<SPAN name="chapter_5"></SPAN><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page49" title="49"> </SPAN>
<h2><span class="chapter_no" title="five">V</span><br/>THE STORY OF JANG</h2>
<p class="first_paragraph">“<span class="first_word">Did</span> you ever own a dog, Baron Munchausen?”
asked the reporter of the <cite>Gehenna
Gazette</cite>, calling to interview the eminent nobleman
during Dog Show Week in Cimmeria.</p>
<p>“Yes, indeed I have,” said the Baron, “I fancy I
must have owned as many as a hundred dogs in my
life. To be sure some of the dogs were iron and
brass, but I was just as fond of them as if they had
been made of plush or lamb’s wool. They were so
quiet, those iron dogs were; and the brass dogs
never barked or snapped at any one.”</p>
<p>“I never saw a brass dog,” said the reporter.
“What good are they?”</p>
<p>“Oh they are likely to be very useful in winter,”
the Baron replied. “My brass dogs used to guard
my fire-place and keep the blazing logs from rolling
out into my room and setting fire to the rug the
Khan of Tartary gave me for saving his life from a
herd of Antipodes he and I were hunting in the
Himalaya Mountains.”</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page50" title="50"> </SPAN>“I don’t see what you needed dogs to do that
for,” said the reporter. “A fender would have
done just as well, or a pair of andirons,” he added.</p>
<p>“That’s what these dogs were,” said the Baron.
“They were fire dogs and fire dogs are andirons.”</p>
<p>Ananias pressed his lips tightly together, and
into his eyes came a troubled look. It was evident
that, revolting as the idea was to him, he thought
the Baron was trying to deceive him. Noting his
displeasure, the Baron inwardly resolving to be
careful how he handled the truth, hastened on
with his story.</p>
<p>“But dogs were never my favourite animals,” he
said. “With my pets I am quite as I am with other
things. I like to have pets that are entirely different
from the pets of other people, and that is why
in my day I have made companions of such animals
as the sangaree, and the camomile, and the—ah—the
two-horned piccolo. I’ve had tame bees even—in
fact my bees used to be the wonder of Siam, in
which country I was stationed for three years, having
been commissioned by a British company to
make a study of its climate with a view to finding
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page51" title="51"> </SPAN>out if it would pay the company to go into the ice
business there. Siam is, as you have probably
heard, a very warm country, and as ice is a very
rare thing in warm countries these English people
thought they might make a vast fortune by sending
tug-boats up to the Arctic Ocean, and with them
capture and tow icebergs to Siam, where they
might be cut up and sold to the people at tremendous
profit. The scheme was certainly a good one,
and I found many of the wealthy Siamese quite
willing to subscribe for a hundred pounds of ice a
week at ten dollars a pound, but it never came to
anything because we had no means of preserving
the icebergs after we got them into the Gulf of
Siam. The water was so hot that they melted before
we could cut them up, and we nearly got ourselves
into very serious trouble with the coast
people for that same reason. An iceberg, as you
know, is a huge affair, and when a dozen or two of
them had melted in the Gulf they added so to the
quantity of water there that fifty miles of the
coast line were completely flooded, and thousands
of valuable fish, able to live in warm water only,
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page52" title="52"> </SPAN>were so chilled that they got pneumonia, and died.
You can readily imagine how indignant the Siamese
fishermen were with my company over the losses
they had to bear, but their affection for me personally
was so great that they promised not to sue the
company if I would promise not to let the thing
occur again. This I promised, and all went well.
But about the bees, it was while I was living in
Bangkok that I had them, and they were truly wonderful.
There was hardly anything those bees
couldn’t do after I got them tamed.”</p>
<p>“How did you tame them, Baron,” asked
Ananias.</p>
<p>“Power of the eye, my boy,” returned the Baron.
“I attracted their attention first and then held it.
