A WHIPPING TOP and a little ball lay together in a box, among other
toys, and the top said to the ball, “Shall we be married, as we live in
the same box?”
But the ball, which wore a dress of morocco
leather, and thought as much of herself as any other young lady, would
not even condescend to reply.
The next day came the little boy to
whom the playthings belonged, and he painted the top red and yellow,
and drove a brass-headed nail into the middle, so that while the top was
spinning round it looked splendid.
“Look at me,” said the top to
the ball. “What do you say now? Shall we be engaged to each other? We
should suit so well; you spring, and I dance. No one could be happier
than we should be.”
“Indeed! do you think so? Perhaps you do not
know that my father and mother were morocco slippers, and that I have a
Spanish cork in my body.”
“Yes; but I am made of mahogany,” said
the top. “The major himself turned me. He has a turning lathe of his
own, and it is a great amusement to him.”
“Can I believe it?” asked the ball.
“May I never be whipped again,” said the top, “if I am not telling you the truth.”
“You
certainly know how to speak for yourself very well,” said the ball;
“but I cannot accept your proposal. I am almost engaged to a swallow.
Every time I fly up in the air, he puts his head out of the nest, and
says, ‘Will you?’ and I have said, ‘Yes,’ to myself silently, and that
is as good as being half engaged; but I will promise never to forget
you.”
“Much good that will be to me,” said the top; and they spoke to each other no more.
Next
day the ball was taken out by the boy. The top saw it flying high in
the air, like a bird, till it would go quite out of sight. Each time it
came back, as it touched the earth, it gave a higher leap than before,
either because it longed to fly upwards, or from having a Spanish cork
in its body. But the ninth time it rose in the air, it remained away,
and did not return. The boy searched everywhere for it, but he searched
in vain, for it could not be found; it was gone.
“I know very well where she is,” sighed the top; “she is in the swallow’s nest, and has married the swallow.”
The
more the top thought of this, the more he longed for the ball. His love
increased the more, just because he could not get her; and that she
should have been won by another, was the worst of all. The top still
twirled about and hummed, but he continued to think of the ball; and the
more he thought of her, the more beautiful she seemed to his fancy.
Thus
several years passed by, and his love became quite old. The top, also,
was no longer young; but there came a day when he looked handsomer than
ever; for he was gilded all over. He was now a golden top, and whirled
and danced about till he hummed quite loud, and was something worth
looking at; but one day he leaped too high, and then he, also, was gone.
They searched everywhere, even in the cellar, but he was nowhere to be
found. Where could he be? He had jumped into the dust-bin, where all
sorts of rubbish were lying: cabbage-stalks, dust, and rain-droppings
that had fallen down from the gutter under the roof.
“Now I am in
a nice place,” said he; “my gilding will soon be washed off here. Oh
dear, what a set of rabble I have got amongst!” And then he glanced at a
curious round thing like an old apple, which lay near a long, leafless
cabbage-stalk. It was, however, not an apple, but an old ball, which had
lain for years in the gutter, and was soaked through with water.
“Thank
goodness, here comes one of my own class, with whom I can talk,” said
the ball, examining the gilded top. “I am made of morocco,” she said. “I
was sewn together by a young lady, and I have a Spanish cork in my
body; but no one would think it, to look at me now. I was once engaged
to a swallow; but I fell in here from the gutter under the roof, and I
have lain here more than five years, and have been thoroughly drenched.
Believe me, it is a long time for a young maiden.”
The top said
nothing, but he thought of his old love; and the more she said, the more
clear it became to him that this was the same ball.
The servant then came to clean out the dust-bin.
“Ah,”
she exclaimed, “here is a gilt top.” So the top was brought again to
notice and honor, but nothing more was heard of the little ball. He
spoke not a word about his old love; for that soon died away. When the
beloved object has lain for five years in a gutter, and has been
drenched through, no one cares to know her again on meeting her in a
dust-bin.
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