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VI. How Master Rabbit gave himself Airs. (Micmac.) It happened once that Lox
was living in great luxury. He had a wigwam full of hundreds of dried
sea-ducks, moose meat, maple sugar, and corn. He gave a dinner, and among the
guests invited Marten and Mahtigwess, the Rabbit. Now it is a great weakness
of Master Rabbit that he is much given to hinting at one minute, and saying
pretty plainly the next, that he has been in better society than that around
him, and has lived among great people, and no one was quicker than the Marten
to find out that wherein any one was foolish or feeble. So when Master Rabbit,
smoothing down his white fur, said it was the only kind of a coat worn by the
aristocracy, Marten humbly inquired, "if that were so, how he came by
it." "It shows,"
replied Master Rabbit, "that I have habitually kept company with
gentlemen." "How did you get that
slit in your lip?" inquired Marten, who knew very well what this Indian
really was. "Ah!" replied the
Rabbit, "where I live they use knives and forks. And one day, while
eating with some great sagamores, my knife slipped, and I cut my lip." "And why are your mouth
and whiskers always going when you are still? Is that high style?" "Yes; I am meditating,
planning, combining great affairs; talking to myself, you see. That's the way we
do." "But why do you always
hop? Why don't you sometimes walk, like other people?" "Ah, that's our
style. We gentlemen don't run, like the vulgar. We have a gait of our
own, don't you know?" "Indeed! Well, if you
don't mind a question, I would like to know why you always scamper away so
suddenly, and jump so far and so rapidly when you run." "Aw! don't you know? I
used to be employed in very genteel business; public service, — in fact,
diplomatic. I carried dispatches (weegadigunn, Micmac; wighiggin,
Pass.) — books, letters, papers, and so I got in the way of moving nimbly. Now
it comes naturally to me. One of my old aristocratic habits."7 Upon this Marten gave it up.
He had seen something of good society himself, as he lived habitually with
Glooskap, but Master Rabbit was too much for him. ________________________________
7 This droll dialogue occurs in the middle of the Micmac story of Lox, or Badger, and the Ducks and Bear, where it evidently does not belong, or has been interpolated to make length. In the original, Marten carries his inquiries much further into certain physiological details, all of which Master Rabbit naively explains as the result of the delicate diet and the wine to which he as a gentleman had been accustomed. |