Questions and tasks
1. What questions did the Elephant’s Child ask the animals? Why?
2. What did the Elephant’s Child want to find out when he set off to the Limpopo River?
3. What question did the Elephant’s Child ask the Crocodile when he saw him for the first time? What did the Crocodile answer?
4. What advantages did the Elephant’s Child get thanks to his curtiosity?
5. Describe how the family met the Elelphant's Child and what happened then.
6. Make up the plan of the story and retell it.
The Sing-Song of Old Man Kangaroo[128]
Not always was the Kangaroo as now we do ehold him[129]
, but a Different Animal with four short legs. He was grey and he was woolly, and his pride was inordinate: he danced on an outcrop in the middle of Australia, and he went to the Little God Nqa.He went to Nqa at six before breakfast, saying, ‘Make me different from all other animals by five this afternoon.’
Up jumped Nqa from his seat on the sand-flat and shouted, ‘Go away!’
He was grey and he was woolly, and his pride was inordinate; he danced on a rock-ledge in the middle of Australia, and he went to the Middle God Nquing.
He went to Nquing at eight after breakfast saying, ‘Make me different from other animals; make me, also, wonderfully popular by five this afternoon.’
Up jumped Nquing from his burrow in the spinifex[130]
and shouted, ‘Go away!’He was grey and he was woolly, and his pride was inordinate; he danced on a sandbank in the middle of Australia, and he went to the Big God Nqong.
He went to Nqong at ten before dinner-time, saying, ‘Make me different from all other animals; make me popular and wonderfully run after by five this afternoon.’
Up jumped Nqong from his bath in the saltpan and shouted, ‘Yes, I will!’
Nqong called Dingo – Yellow-Dog Dingo – always hungry, dusty in the sunshine, and showed him Kangaroo. Nqong said, ‘Dingo! Wake up, Dingo! Do you see that gentlemen dancing on an ashpit? He wants to be popular and very truly run after. Dingo, make him so!’
Up jumped Dingo – Yellow-Dog Dingo – and said, ‘What, that cat-rabbit?’
Off ran Dingo – Yellow-Dog Dingo – always hungry, grinning[132]
like a coal-scuttle, – ran after Kangaroo.