickly was waiting for him.</p>
<p>‘That was a very narrow escape,’ said Stickly-Prickly. ‘I don’t rib
Painted Jaguar. What did you tell him that you were?’</p>
<p>‘I told him truthfully that I was a truthful Tortoise, but he wouldn’t
believe it, and he made me jump into the river to see if I was, and I was,
and he is surprised. Now he’s gone to tell his Mummy. Listen to him!’</p>
<p>They could hear Painted Jaguar roaring up and down among the trees and the
bushes by the side of the turbid Amazon, till his Mummy came.</p>
<p>‘Son, son!’ said his mother ever so many times, graciously waving her
tail, ‘what have you been doing that you shouldn’t have done?’</p>
<p>‘I tried to scoop something that said it wanted to be scooped out of its
shell with my paw, and my paw is full of per-ickles,’ said Painted Jaguar.</p>
<p>‘Son, son!’ said his mother ever so many times, graciously waving her
tail, ‘by the prickles in your paddy-paw I see that that must have been a
Hedgehog. You should have dropped him into the water.</p>
<p>‘I did that to the other thing; and he said he was a Tortoise, and I
didn’t believe him, and it was quite true, and he has dived under the
turbid Amazon, and he won’t come up again, and I haven’t anything at all
to eat, and I think we had better find lodgings somewhere else. They are
too clever on the turbid Amazon for poor me!’</p>
<p>‘Son, son!’ said his mother ever so many times, graciously waving her
tail, ‘now attend to me and remember what I say. A Hedgehog curls himself
up into a ball and his prickles stick out every which way at once. By this
you may know the Hedgehog.’</p>
<p>‘I don’t like this old lady one little bit,’ said Stickly-Prickly, under
the shadow of a large leaf. ‘I wonder what else she knows?’</p>
<p>‘A Tortoise can’t curl himself up,’ Mother Jaguar went on, ever so many
times, graciously waving her tail. ‘He only draws his head and legs into
his shell. By this you may know the tortoise.’</p>
<p>‘I don’t like this old lady at all—at all,’ said Slow-and-Solid
Tortoise. ‘Even Painted Jaguar can’t forget those directions. It’s a great
pity that you can’t swim, Stickly-Prickly.’</p>
<p>‘Don’t talk to me,’ said Stickly-Prickly. ‘Just think how much better it
would be if you could curl up. This is a mess! Listen to Painted Jaguar.’</p>
<p>Painted Jaguar was sitting on the banks of the turbid Amazon sucking
prickles out of his Paws and saying to himself—</p>
<p>‘Can’t curl, but can swim—<br/>
Slow-Solid, that’s him!<br/>
Curls up, but can’t swim—<br/>
Stickly-Prickly, that’s him!’<br/></p>
<p>‘He’ll never forget that this month of Sundays,’ said Stickly-Prickly.
‘Hold up my chin, Slow-and-Solid. I’m going to try to learn to swim. It
may be useful.’</p>
<p>‘Excellent!’ said Slow-and-Solid; and he held up Stickly-Prickly’s chin,
while Stickly-Prickly kicked in the waters of the turbid Amazon.</p>
<p>‘You’ll make a fine swimmer yet,’ said Slow-and-Solid. ‘Now, if you can
unlace my back-plates a little, I’ll see what I can do towards curling up.
It may be useful.’</p>
<p>Stickly-Prickly helped to unlace Tortoise’s back-plates, so that by
twisting and straining Slow-and-Solid actually managed to curl up a tiddy
wee bit.</p>
<p>‘Excellent!’ said Stickly-Prickly; ‘but I shouldn’t do any more just now.
It’s making you black in the face. Kindly lead me into the water once
again and I’ll practice that side-stroke which you say is so easy.’ And so
Stickly-Prickly practiced, and Slow-Solid swam alongside.</p>
<p>‘Excellent!’ said Slow-and-Solid. ‘A little more practice will make you a
regular whale. Now, if I may trouble you to unlace my back and front
plates two holes more, I’ll try that fascinating bend that you say is so
easy. Won’t Painted Jaguar be surprised!’</p>
<p>‘Excellent!’ said Stickly-Prickly, all wet from the turbid Amazon. ‘I
declare, I shouldn’t know you from one of my own family. Two holes, I
think, you said? A little more expression, please, and don’t grunt quite
so much, or Painted Jaguar may hear us. When you’ve finished, I want to
try that long dive which you say is so easy. Won’t Painted Jaguar be
surprised!’</p>
<p>And so Stickly-Prickly dived, and Slow-and-Solid dived alongside.</p>
<p>‘Excellent!’ said Slow-and-Solid. ‘A leetle more attention to holding your
breath and you will be able to keep house at the bottom of the turbid
Amazon. Now I’ll try that exercise of putting my hind legs round my ears
which you say is so peculiarly comfortable. Won’t Painted Jaguar be
surprised!’</p>
<p>‘Excellent!’ said Stickly-Prickly. ‘But it’s straining your back-plates a
little. They are all overlapping now, instead of lying side by side.’</p>
<p>‘Oh, that’s the result of exercise,’ said Slow-and-Solid. ‘I’ve noticed
that your prickles seem to be melting into one another, and that you’re
growing to look rather more like a pinecone, and less like a
chestnut-burr, than you used to.’</p>
<p>‘Am I?’ said Stickly-Prickly. ‘That comes from my soaking in the water.
