How The Rhinoceros Got His Skin
by Ruyard Kipling
Once upon a time, on an uninhabited island on the shores of the Red Sea, there
lived a Parsee from whose hat the rays of the sun were reflected in more-than-oriental
splendour. And the Parsee lived by the Red Sea with nothing but his hat and his
knife and a cooking-stove of the kind that you must particularly never touch. And
one day he took flour and water and currants and plums and sugar and things, and
made himself one cake which was two feet across and three feet thick. It was indeed
a Superior Comestible (that's magic), and he put it on stove because he was allowed
to cook on the stove, and he baked it and he baked it till it was all done brown
and smelt most sentimental. But just as he was going to eat it there came down to
the beach from the Altogether Uninhabited Interior one Rhinoceros with a horn on
his nose, two piggy eyes, and few manners. In those days the Rhinoceros's skin fitted
him quite tight. There were no wrinkles in it anywhere. He looked exactly like a
Noah's Ark Rhinoceros, but of course much bigger. All the same, he had no manners
then, and he has no manners now, and he never will have any manners. He said, 'How!'
and the Parsee left that cake and climbed to the top of a palm tree with nothing
on but his hat, from which the rays of the sun were always reflected in more-than-oriental
splendour. And the Rhinoceros upset the oil-stove with his nose, and the cake rolled
on the sand, and he spiked that cake on the horn of his nose, and he ate it, and
he went away, waving his tail, to the desolate and Exclusively Uninhabited Interior
which abuts on the islands of Mazanderan, Socotra, and Promontories of the Larger
Equinox. Then the Parsee came down from his palm-tree and put the stove on its legs
and recited the following Sloka, which, as you have not heard, I will now proceed
to relate:--
Them that takes cakes Which the Parsee-man bakes Makes dreadful mistakes.
And there was a great deal more in that than you would think.
Because, five weeks later, there was a heat wave in the Red Sea, and everybody
took off all the clothes they had. The Parsee took off his hat; but the Rhinoceros
took off his skin and carried it over his shoulder as he came down to the beach
to bathe. In those days it buttoned underneath with three buttons and looked like
a waterproof. He said nothing whatever about the Parsee's cake, because he had eaten
it all; and he never had any manners, then, since, or henceforward. He waddled straight
into the water and blew bubbles through his nose, leaving his skin on the beach.
Presently the Parsee came by and found the skin, and he smiled one smile that
ran all round his face two times. Then he danced three times round the skin and
rubbed his hands. Then he went to his camp and filled his hat with cake-crumbs,
for the Parsee never ate anything but cake, and never swept out his camp. He took
that skin, and he shook that skin, and he scrubbed that skin, and he rubbed that
skin just as full of old, dry, stale, tickly cake-crumbs and some burned currants
as ever it could possibly hold. Then he climbed to the top of his palm-tree and
waited for the Rhinoceros to come out of the water and put it on.
And the Rhinoceros did. He buttoned it up with the three buttons, and it tickled
like cake crumbs in bed. Then he wanted to scratch, but that made it worse; and
then he lay down on the sands and rolled and rolled and rolled, and every time he
rolled the cake crumbs tickled him worse and worse and worse. Then he ran to the
palm-tree and rubbed and rubbed and rubbed himself against it. He rubbed so much
and so hard that he rubbed his skin into a great fold over his shoulders, and another
fold underneath, where the buttons used to be (but he rubbed the buttons off), and
he rubbed some more folds over his legs. And it spoiled his temper, but it didn't
make the least difference to the cake-crumbs. They were inside his skin and they
tickled. So he went home, very angry indeed and horribly scratchy; and from that
day to this every rhinoceros has great folds in his skin and a very bad temper,
all on account of the cake-crumbs inside.
But the Parsee came down from his palm-tree, wearing his hat, from which the
rays of the sun were reflected in more-than-oriental splendour, packed up his cooking-stove,
and went away in the direction of Orotavo, Amygdala, the Upland Meadows of Anantarivo,
and the Marshes of Sonaput.
THIS Uninhabited Island Is off Cape Gardafui, By the Beaches of Socotra And the
Pink Arabian Sea: But it's hot--too hot from Suez For the likes of you and me Ever
to go In a P. and 0. And call on the Cake-Parsee!
A post-story note: It can be very useful to rememeber that what most drives us are the myths and stories we tell ourselves. They influence the things we desire, the way we see the world, the things we delete or include and the distortions we make in our perceptions. What do you notice about this story? If you were to re tell it from memory, what parts would you remember? Why?
|