<h2><SPAN name="st7" class="c011">THE LAZY BEE</SPAN></h2>
<p>In a beehive once there was a bee who would
not work. She would go flying from blossom
to blossom on the orange trees sucking out
all the honey. But instead of taking it back
to the hive she would eat it then and there.</p>
<p>She was a lazy bee. Every morning, the
moment the sun had warmed the hive, she
would come to the door and look out. On
making sure that it was a lovely day, she
would wash her face and comb her hair with
her paws, the way flies do, and then go flitting
off, as pleased as could be at the bright
weather. So she would go buzzing and buzzing
from flower to flower; and then after a
time she would go back and see what the
other bees were doing in the hive. So it
would go on all day long.</p>
<p>Meantime the other bees would be working
themselves to death trying to fill the hive
full of honey; for honey is what they give
the little bees to eat as soon as they are born.
And these worker bees, very staid, respectable,
earnest bees, began to scowl at the conduct of
this shirker of a sister they had.</p>
<p>You must know that, at the door of every
beehive, there are always a number of bees
on watch, to see that no insects but bees get
into the hive. These policemen, as a rule,
are old bees, with a great deal of experience
in life. Their backs are quite bald, because
all the hair gets worn off from rubbing
against the hive as they walk in and out of
the door.</p>
<p>One day when the lazy bee was just dropping
in to see what was going on in the hive, these
policemen called her to one side:</p>
<p>“Sister,” said they, “it is time you did a
little work. All us bees have to work!”</p>
<p>The little bee was quite scared when the
policemen spoke to her, but she answered:</p>
<p>“I go flying about all day long, and get
very tired!”</p>
<p>“We didn’t ask you how tired you got!
We want to see how much work you can do!
This is Warning Number 1!”</p>
<p>And they let her go on into the hive.</p>
<p>But the lazy little bee did not mend her
ways. On the next evening the policemen
stopped her again:</p>
<p>“Sister, we didn’t see you working today!”</p>
<p>The little bee was expecting something of
the kind, and she had been thinking up what
she would say all the way home.</p>
<p>“I’ll go to work one of these days,” she
spoke up promptly; and with a cheerful,
winsome smile.</p>
<p>“We don’t want you to go to work one of
these days,” they answered gruffly. “We
want you to go to work tomorrow morning.
This is Warning Number 2!”</p>
<p>And they let her in.</p>
<p>The following night, when the lazy bee
came home, she did not wait for the policemen
to stop her. She went up to them sorrowfully
and said:</p>
<p>“Yes, yes! I remember what I promised.
I’m so sorry I wasn’t able to work today!”</p>
<p>“We didn’t ask how sorry you were, nor
what you had promised. What we want
from you is work. Today is the nineteenth
of April. Tomorrow will be the twentieth
of April. See to it that the twentieth of
April does not pass without your putting at
least one load of honey into the hive. This is
Warning Number 3! You may enter!”</p>
<p>And the policemen who had been blocking
the door stepped aside to let her in.</p>
<p>The lazy bee woke up with very good intentions
the next morning; but the sun was
so warm and bright and the flowers were so
beautiful! The day passed the same as all
the others; except that toward evening the
weather changed. The sun went down behind
a great bank of clouds and a strong icy wind
began to blow.</p>
<p>The lazy little bee started for home as fast
as she could, thinking how warm and cozy it
would be inside the hive, with all that storm
blowing out of doors. But on the porch of the
beehive the policemen got in front of her.</p>
<p>“Where are you going, young lady?” said
they.</p>
<p>“I am going in to bed. This is where I
live!”</p>
<p>“You must be mistaken,” said the policemen.
“Only busy worker bees live here!
Lazy bees are not allowed inside this door!”</p>
<p>“Tomorrow, surely, surely, surely, I am
going to work,” said the little bee.</p>
<p>“There is no tomorrow for lazy bees,” said
the policemen; for they were old, wise bees,
and knew philosophy. “Away with you!”
And they pushed her off the doorstep.</p>
<p>The little bee did not know what to do.
She flew around for a time; but soon it began
to grow dark; the wind blew colder and
colder, and drops of rain began to fall. Quite
tired at last, she took hold of a leaf, intending
to rest a moment; but she was chilled and
numbed by the cold. She could not hang
on, and fell a long distance to the ground.</p>
<p>She tried to get to her wings again, but
they were too tired to work. So she started
crawling over the ground toward the hive.
Every stone, every stick she met, she had to
climb over with great effort—so many hills
and mountains they seemed to such a tiny
bee. The raindrops were coming faster when,
almost dead with cold and fright and fatigue,
she arrived at the door of the hive.</p>
<p>“Oh, oh,” she moaned. “I am cold, and it
is going to rain! I shall be sure to die out
here!” And she crept up to the door.</p>
<p>But the fierce policemen again stopped her
from going in.</p>
<p>“Forgive me, sisters,” the little bee said.
