The story of
Little Kettlehead "An Awful Warning To Bad Babas"
or "The Story Of Little Degchie-Head" By Helen Bannerman
Once upon a time
there was a little girl in India, and her name was Mary. And she was very
fond
of poking fires.
Her Mother used
often to scold her and pull her away, but it was no use. She always poked
fires
when she got the chance.
But for a long
time she had not managed to poke any fire, till at last one day she noticed
that her
Mother was very busy taking the cook's account.
So off she set to the cook-house as fast as she could run.
And began poking the fire joyfully.
But the cooking-places
were very very high up, and she could not reach them properly, so she
pulled forward the big kettle. in which the cook boiled the hot water.
And got on to it. Then she found she could poke the fire splendidly, and she was very much pleased.
But the kettle
was round at the bottom, and not very steady, and suddenly it tipped over,
and
she fell into the fire, and her head was burned right off.
There she lay,
with no head, and oh! how frightened Domingo was when he found a
Missy Baba with no head lying in his kitchen.
He picked her, and set her on her feet.
And seizing the kettle, popped it on for a head.
And tied on her sun bonet to keep it firm.
Then he drew
the best eyes, nose and mouth he could with the burnt stick she
had been poking the fire with.
And sent her back to her Mother.
But when her
Mother spoke to her, Kettle-head was so frightened to show her face that she
kept
turning her back to her. And when they sat down to breakfast she would not
take off her
sun-bonnet.
she bent her
head down, so that her Father and Mother should not see her face, and she
could say nothing but
"Clip - clap - clapper - apper apper," as the lid rattled against
the kettle. And
her Father and Mother said,
"What a rude child!"
And she kept
in a corner all day, pretending to play with her doll, and crying all the
time. And the noise
she made was just "Clip - clap - clapper - apper apper."
And when her
Father and Mother went out for a walk, she would not go with them, but sat
in her corner, and
tried to hide her face, and cried "Clip - clap - clapper - apper apper."
At last night
came, and she went to bed, but still she would not take off her sun-bonnet,
for fear of losing the
only head she had, and she lay down very sorrowfully and fell asleep.
Now it just happened
to be Christmas Eve, and Old Father Christmas came in, with his bag on his
back, when
everybody was asleep, and he was very much puzzled when he saw such a strange
looking child.
"What can
I give her?" said he; "she has no proper eyes to read a book with,
and no proper nose to
smell a scent bottle - no ears to hear a drum, and no mouth for sweets. And
she couldn't kiss a doll
with that
face!" And he turned out his bag to the very bottom to try to find something.
And at the very
bottom he found a poor doll that had been all cut to pieces by some wild toy
soldiers with their sharp swords. Her body was all chopped into little bits,
and if Father Christmas had
not taken them out and given them to some wild boys, they would have chopped
her head too!
"The very thing!" said Father Christmas, and he put a little table by the bedside, and laid the doll's head on it.
It was a beautiful doll's head, with long golden hair, and real eyelashes.
When Kettle-head woke, she was delighted to find Father Christmas had brought her a new head.
She got up at once, holding it carefully in both hands.
And carried it over to the looking-glass to see how it looked.
Then, with great
care, for fear of dropping it, she went to the drawing room, and fetched the
gum bottle off her Mother's writing table.
Then she gummed her neck carefully before the glass, and stuck the beautiful new head on.
And sat very still and quiet till the gum was quite hard.
Then she got
up, and bent her head gently over to see if it was quite secure, and finding
it was, she shook it, and wagged it, and at last
she jumped six times for joy, and ran off to show her wonderful new head to
her Father and
Mother, who said, "Why Mary what have you done to yourself? Your hair
has grown a yard
long in one night, and we never saw you look so smiling before." And
they were very much pleased.
And after that
Mary would not go near a fire. Even when she held her Mother's hand she had
to be dragged
past, she was so frightened. And that is how her head has never been burned
off again.
THE END THE END THE END THE END THE END THE END
This text and pictures originally came from the wonderful website STERLING TIMES.