Three Sparrows
Toby Grumbleton worked with his uncle down in one of the deepest mines
in Ballarat. If you had searched the whole district in that gold
hunting region, you couldn’t have found a more selfish, lazy, and
disobedient boy than Toby. In consequence of his surly and complaining
disposition his companions had bestowed upon him the nickname of “Toby
the Growler,” and he well deserved the title; for a greater snivelling,
discontented youth never existed.
One day, while at work in the mine, Toby was ordered to gather together
all the blunt tools and send them up to the surface to be sharpened. As
usual, Toby began to grumble, whereupon his uncle gave him a good
thrashing, and the “Growler” ran off into one of the usual drives or
passages of the mine to indulge in a sulking fit. Of the many dark and
wide caverns underground, none in the whole pit was so large and so
gloomy and dismal as the one in which “Toby the Growler” had taken
refuge, yet the boy had not been there long before he became aware of a
strange yellow-coloured glow lighting up the drive. Looking up, he
beheld a little old dwarf, with a lamp in his hand, standing over him.
Such a plain, ugly-looking creature Toby had never seen before, though
there are any number of queer-looking fellows at Ballarat. The intruder
was small, not nearly so tall as Toby, but his head was a rasper, and
appeared as if it had belonged to several ancient individuals in
succession, the eyes very red, and omitting a fiery glow. He was
attired in a suit of brown russet, with a long sugar-loaf hat, and a
crutch staff.
“Get up, Toby the Growler, and follow me,” cried the dwarf in a brief
tone, and looking at him with those horrid eyes. Toby felt inclined to
disobey, but his heart sank within him at sight of the creature, and he
therefore followed, grumbling as he went, and wondering where the ugly
little humpback would lead him. Of one thing the boy was certain—that
the end of the subterranean passage would effectually bar the progress
of the unwelcome visitor; but the dim cave seemed to extend and open
out before them as they proceeded, until it took the shape of a long
railway tunnel, from which they at length emerged into the bright open
sunlight, beaming down upon a landscape fairer than a child’s dream.
The sudden transit from what appeared to be the bowels of a great high
mountain to the noonday light almost blinded our friend Toby; but the
dwarf touched him with his staff, and lo! the boy beheld a charming
country teeming with life and beauty. Here were soft grassy spots,
shaded by trees bending with ripe and golden-hued fruit; yonder a range
of hills clothed with richest verdure, and at the feet of which a broad
lake gleamed like a burnished shield. There were swans on the lake, and
birds of bright plumage on the trees and in the air, and birds
everywhere around.
“What place is this, sir?” cried Toby in amazement.
“This is the land of the three sparrows,” answered the dwarf with a
smile. “Look there; that little white building is the home of ‘Test,’
the eldest of the three; yonder by the water is the palace of ‘Try,’
while on the hills over there you can see the castle of ‘Cure,’ the
youngest.”
“Are they real sparrows, sir?” asked Toby.
“No, boy, only in form. They are Australian elves. Every twenty years
the great body of elfins in this country transform three of their
number into the shape of sparrows, to govern this land, and also for
other purposes, of which you may judge for yourself.” Saying which, the
dwarf caught the Growler in his arms, and in an instant they were
standing by the white palace on the lake. All the windows and doors
were wide open, so the dwarf entered with his companion and conducted
him to a large room where Test sat perched on the back of an armchair.
He seemed a well-feathered, plump old bird and wore spectacles.
“Ah, Grip, my trusty messenger,” he cried, “I see you have returned
with the Growler; take him hence and test him in the usual way.”
“Very well, your Excellency,” and the dwarf bent low in obeisance and
retired. He led Toby away into a large empty hall, and standing him up
beside the door, said, “Toby, Toby, shut your eyes and see what Fate
will send you.” The Growler closed his eyes, when the voice of the
dwarf was again heard. “Toby, Toby, open your eyes and see what Fate
has sent you.”