“Please, let me go in!”</p>
<p>“Too late! Too late!” they answered.</p>
<p>“Please, sisters, I am so sleepy!” said the
little bee.</p>
<p>“Too late! Too late!” said they.</p>
<p>“Please, sisters, I am cold!” said the little
bee.</p>
<p>“Sorry! You can’t go in!” said they.</p>
<p>“Please, sisters, for one last time! I shall
die out here!”</p>
<p>“You won’t die, lazy bee! One night will
teach you the value of a warm bed earned by
honest labor! Away from here!”</p>
<p>And they pushed her off the doorstep
again.</p>
<p>By this time it was raining hard. The
little bee felt her wings and fur getting wetter
and wetter; and she was so cold and sleepy
she did not know what to do. She crawled
along as fast as she could over the ground,
hoping to come to some place where it was
dry and not so cold. At last she came to a
tree and began to walk up the trunk.
Suddenly, just as she had come to the crotch
of two branches, she fell! She fell a long, long
distance and landed finally on something
soft. There was no wind and no rain blowing.
On coming to her wits the little bee understood
that she had fallen down through a hole inside
a hollow tree.</p>
<p>And now the little bee had the fright of her
life. Coiled up near her there was a snake, a
green snake with a brick-colored back. That
hollow tree was the snake’s house; and the
snake lay there looking at her with eyes that
shone even in that darkness. Now, snakes
eat bees, and like them. So when this little
bee found herself so close to a fearful enemy of
her kind, she just closed her eyes and murmured
to herself:</p>
<p>“This is the last of me! Oh, how I wish I
had worked!”</p>
<p>To her great surprise, however, the
snake not only did not eat her, but spoke
to her rather softly for such a terrible
snake:</p>
<p>“How do you do, little bee? You must be
a naughty little bee, to be out so late at
night!”</p>
<p>“Yes,” she murmured, her heart in her
throat. “I have been a naughty bee. I did
not work, and they won’t let me in to go to
my bed!”</p>
<p>“In that case, I shall not be so sorry to
eat you!” answered the snake. “Surely there
can be no harm at all in depriving the world
of a useless little bee like you! I won’t have
to go out for dinner tonight. I shall eat
you right here!”</p>
<p>The little bee was about as scared as a bee
can be.</p>
<p>“That is not fair,” she said. “It is not
just! You have no right to eat me just because
you are bigger than I am. Go and ask people
if that isn’t so! People know what is right
and wrong!”</p>
<p>“Ah, ah!” said the snake, lifting his head
higher, “so you have a good opinion of men?
So you think that the men who steal your
honey are more honest than snakes who eat
you? You are not only a lazy bee. You are
also a silly one!”</p>
<p>“It is not because men are dishonest that
they take our honey,” said the bee.</p>
<p>“Why is it then?” said the snake.</p>
<p>“It’s because they are more intelligent
than we are!” That is what the bee said;
but the snake just laughed; and then he
hissed:</p>
<p>“Well, if you must have it that way, it’s
because I’m more intelligent than you that
I’m going to eat you now! Get ready to be
eaten, lazy bee!”</p>
<p>And the snake drew back to strike, and lap
up the bee at one gobble.</p>
<p>But the little bee had time to say:</p>
<p>“It’s because you’re duller than I am that
you eat me!”</p>
<p>“Duller than you?” asked the snake, letting
his head down again. “How is that,
stupid?”</p>
<p>“However it is, it’s so!”</p>
<p>“I’ll have to be shown!” said the snake.
“I will make a bargain with you. We will
each do a trick; and the cleverest trick wins.
If I win, I’ll eat you!”</p>
<p>“And if I win?” asked the little bee.</p>
<p>“If you win,” said the snake after some
thought, “you may stay in here where it is
warm all night. Is it a bargain?”</p>
<p>“It is,” said the bee.</p>
<p>The snake considered another moment or
so and then began to laugh. He had thought
of something a bee could not possibly do. He
darted out of a hole in the tree so quickly the
bee had scarcely time to wonder what he was
up to; and just as quickly he came back with
a seed pod from the eucalyptus tree that
stood near the beehive and shaded it on days
when the sun was hot. Now the seed pods
of the eucalyptus tree are just the shape of a
top; in fact, the boys and girls in Argentina
call them “tops”—<i>trompitos!</i></p>
<p>“Now you just watch and see what I’m
a-going to do,” said the snake. “Watch
now! Watch!...”</p>
<p>The snake wound the thin part of his tail
around the top like a string; then, with a jump
forward to his full length, he straightened his
tail out. The “top” began to spin like mad
on the bark floor there at the bottom of the
hollow tree; and it spun and spun and spun,
dancing, jumping, running off in this direction
and then in that direction. And the snake
laughed! And he laughed and he laughed and
he laughed! No bee would ever be able to do
a thing like that!</p>
<p>Finally the top got tired of spinning and
fell over on its side.</p>
<p>“That is very clever!” said the bee, “I
could never do that!”</p>
<p>“In that case, I shall have to eat you!”
said the snake.</p>
<p>“Not just yet, please,” said the bee. “I
can’t spin a top; but I can do something no
one else can do!”</p>
<p>“What is that?” asked the snake.</p>
<p>“I can disappear!” said the bee.</p>
<p>“What do you mean, disappear?” said
the snake, with some interest. “Disappear so
that I can’t see you and without going away
from here?”</p>
<p>“Without going away from here!”</p>
<p>“Without hiding in the ground?”</p>
<p>“Without hiding in the ground!”</p>
<p>“I give up!” said the snake.
