Hello and welcome to part 9 of Murder Story Monday. This week I explore a version of this tale entitled Little Anklebone.
Its title alone should give us a clue that this is unusual as no
other versions that I have discovered have used an anklebone as our singing bone.
This story has a touch of Red Riding Hood at the beginning and then quickly
morphs into something very unusual. There has to be a willing suspension of
disbelief to believe that a mere anklebone (all that is left of the poor
shepherd after being eaten by a wolf) can do so many things as if it were a
whole body and not just a foot. I feel the story doesn’t make it clear, but I suspect
he is meant to be a ghost and the only corporal part of him is the foot. It is
also extremely unusual in that the bone does speak, but not to call his auntie
out for encouraging the most polite wolf in literature to eat him, but rather
seems very content with his lot in life as a disembodied foot that can somehow
still play the pipe.
The source for
this tale is Wide-Awake
Stories: A Collection of Tales Told by Little Children, Between Sunset and
Sunrise, in the Panjab and Kashmir,
collected by F. A. Steel and R. C. Temple in 1884. Steel's and Temple's source
was supposedly a small boy from “the wilds” of the Gujranwala District in Punjab,
Pakistan.
This version came from here.
This version came from here.
Little
Anklebone
Pakistan
Once upon a time there was a little boy who lost his
parent so he went to live with his auntie, and she set him to herd sheep. All
day long the little fellow wandered barefoot through the pathless plain,
tending his flock, playing his tiny shepherd's pipe from morn till eve.
But one day came a great big wolf, and looked hungrily
at the small shepherd and his fat sheep, saying, "Little boy! shall I eat
you, or your sheep?"
Then the little boy answered politely, "I don't
know Mr. Wolf; I must ask my auntie."
So, all day long he piped away on his tiny pipe, and
in the evening, when he brought the flock home, he went to his auntie and said,
"Auntie dear, a great big wolf asked me today if he should eat me, or your
sheep. Which shall it be?"
Then his auntie looked at the wee little shepherd, and
at the fat flock, and said sharply, "Which shall it be? Why, you, of
course!"
So, next morning the little boy drove his flock out
into the pathless plain, and blew away cheerfully on his shepherd's pipe until
the great big wolf appeared. Then he laid aside his pipe, and, going up to the
savage beast, said, "Oh, if you please, Mr. Wolf, I asked my auntie, and
she says you are to eat me."
Now the wolf, savage as wolves always are, could not
help having just a spark of pity for the tiny barefoot shepherd who played his
pipe so sweetly, therefore he said kindly, "Could I do anything for you,
little boy, after I've eaten you?"
"Thank you!" returned the tiny shepherd.
"If you would be so kind, after you've picked the bones, as to thread my
ankle-bone on a string and hang it on the tree that weeps over the pond yonder,
I shall be much obliged."
So the wolf ate the little shepherd, picked the bones,
and afterwards hung the ankle-bone by a string to the branches of the tree,
where it danced and swung in the sunlight.
Now, one day, three robbers, who had just robbed a
palace, happening to pass that way, sat down under the tree and began to divide
the spoil. Just as they had arranged all the golden dishes and precious jewels
and costly stuffs into three heaps, a jackal howled. Now you must know that
thieves always use the jackal's cry as a note of warning, so that when at the
very same moment Little Anklebone's thread snapped, and he fell plump on the
head of the chief robber, the man imagined someone had thrown a pebble at him,
and, shouting "Run! run! We are discovered!" he bolted away as hard
as he could, followed by his companions, leaving all the treasure behind them.
"Now," said Little Anklebone to himself,
"I shall lead a fine life!"
So he gathered the treasure together, and sat under
the tree that drooped over the pond, and played so sweetly on a new shepherd's
pipe, that all the beasts of the forest, and the birds of the air, and the
fishes of the pond came to listen to him. Then Little Anklebone put marble
basins round the pond for the animals to drink out of, and in the evening the
does, and the tigresses, and the she-wolves gathered round him to be milked,
and when he had drank his fill he milked the rest into the pond, till at last
it became a pond of milk. And Little Anklebone sat by the milken pond and piped
away on his shepherd's pipe.
Now, one day, an old woman, passing by with her jar
for water, heard the sweet strains of Little Anklebone's pipe, and following
the sound, came upon the pond of milk, and saw the animals, and the birds, and
the fishes, listening to the music. She was wonderstruck, especially when
Little Anklebone, from his seat under the tree, called out, "Fill your
jar, mother! All drink who come hither!"
Then the old woman filled her jar with milk, and went
on her way rejoicing at her good fortune. But as she journeyed she met with the
king of that country, who, having been a-hunting, had lost his way in the
pathless plain.
"Give me a drink of water, good mother," he
cried, seeing the jar; "I am half dead with thirst!"
"It is milk, my son," replied the old woman;
"I got it yonder from a milken pond."
Then she told the king of the wonders she had seen, so
that he resolved to have a peep at them himself. And when he saw the milken
pond, and all the animals and birds and fishes gathered round, while Little
Anklebone played ever so sweetly on his shepherd's pipe, he said "I must
have the tiny piper, if I die for it!"
No sooner did Little Anklebone hear these words than
he set off at a run, and the king after him.
Never was there such a chase
before or since, for Little Anklebone hid himself amid the thickest briars and
thorns, and the king was so determined to have the tiny piper, that he did not
care for scratches. At last the king was successful, but no sooner did he take
hold of Little Anklebone than it began to thunder and lighten horribly, whilst
the little piper himself began to sing these words:
Oh, why do you thunder and lighten, dark
heavens?
Your noise is as nothing to what will arise,
When the does that are waiting in vain for the milking,
Find poor Little Anklebone reft from their eyes!
Your noise is as nothing to what will arise,
When the does that are waiting in vain for the milking,
Find poor Little Anklebone reft from their eyes!
Whereupon the King, seeing that it really was nothing
but an ankle-bone after all, let it go.
So, the little piper went back to his seat under the
tree by the pond, and there he sits still, and plays his shepherd's pipe, while
all the beasts of the forest, and birds of the air, and fishes of the pond,
gather round and listen to his music. And sometimes, people wandering through
the pathless plain hear the pipe, and then they say, "That is Little
Anklebone, who was eaten by a wolf ages ago!"
Stay tuned next week for a version from India.
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