The boy opened his eyes and beheld the most magnificent apartment it is
possible to conceive. Tables with marble tops, inlaid with gold, were
loaded with choice fruits and lollies, and by some enchantment the
boy’s ragged clothes were changed to a gorgeous suit of crimson velvet,
bordered with pearls, and several servants stood at hand ready to do
his bidding.
“Ah, this is as it should be!” cried the delighted Toby. “I shall never
grumble again if I am to live like this. Here are guns to shoot with;
dogs to hunt with; horses to ride, and plenty of fishing in the lake.
Ah! I shall be thoroughly satisfied now.” And the Growler set about
enjoying himself.
But alas! for human resolves. The fruit made Toby ill; one of the
horses threw him and hurt his leg; he nearly shot himself with his gun;
and was all but drowned in the lake while fishing; and so he began to
complain worse than before. But the moment he did so, the splendid
scene vanished from before him in the twinkling of an eye, and he
discovered himself in the bare and empty room again, with only his
dirty rags, and the dwarf standing grinning beside him.
“Come along with me, Toby the Growler,” cried the old fellow in a
mocking tone; and before the boy could refuse he was borne away to the
palace of Try. This old and venerable sparrow was deep in the pages of
the Observer when Grip entered with Toby.
“Whom have we here?” he inquired, addressing the dwarf.
“Please, your Worship, this is a mortal who has been tested by your
Worship’s brother, and has failed,” answered Grip.
“What is his special defect?”
“Grumbling, your Worship.”
“Humph! a common quality among mortals, more especially with farmers
and boys. Try him without delay.”
With the quickness of a shifting scene in a magic-lantern Toby was
transferred to a cottage in a lonely valley, occupied by an old lady
and gentleman, who welcomed him as if he had been their own son, and
procured for him all that he could desire. The whole day was one round
of pleasure and enjoyment, and the boy expressed himself grateful and
satisfied with his position. One simple act he had to perform in return
for all this kindness, and that was to draw seven buckets of water from
a well every morning, for the use of the cottage. Yet Toby the Growler,
unmindful of past experience, began to grumble again, and once more he
found himself by the lake with the dwarf at his elbow.
“For the last time, come with me, Toby the Growler,” he cried in a
terrible voice, while his red flaming eyes shot out flashes like fire.
The boy felt utterly powerless to resist, and swift as a streak of
lightning he was carried to the gloomy abode of Cure, the youngest of
the three sparrows. The castle was as dark as a dungeon, but the guide
found his way within to the reception-hall, where Cure, in regal
feathers, sat surrounded by a guard of crows bearing torches.
“Who is this?” inquired the youngest sparrow sternly.
“A grumbling boy, your Highness.”
“Let him be cured. Take him away.”
The words were scarcely spoken ere poor Toby found himself instantly
transformed into a donkey with long ears. He was on a hard, hilly road,
dragging a heavy dray after him loaded with firewood. At first the lad
felt somewhat doubtful respecting the sudden transformation, but a
smart thump across his buttock soon convinced him he was no longer an
idle boy, but a beast of burden, with a cruel youth for his master, who
beat and bruised him unmercifully with a thick stick. Oh! the long and
weary hours he had to toil, while the miserable food he had to eat made
him weep, and wet the winkers with his tears. He thought of his uncle
and his home, and all the many kindnesses he had received, and had
repaid with complaints and grumblings, and he vowed earnestly, and with
true penitence, that if ever he got back again to the mine and to his
kind relative, he would avoid complaining for the rest of his life.
With this firm resolve came another sudden shifting in the magic scene.
So sudden was it that Toby rubbed his eyes, and found himself in that
self-same narrow drive in the mine at Ballarat, with his uncle shaking
him by the collar, and telling him that it was time to go to the
surface.
Toby is a man now, and is married and has several children; and if one
of these begins to grumble, he does not forget to remind them of the
Three Sparrows.