<h3><SPAN name="THE_CICADAS_STORY">THE CICADA’S STORY</SPAN></h3>
<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Agnes McClellan Daulton</span></p>
<p>Once upon a time a grasshopper introduced
me to Mr. Periodical Cicada. He was a very
pleasant fellow and not a bit stuck up, although
the poets have written of him, and almost
every one knows him by the name of
seventeen year locust, though he really is not
a locust at all. I was pleased to meet him, and
asked him if he would mind telling me what
he did all those seventeen years, and he replied:</p>
<p>“Not at all, now that they are over it is very
pleasant to talk about them.” Then he began
his story. “Seventeen years ago this June, in
an old orchard, my mother tucked away in
the green twigs of a mossy apple tree hundreds
of little cradles. I was sleeping in one and
in the others were my brothers and sisters.
While my mother was at work our father sat
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="Page_221"></SPAN>[221]</span>on a twig close by and sang the merriest lullaby
that babies ever listened to.</p>
<p>“Several weeks later we little ones crept out
of our cradles and dropped lightly to the
ground beneath the tree; then each of us dug
a little burrow and hid ourselves away in the
warm, moist soil near sappy rootlets that gave
us our food.</p>
<p>“We were very tiny at first, but little by little
we grew, always making our cells bigger to
fit, so that we were as snug and cosy as babies
could be, only it was very dark and lonely.</p>
<p>“The rootlets would tell us when it was
spring, of how the pink and white blossoms
were holding up perfumed cups to the blue
sky; of the tree musical with the humming of
the bees that came for honey; then of summer,
when birds nested and sang among the green
boughs; later of autumn, of apples mellow
and ripe, globes of red and gold, that fell with
a muffled thud in the long, green grass; and at
last of the winter, and of the fleecy snow that
clothed the old tree in soft white. They
whispered of heat, of cold, of sunshine and
rain, of freezing winds and balmy breezes,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="Page_222"></SPAN>[222]</span>
but we baby Cicadas neither understood nor
cared, and there tucked away in our gloomy
cells we lived seventeen long years.</p>
<p>“But one May day, in the sweetest of apple
blossoming time, all we little Cicadas made up
our minds to go out into the world and seek
our fortunes. Then every one of us began
digging and carrying up to the surface tiny
pellets of soft clay.</p>
<p>“My, but we did work hard, and by the time
the big sun had hidden his round face in the
west each of us had built a funny little chimney
six inches high.”</p>
<p>“Oh, how lovely!” I cried; “and please, Mr.
Periodical Cicada, what were they for?”</p>
<p>But the Cicada only shook his head at me
gravely, as much as to say that it was a Cicada
family secret.</p>
<p>“When the chimneys were done,” he went
on, “we all scrambled up and began hunting a
safe place to rest. I soon found a fine twig
where I held on for dear life. I wasn’t very
pretty, being dressed in a brown coat, and besides,
I had gotten very muddy building my
chimney. Now while I was hanging there<span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="Page_223"></SPAN>[223]</span>
hoping to dry off—click—and goodness me!
if my little brown jacket hadn’t split down my
back from collar to waistband. I felt very
bad, for even if it was a muddy, ugly brown
coat, it was all I had, and I had no idea where
to get another in the big, cold world I had
just come into. But when I stepped out of my
coat to see if I could mend it, my stockings
and shoes came off with it and there I hung,
if you will believe me, dressed in the prettiest
cream-coloured suit you ever saw. I never
was more surprised in my life.</p>
<p>“Just then, I happened to catch a glimpse
of one of my sisters, and she also was in cream,
and there was a brother; yes, there was the
whole family, and every one of us in a lovely
suit of cream-colour. But, oh, when we got a
good look at each other we laughed till we almost
fell from our perches, for each of us had
pink eyes and heavy, fierce eyebrows, and
queer humps on the sides of our necks. Such
a ridiculous looking lot of youngsters you
never saw. Beside us hung our old, muddy
clothes, coat, shoes, stockings, and all. If you
look in the orchard you can often find these<span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="Page_224"></SPAN>[224]</span>
old clothes long after the Cicadas have flown
away.”</p>
<p>“Oh, Mr. Cicada, how I should love to have
seen you!” I exclaimed. “I shall look for
little brown coats as soon as I get home.”</p>
<p>“This was only the beginning,” went on
Periodical. “The most wonderful things
were to come; for slowly, slowly those humps
on our necks began to swell, and after a time
they opened out into two lovely, gauzy wings,
veined with pearl colour. When the great
round moon came gliding up over the orchard
and shed down upon us her gentle, silvery
light, there we hung like some strange, beautiful
flowers. The apple blossoms thought we
were flowers and whispered to us some of the
prettiest honey and pollen secrets; they were
so provoked when we flew away and they
found out their mistake—but they need not
fear for we will never tell; no, indeed, never!</p>
<p>“When morning came we found our beauty
had been very fleeting, for our lovely cream-coloured
suits had changed to greenish-brown,
and our wings, though still transparent, were
dull of colour. The males among us were<span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="Page_225"></SPAN>[225]</span>
drummers. Deep within my body, I carried
two drums, each being covered by a plate that
you can easily see on the outside. Now, I
don’t need drumsticks, for my drums are air
instruments, and by twitching my muscles I
can snap my drumheads faster and faster, making
the gayest sort of a roll-call. Listen to
this: <i>Whirr-r-r-r-r!</i>”</p>
<hr class="chap" />
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="Page_226"></SPAN>[226]</span></p>
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