Oh, won’t Painted Jaguar be surprised!’</p>
<p>They went on with their exercises, each helping the other, till morning
came; and when the sun was high they rested and dried themselves. Then
they saw that they were both of them quite different from what they had
been.</p>
<p>‘Stickly-Prickly,’ said Tortoise after breakfast, ‘I am not what I was
yesterday; but I think that I may yet amuse Painted Jaguar.</p>
<p>‘That was the very thing I was thinking just now,’ said Stickly-Prickly.
‘I think scales are a tremendous improvement on prickles—to say
nothing of being able to swim. Oh, won’t Painted Jaguar be surprised!
Let’s go and find him.’</p>
<p>By and by they found Painted Jaguar, still nursing his paddy-paw that had
been hurt the night before. He was so astonished that he fell three times
backward over his own painted tail without stopping.</p>
<p>‘Good morning!’ said Stickly-Prickly. ‘And how is your dear gracious Mummy
this morning?’</p>
<p>‘She is quite well, thank you,’ said Painted Jaguar; ‘but you must forgive
me if I do not at this precise moment recall your name.’</p>
<p>‘That’s unkind of you,’ said Stickly-Prickly, ‘seeing that this time
yesterday you tried to scoop me out of my shell with your paw.’</p>
<p>‘But you hadn’t any shell. It was all prickles,’ said Painted Jaguar. ‘I
know it was. Just look at my paw!’</p>
<p>‘You told me to drop into the turbid Amazon and be drowned,’ said
Slow-Solid. ‘Why are you so rude and forgetful to-day?’</p>
<p>‘Don’t you remember what your mother told you?’ said Stickly-Prickly,—</p>
<p>‘Can’t curl, but can swim—<br/>
Stickly-Prickly, that’s him!<br/>
Curls up, but can’t swim—<br/>
Slow-Solid, that’s him!’<br/></p>
<p>Then they both curled themselves up and rolled round and round Painted
Jaguar till his eyes turned truly cart-wheels in his head.</p>
<p>Then he went to fetch his mother.</p>
<p>‘Mother,’ he said, ‘there are two new animals in the woods to-day, and the
one that you said couldn’t swim, swims, and the one that you said couldn’t
curl up, curls; and they’ve gone shares in their prickles, I think,
because both of them are scaly all over, instead of one being smooth and
the other very prickly; and, besides that, they are rolling round and
round in circles, and I don’t feel comfy.’</p>
<p>‘Son, son!’ said Mother Jaguar ever so many times, graciously waving her
tail, ‘a Hedgehog is a Hedgehog, and can’t be anything but a Hedgehog; and
a Tortoise is a Tortoise, and can never be anything else.’</p>
<p>‘But it isn’t a Hedgehog, and it isn’t a Tortoise. It’s a little bit of
both, and I don’t know its proper name.’</p>
<p>‘Nonsense!’ said Mother Jaguar. ‘Everything has its proper name. I should
call it “Armadillo” till I found out the real one. And I should leave it
alone.’</p>
<p>So Painted Jaguar did as he was told, especially about leaving them alone;
but the curious thing is that from that day to this, O Best Beloved, no
one on the banks of the turbid Amazon has ever called Stickly-Prickly and
Slow-Solid anything except Armadillo. There are Hedgehogs and Tortoises in
other places, of course (there are some in my garden); but the real old
and clever kind, with their scales lying lippety-lappety one over the
other, like pine-cone scales, that lived on the banks of the turbid Amazon
in the High and Far-Off Days, are always called Armadillos, because they
were so clever.</p>
<p>So that; all right, Best Beloved. Do you see?</p>
<p>I’VE never sailed the Amazon,<br/>
I’ve never reached Brazil;<br/>
But the Don and Magdelana,<br/>
They can go there when they will!<br/>
<br/>
Yes, weekly from Southampton,<br/>
Great steamers, white and gold,<br/>
Go rolling down to Rio<br/>
(Roll down—roll down to Rio!)<br/>
And I’d like to roll to Rio<br/>
Some day before I’m old!<br/>
<br/>
I’ve never seen a Jaguar,<br/>
Nor yet an Armadill<br/>
O dilloing in his armour,<br/>
And I s’pose I never will,<br/>
<br/>
Unless I go to Rio<br/>
These wonders to behold—<br/>
Roll down—roll down to Rio—<br/>
Roll really down to Rio!<br/>
Oh, I’d love to roll to Rio<br/>
Some day before I’m old!<br/></p>
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