This is a story about a boy. His name is Anansi.
There was a great famine in the country where Anansi lived. Anansi and his
little brothers and sisters were very hungry. The boy could not think of
anything but food.
"This hunger will kill me!" he often said.
One day he went out of the house and walked to the seashore.
"I shall try to catch a little fish," he thought.
He sat on the seashore watching, watching, watching, but nothing came. Then
suddenly he saw a green island in the sea. Anansi climbed into a little red
boat, and soon he came to the green island.
He got out of the boat, stood under the tree and looked up at big nuts high
above him. He tried to climb up the tree and get the nuts, but that was not
easy. He tried again and again, but he could not get the nuts. The nuts were
laughing at him!
"I will get you, my dear nuts!" he said. And he tired again and again
to get the nuts. At last he got one nut.
"Now I have you!" he cried. He tried to throw it into his little boat,
but the nut fell into the sea.
Well, there are many more nuts in the tree," said Anansi, but the second
nut fell into the sea too. Seven times that happened, seven good, big nuts were
in the sea! The wind carried them far, far away. The boy cried and cried, but
nuts have no ears! They did not come back.
Then Anansi went to the forest. He saw a little house there. An old man came out
of the house.
"What do you want here, my boy?" asked the old man. "Do not be
afraid of me. Tell me everything."
So Anansi told him about the famine and about his hungry people. Then he told
the old man about the nuts and cried again. The old man took Anansi's hand and
said: "Do not cry, my boy! I have something to tell you. It is better than
nuts." He went into his house and brought a little pot.
"Take this home and give it to your mother. Now you and your people will
never be hungry. When your mother wants to make dinner for her family, she must
only say: 'Pot, pot, what you did for the old man, please do for me!'
Anansi thanked him and went quickly away. He came to the little boat, got in,
and said at once: "Pot, pot, what you did for the old man, please do for
me!"
And the pot gave him a good dinner. Anansi ate it all and was strong again. He
soon came home. But he did not want to give the pot to his mother. "It is
my pot. I shall have it and eat when I want to."
So Anansi put the pot in some dark place of the house and spoke to it when
nobody was at home.
Every day his mother and his brothers and sisters went out to look for food.
Anansi did not go with them. He said: "Oh, I am ill, I cannot go."
When he was at home alone, he ran to his pot, and the pot gave him a good
dinner.
Anansi's brothers and sisters grew thinner and thinner every day, but Anansi
grew fatter and fatter.
"Why is he so fat?" one of his brothers asked one day. "I think
he has a secret. I shall find it out."
And the next day he did not go out to look for food with his mother. He stayed
at home. Anansi thought that nobody was at home, took his pot and said:
"Pot, pot, what you did for the old man, please do for me!"
And the pot gave him a good dinner.
His brother listened to the words. Now he knew about the pot, and he told his
mother about it. The poor woman began to cry.
"I have a bad son!" she cried.
That day she told Anansi to go out of the house together with the other
children. She stayed at home and asked the pot to give her dinner.
"How happy my children will be when they come home!" she thought.
Anansi came home with the other children. Their mother gave them dinner, but
Anansi said: "I am very ill, I cannot eat it. I shall go to bed."
But he did not go to bed. He went to the place where the pot was. But the pot
was not there!
The next day his mother went to the village square with the pot in her hands.
She stopped there and began to beat the pot with a little stick. Many people
came to the place. The she said: "Pot, pot, what you did for the old man,
please do for me."
And the pot gave her food! The woman spoke to the pot many times, and the pot
gave the food to the hungry people. But when she spoke to the pot for the
fiftieth time, the pot melted away. There was nothing on the ground in front of
the poor woman.
Anansi was very angry. He decided to go to the old man again and tell him
everything. "He will give me another pot," he thought.
When Anansi came to the seashore, the little red boat was there. He got into it,
and soon he came to the old man's house. The old man listened to Anansi's story.
"I have no pot to give you, my boy, but I will give you this stick. You say
the same words to it, only instead of 'pot, pot' say 'stick, stick...'"
Anansi took the stick and ran to the boat. He could not wait a minute. He said
quickly: "Stick, stick, what you did for the old man, please do for
me!"
And the stick did! It beat him on the back, on his fat face, on his fat hands
and legs, it beat all his fat body! He did not know what to do. He jumped into
the water and swam away as quickly as he could. He left the boat with the stick
in it.
He came home crying like a small child, but he did not tell anybody about the
stick. But that was a good lesson to him. People say that now everything he gets
he shares with his brothers and sisters and with other people too.