The Frog
and the Crocodile
Once, there was a frog who lived in the middle of
a swamp. His entire family had lived in that
swamp for generations, but this particular frog
decided that he had had quite enough wetness to
last him a lifetime. He decided that he was going
to find a dry place to live instead.
The only thing that separated him from dry land
was a swampy, muddy, swiftly flowing river. But
the river was home to all sorts of slippery,
slittering snakes that loved nothing better than
a good, plump frog for dinner, so Frog didn't
dare try to swim across.
So for many days, the frog stayed put, hopping
along the bank, trying to think of a way to get
across.
The snakes hissed and jeered at him, daring him
to come closer, but he refused. Occasionally they
would slither closer, jaws open to attack, but
the frog always leaped out of the way. But no
matter how far upstream he searched or how far
downstream, the frog wasn't able to find a way
across the water.
He had felt certain that there would be a bridge,
or a place where the banks came together, yet all
he found was more reeds and water. After a while,
even the snakes stopped teasing him and went off
in search of easier prey.
The frog sighed in frustration and sat to sulk in
the rushes. Suddenly, he spotted two big eyes
staring at him from the water. The giant
log-shaped animal opened its mouth and asked him,
"What are you doing, Frog? Surely there are
enough flies right there for a meal."
The frog croaked in surprise and leaped away from
the crocodile. That creature could swallow him
whole in a moment without thinking about it! Once
he was a satisfied that he was a safe distance
away, he answered. "I'm tired of living in
swampy waters, and I want to travel to the other
side of the river. But if I swim across, the
snakes will eat me."
The crocodile harrumphed in agreement and sat,
thinking, for a while. "Well, if you're
afraid of the snakes, I could give you a ride
across," he suggested.
"Oh no, I don't think so," Frog
answered quickly. "You'd eat me on the way
over, or go underwater so the snakes could get
me!"
"Now why would I let the snakes get you? I
think they're a terrible nuisance with all their
hissing and slithering! The river would be much
better off without them altogether! Anyway, if
you're so worried that I might eat you, you can
ride on my tail."
The frog considered his offer. He did want to get
to dry ground very badly, and there didn't seem
to be any other way across the river. He looked
at the crocodile from his short, squat buggy eyes
and wondered about the crocodile's motives. But
if he rode on the tail, the croc couldn't eat him
anyway. And he was right about the snakes--no
self-respecting crocodile would give a meal to
the snakes.
"Okay, it sounds like a good plan to me.
Turn around so I can hop on your tail."
The crocodile flopped his tail into the marshy
mud and let the frog climb on, then he waddled
out to the river. But he couldn't stick his tail
into the water as a rudder because the frog was
on it -- and if he put his tail in the water, the
snakes would eat the frog. They clumsily floated
downstream for a ways, until the crocodile said,
"Hop onto my back so I can steer straight
with my tail." The frog moved, and the
journey smoothed out.
From where he was sitting, the frog couldn't see
much except the back of Crocodile's head.
"Why don't you hop up on my head so you can
see everything around us?" Crocodile
invited.
"But I don't want to see anything
else," the frog answered, suddenly feeling
nervous.
"Oh, come now. It's a beautiful view! Surely
you don't think that I'm going to eat you after
we're halfway across. My home is in the marsh--
what would be the point of swimming across the
river full of snakes if I didn't leave you on the
other bank?"
Frog was curious about what the river looked
like, so he climbed on top of Crocodile's head.
The river looked almost pretty from this view. He
watched dragonflies darting over the water and
smiled in anticipation as he saw firm ground
beyond the cattails. When the crocodile got close
enough, the frog would leap off his head towards
freedom. He wouldn't give the croc a chance to
eat him.
"My nose tickles," the crocodile
complained suddenly, breaking into the frog's
train of thought. "I think there might be a
fly buzzing around it somewhere, or a piece of
cattail fluff swept into it while I was taking
you across the river."
"I don't see a fly," the frog said,
peering at the crocodile's green snout. It seemed
odd that anything could tickle a crocodile
through it's thick skin.
"Would you go check my nose for a piece of
cattail fluff, then?" the crocodile begged,
twitching his nose. "I'm afraid I'll sneeze
and send you flying. I don't want to feed you to
the snakes." A tear seeped out of his eye,
as if he was holding back a mighty sneeze.
The bank isn't too far, the frog thought. And
it's the least he could do to repay him for
bringing him over. So he hopped onto the
crocodile's snout and checked the nostrils. Just
a little closer, and he could jump... "I
don't see--" he began.
Just then, with a terrific CHOMP! the frog
disappeared. The crocodile licked his lips in
satisfaction and gave a tiny half-sneeze.
"Good, I feel much better already," he
smiled, and turned around to go back home.
<<
BACK TO INDEX | NEXT PARABLE >>
|