Of course, I tried my plan on one bee first. He
tamed the rest. Bees are very like children. They
like to play stunts—I think it is called stunts,
isn’t it, when one boy does something, and all his
companions try to do the same thing?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Ananias, “I believe there is such a
game, but I shouldn’t like to play it with you.”</p>
<p>“Well, that was the way I did with the bees,”
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page53" title="53"> </SPAN>said Mr. Munchausen. “I tamed the king bee,
and when he had learned all sorts of funny little
tricks, such as standing on his head and humming
tunes, I let him go back to the swarm. He
was gone a week, and then he came back, he had
grown so fond of me—as well he might, because I
fed him well, giving him a large basket of flowers
three times a day. Back with him came two or
three thousand other bees, and whatever Jang did
they did.”</p>
<p>“Who was Jang?” asked Ananias.</p>
<p>“That was the first bee’s name. King Jang.
Jang is Siamese for Billie, and as I was always
fond of the name, Billie, I called him Jang. By and
by every bee in the lot could hum the Star Spangled
Banner and Yankee Doodle as well as you or I
could, and it was grand on those soft moonlight
nights we had there, to sit on the back porch of my
pagoda and listen to my bee orchestra discoursing
sweet music. Of course, as soon as Jang had
learned to hum one tune it was easy enough for
him to learn another, and before long the bee orchestra
could give us any bit of music we wished
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page54" title="54"> </SPAN>to have. Then I used to give musicales at my house
and all the Siamese people, from the King down
asked to be invited, so that through my pets my
home became one of the most attractive in all Asia.</p>
<p>“And the honey those bees made! It was the
sweetest honey you ever tasted, and every morning
when I got down to breakfast there was a fresh
bottleful ready for me, the bees having made it in
the bottle itself over night. They were the most
grateful pets I ever had, and once they saved my
life. They used to live in a hive I had built for them
in one corner of my room and I could go to bed and
sleep with every door in my house open, and not be
afraid of robbers, because those bees were there to
protect me. One night a lion broke loose from the
Royal Zoo, and while trotting along the road looking
for something to eat he saw my front door wide
open. In he walked, and began to sniff. He sniffed
here and he sniffed there, but found nothing but a
pot of anchovy paste, which made him thirstier and
hungrier than ever. So he prowled into the parlour,
and had his appetite further aggravated by a bronze
statue of the Emperor of China I had there. He
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page55" title="55"> </SPAN>thought in the dim light it was a small-sized human
being, and he pounced on it in a minute. Well, of
course, he couldn’t make any headway trying to
eat a bronze statue, and the more he tried the more
hungry and angry he got. He roared until he shook
the house and would undoubtedly have awakened
me had it not been that I am always a sound sleeper
and never wake until I have slept enough. Why, on
one occasion, on the Northern Pacific Railway, a
train I was on ran into and completely telescoped
another while I was asleep in the smoking car, and
although I was severely burned and hurled out of
the car window to land sixty feet away on the prairie,
I didn’t wake up for two hours. I was nearly
buried alive because they thought I’d been killed,
I lay so still.</p>
<p>“But to return to the bees. The roaring of the
lion disturbed them, and Jang buzzed out of his
hive to see what was the matter just as the lion appeared
at my bed-room door. The intelligent insect
saw in a moment what the trouble was, and he
sounded the alarm for the rest of the bees, who came
swarming out of the hive in response to the summons.
