Especialidad de la casa

Especialidad de la casa:
Aperitivo de fragmentos variados de libros, con aderezo filmográfico y televisivo, extraídos de la despensa del lugar. Anteriormente mantenidos por su recolectora como conservas en papel, han sido rescatados del fondo de la alacena para su degustación digital por los lectores.

jueves, 1 de noviembre de 2012

Japanese Fairy Tales, Grace James

   "A novice cleaned and scoured the tea-kettle, and it came out as pretty as you please. The priest turned it this way and that, and upside down, looked into it, tapped it with his finger-nail. He smiled. “A bargain,” he cried, “a bargain!” and rubbed his hands. He set the kettle upon a box covered over with a purple cloth, and looked at it so long that first he was fain to rub his eyes many times, and then to close them altogether. His head dropped forward and he slept.
   And then, believe me, the wonderful thing happened. The tea-kettle moved, though no hand was near it. A hairy head, with two bright eyes, looked out of the spout. The lid jumped up and down. Four brown and hairy paws appeared, and a fine bushy tail. In a minute the kettle was down from the box and going round and round looking at things.
   “A very comfortable room, to be sure,” says the tea-kettle.  
   Pleased enough to find itself so well lodged, it soon began to dance and to caper nimbly and to sing at the top of its voice. Three or four novices were studying in the next room. “The old man is lively,” they said; “only hark to him. What can he be at?” And they laughed in their sleeves.
   Heaven’s mercy, the noise that the tea-kettle made! Bang! bang! Thud! thud! thud!
   The novices soon stopped laughing. One of them slid aside the kara-kami and peeped through.
   “Arah, the devil and all’s in it!” he cried. “Here’s the master’s old tea-kettle turned into a sort of a badger. The gods protect us from witchcraft, or for certain we shall be lost!”

Libro leído en: The Project Gutenberg

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