The
Cooper And The Two Dragons
In Switzerland lived a man,
cooper was his state, which one
day climbs the soft inclined side
of the surrounding mountain to a
forest of oaks and birches to
seek wood there. It was the
autumn and the ground was covered
with a thick carpet of dead
leafs. Our man deviated soon from
the path, in search of some good
low branch which he can cut and
charge on his mule.
At the falling night, he noted
that he had been mislaid. He
scanned the darkness in the hope
to see the campfire of some
hunter or the hut of a coalman.
The branches lacerated his face
while he advanced in the obscure
forest, and sudden it seemed to
him that the ground was falling
under his steps. He released the
leading-rein of his mule, tried
to advance, lost foot and fell at
the bottom from a ravine,
bringing in his fall several
roots and stones. At the bottom,
the ground was covered with mud
and the air impregnated of a
strong odor of manure and burned
foliage. Exhausted, the cooper
shrivelled in a corner and fell
asleep.
With the pale gleam of the dawn,
he woke up, sored all over, and
contemplated the thin band of sky
which cut out between the walls
of the ravine, so high and abrupt
that he could not think of
climbing them, and he sank in a
deep despair. Then he heard the
sigh of a drowsy animal, so near
and so powerful that he felt his
hair to straigt up on his head.
This breath was hot like the
breath of a furnace and passably
sulfurous. It seemed to emanate
on the side opposite of the
ravine and the cooper leaned
ahead and scanned the darkness.
In a jump, he stand erected. Not
far from him, their folded up
rings and their massive forms
cutting out vaguely in the dim
light, their heavy half closed
eyelids because the winter
torpor, two enormous dragons were
rested.
Our man fell to knees to beg the
sky. At this time there, one of
the dragons emerged from its
torpor. The wings folded up like
a fan, it came out of the cave in
a great unfolding of scaly rings,
carried by four short clawed
legs. It agitated the tail in
direction of the cooper and it
was rolled up around him. The
dragon looked a few moments at
the prisoner with glaucous eyes,
then released him and re-entered
in its den, leaving poor man with
his knees trembling of terror,
but unharmed.
Knowing his rescue improbable and
his escape impossible, the cooper
spent the winter in the ravine,
accompanied by the drowsy
dragons. He nourished from
mushrooms growing on the wet
walls, heated by the breath of
the dragons, and was refreshed by
collecting the dew in his hands.
As he was left in peace, he lost
his fear and, one night when the
snowflakes fell thick and where
cold bit him, he slipped into the
cave and settled himself well at
the heat from the hollow of the
rings. One of the dragons turned
the head but, accepting the
intrusion, it took again its
position and left him quiet.
The cooper thus spent the night
and all those which followed and,
with the return of spring, when
the melting made waters cascade
in the ravine, the dragons saved
his life. One morning, he woke up
alone and frozen in the smoked
den. By the opening penetrated
the noise of a large beat of
wings. He precipitated outside
and saw one of the dragons
spreading largely its membranous
wings and, whipping the air from
its tail, rising in the sky. The
other dragons was also on the
point of flying away in the
bright light of the morning and,
crouch in mud, it slowly unfolded
its wings, such insect hardly
released of its cocoon. The
cooper seizes it by the tail and
he hanged of all his forces while
the animal flapped the air to
rise from the ground.
Arrived at the edge of the
ravine, the man opened the arms
and fell gently on the ground. He
looked for a moment the rise of
the dragons in the luminous sky.
Then it was put in search of the
path from which he had deviated
the preceding autumn and followed
it until he reach his home.
There, he told his adventure to
his friends and relative amazed
which held him for dead since his
mule had returned alone, several
months before.
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