“Disappear! But if you don’t do as you say, I eat
you, gobble, gobble, just like that!”</p>
<p>Now you must know that while the top was
spinning round and round, the little bee
had noticed something on the floor of the
hollow tree she had not seen before: it was a
little shrub, three or four inches high, with
leaves about the size of a fifty-cent piece. She
now walked over to the stem of this little
shrub, taking care, however, not to touch it
with her body. Then she said:</p>
<p>“Now it is my turn, Mr. Snake. Won’t
you be so kind as to turn around, and count
‘one,’ ‘two,’ ‘three.’ At the word ‘three,’
you can look for me everywhere! I simply
won’t be around!”</p>
<p>The snake looked the other way and ran off
a “onetathree,” then turning around with
his mouth wide open to have his dinner at last.
You see, he counted so fast just to give the
bee as little time as possible, under the contract
they had made.</p>
<p>But if he opened his mouth wide for his
dinner, he held it open in complete surprise.
There was no bee to be found anywhere! He
looked on the floor. He looked on the sides
of the hollow tree. He looked in each nook
and cranny. He looked the little shrub all
over. Nothing! The bee had simply disappeared!</p>
<p>Now, the snake understood that if his trick
of spinning the top with his tail was extraordinary,
this trick of the bee was almost
miraculous. Where had that good-for-nothing
lazybones gone to? Here? No! There? No!
Where then? Nowhere! There was no way to
find the little bee!</p>
<p>“Well,” said the snake at last, “I give up!
Where are you?”</p>
<p>A little voice seemed to come from a long
way off, but still from the middle of the space
inside the hollow tree.</p>
<p>“You won’t eat me if I reappear?” it said.</p>
<p>“No, I won’t eat you!” said the snake.</p>
<p>“Promise?”</p>
<p>“I promise! But where are you?”</p>
<p>“Here I am,” said the bee, coming out on
one of the leaves of the little shrub.</p>
<p>It was not such a great mystery after all.
That shrub was a Sensitive-plant, a plant
that is very common in South America, especially
in the North of the Republic of Argentina,
where Sensitive-plants grow to quite a
good size. The peculiarity of the Sensitive-plant
is that it shrivels up its leaves at the
slightest contact. The leaves of this shrub were
unusually large, as is true of the Sensitive-plants
around the city of Misiones. You see,
the moment the bee lighted on a leaf, it folded
up tight about her, hiding her completely
from view. Now, the snake had been living
next to that plant all the season long, and had
never noticed anything unusual about it.
The little bee had paid attention to such
things, however; and her knowledge this
time had saved her life.</p>
<p>The snake was very much ashamed at being
bested by such a little bee; and he was not
very nice about it either. So much so, in
fact, that the bee spent most of the night
reminding him of the promise he had made
not to eat her.</p>
<p>And it was a long, endless night for the
little bee. She sat on the floor in one corner
and the snake coiled up in the other corner
opposite. Pretty soon it began to rain so
hard that the water came pouring in through
the hole at the top of the tree and made quite
a puddle on the floor. The bee sat there and
shivered and shivered; and every so often
the snake would raise his head as though to
swallow her at one gulp. “You promised!
You promised! You promised!” And the
snake would lower his head, sheepishlike,
because he did not want the bee to think him
a dishonest, as well as a stupid snake.</p>
<p>The little bee, who had been used to a
warm hive at home and to warm sunlight out
of doors, had never dreamed there could be
so much cold anywhere as there was in that
hollow tree. Nor had there ever been a
night so long!</p>
<p>But the moment there was a trace of daylight
at the hole in the top of the tree, the bee
bade the snake good-by and crawled out.
She tried her wings; and this time they
worked all right. She flew in a bee-line
straight for the door of the hive.</p>
<p>The policemen were standing there and she
began to cry. But they simply stepped aside
without saying a word, and let her in. They
understood, you see, as wise old bees, that
this wayward child was not the lazy bee they
had driven away the evening before, but a
sadder and wiser child who now knew something
about the world she had to live in.</p>
<p>And they were right. Never before was
there such a bee for working from morning
till night, day in, day out, gathering pollen
and honey from the flowers. When Autumn
came she was the most respected bee in the
hive and she was appointed teacher of the
young bees who would do the work the following
year. And her first lesson was something
like this:</p>
<p>“It is not because bees are intelligent but
because they work that makes them such
wonderful little things. I used my intelligence
only once—and that was to save my
life. I should not have gotten into that
trouble, however, if I had worked, like all
the other bees. I used to waste my strength
just flying around doing nothing. I should
not have been any more tired if I had worked.
What I needed was a sense of duty; and I
got it that night I spent with the snake in the
hollow tree.</p>
<p>“Work, my little bees, work!—remembering
that what we are all working for, the happiness
of everybody, will be hard enough to get
if each of us does his full duty. This is what
people say, and it is just as true of bees.
Work well and faithfully and you will be
happy. There is no sounder philosophy for
a man or for a bee!”</p>
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