Tags:
General,
Fantasy,
Juvenile Nonfiction,
Classics,
Action & Adventure,
Family,
Juvenile Fiction,
Fantasy & Magic,
Short Stories,
Animals,
Dragons; Unicorns & Mythical,
Moomins (Fictitious Characters),
Children's Stories; Swedish,
Fantasy Fiction; Swedish
furthermore he carried an inimitable expression on his face, an expression that no other dog could ever have. Possibly the jewels were more important to Sniff than the expression, but in any case he loved Cedric.
And as soon as he had given Cedric away he regretted it to desperation. He neither ate nor slept nor talked. He only regretted.
'But dearest Sniffy,' Moominmamma said worriedly, 'if you really did love Cedric so much, then why didn't you at least give him to someone you like and not to Gaffsie's daughter?'
'Pooh,' Sniff mumbled, staring at the floor with his poor reddened eyes, 'it was Moomintroll's fault. He told me that if one gives something away that one really likes, then one will get it back ten times over and feel wonderful afterwards. He tricked me to it.'
'Oh,' Moominmamma said. 'Well, well.' She didn't find anything better to say. She felt she had to sleep on the matter.
Evening fell, and Moominmamma went to bed. Everybody said good night, and the lights were put out, one after the other. Only Sniff lay awake, staring up at the ceiling, where the shadow of a large branch was moving up and down in the moonlight. Through the open window he could hear Snufkin's mouth organ playing in the warm night down by the river.
When Sniff's thoughts became too black he jumped out of bed and padded to the window. He climbed down the rope ladder and ran through the garden where the peonies gleamed white and all the shadows were coal-black. The moon was high, far away and impersonal.
Snufkin was sitting outside his tent.
He didn't play any complete tunes tonight, only small shreds of music that resembled questions or those small concurring sounds one makes when one doesn't know what to say.
Sniff sat down beside him and looked disconsolately into the river.
'Hullo,' Snufkin said. 'Good thing you came. I've been sitting here thinking about a story that might interest you.'
'I'm not interested in fairy tales tonight,' Sniff mumbled, wrinkling himself up.
'It's no fairy tale,' Snufkin said. 'It's happened. It happened to an aunt of my mother's.'
And Snufkin started his story, sucking at his pipe and now and then splashing with his toes in the dark river water.
*
'Once upon a time there was a lady who loved all her belongings. She had no children to amuse or annoy her, she didn't need to work or cook, she didn't mind what people said about her and she wasn't the scared sort. Also she had lost her taste for play. In other words, she found life a bit boring.
'But she loved her beautiful things and she had collected them all her life, sorted them and polished them and made them more and more beautiful to look at. One really didn't believe one's eyes when one entered her house.'
'She was a happy lady,' Sniff nodded. 'What kinds of things did she have?'
'Well,' Snufkin said. 'She was as happy as she knew how to be. And now don't interrupt me, please. Then, one night it happened that this aunt of my mother's went down to her dark scullery to eat a cold cutlet, and she swallowed a large bone. She felt funny for several days afterwards, and when she didn't get any better she went to her doctor. He tapped her chest and listened to it and X-rayed her and shook her about, and at last he told her
that this cutlet bone had stuck crosswise somewhere inside her. It was impossible to prise it loose. In other words, he feared the worst.'
'You don't say,' Sniff said, showing a little more interest in the story. 'He thought the lady was going to kick the bucket but he didn't dare tell her?'
'That's about it,' Snufkin agreed. 'But this aunt of my mother's wasn't easily scared, so she made him tell her how much time she had left, and then she went home to think. A few weeks wasn't very much.
'She suddenly remembered that in her youth she had wanted to explore the Amazonas, to learn deep sea diving, to build a large nice house for lonely children, to see a volcano and to arrange a gigantic party for all her friends. But all
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