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page56" title="56"> </SPAN>Jang kept his eye on the lion meanwhile,
and just as the prowler caught sight of your uncle
peacefully snoring away on the bed, dreaming of
his boyhood, and prepared to spring upon me, Jang
buzzed over and sat down upon his back, putting
his sting where it would do the most good. The
angry lion, who in a moment would have fastened
his teeth upon me, turned with a yelp of pain, and
the bite which was to have been mine wrought
havoc with his own back. Following Jang’s example,
the other bees ranged themselves in line
over the lion’s broad shoulders, and stung him until
he roared with pain. Each time he was stung he
would whisk his head around like a dog after a
flea, and bite himself, until finally he had literally
chewed himself up, when he fainted from sheer exhaustion,
and I was saved. You can imagine my
surprise when next morning I awakened to find a
dying lion in my room.”</p>
<div id="illo04" class="illo">
<ANTIMG src="images/illo04-thumb.jpg" width-obs="300" height-obs="417" alt="A lion roars at a bee on its back" />
<p class="caption">“Jang buzzed over and sat down upon his
back, putting his sting where it would do the
most good.” <span class="illo_ch">Chapter V.</span></p>
</div>
<p>“But, Baron,” said Ananias. “I don’t understand
one thing about it. If you were fast asleep
while all this was happening how did you know
that Jang did those things?”</p>
<!-- Original location of illo04 -->
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page57" title="57"> </SPAN>“Why, Jang told me himself,” replied the Baron
calmly.</p>
<p>“Could he talk?” cried Ananias in amazement.</p>
<p>“Not as you and I do,” said the Baron. “Of
course not, but Jang could spell. I taught him how.
You see I reasoned it out this way. If a bee can be
taught to sing a song which is only a story in music,
why can’t he be taught to tell a story in real words.
It was worth trying anyhow, and I tried. Jang
was an apt pupil. He was the most intelligent bee
I ever met, and it didn’t take me more than a month
to teach him his letters, and when he once knew
his letters it was easy enough to teach him how to
spell. I got a great big sheet and covered it with
twenty-six squares, and in each of these squares I
painted a letter of the alphabet, so that finally when
Jang came to know them, and wanted to tell me
anything he would fly from one square to another
until he had spelled out whatever he wished to say.
I would follow his movements closely, and we got
so after awhile that we could converse for hours
without any trouble whatsoever. I really believe
that if Jang had been a little heavier so that he
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page58" title="58"> </SPAN>could push the keys down far enough he could have
managed a typewriter as well as anybody, and
when I think about his wonderful mind and delicious
fancy I deeply regret that there never was a
typewriting machine so delicately made that a bee
of his weight could make it go. The world would
have been very much enriched by the stories Jang
had in his mind to tell, but it is too late now. He
is gone forever.”</p>
<p>“How did you lose Jang, Baron?” asked
Ananias, with tears in his eyes.</p>
<p>“He thought I had deceived him,” said the
Baron, with a sigh. “He was as much of a stickler
for truth as I am. An American friend of mine
sent me a magnificent parterre of wax flowers
which were so perfectly made that I couldn’t tell
them from the real. I was very proud of them,
and kept them in my room near the hive. When
Jang and his tribe first caught sight of them they
were delighted and they sang as they had never
sung before just to show how pleased they were.
Then they set to work to make honey out of them.
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page59" title="59"> </SPAN>They must have laboured over those flowers for two
months before I thought to tell them that they were
only wax and not at all real. As I told Jang this,
I unfortunately laughed, thinking that he could
understand the joke of the thing as well as I, but I
was mistaken. All that he could see was that he
had been deceived, and it made him very angry.
Bees don’t seem to have a well-developed sense of
humour. He cast a reproachful glance at me and
returned to his hive and on the morning of the third
day when I waked up they were moving out. They
flew to my lattice and ranged themselves along the
slats and waited for Jang. In a moment he appeared
and at a given signal they buzzed out of my
sight, humming a farewell dirge as they went. I
never saw them again.”</p>
<p>Here the Baron wiped his eyes.</p>
<p>“I felt very bad about it,” he went on, “and resolved
then never again to do anything which even
suggested deception, and when several years later
I had my crest designed I had a bee drawn on it,
for in my eyes my good friend the bee, represents
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page60" title="60"> </SPAN>three great factors of the good and successful life—Industry,
Fidelity, and Truth.”</p>
<p>Whereupon the Baron went his way, leaving
Ananias to think it over.</p>
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