Page:Tanglewood tales (Dulac).djvu/223

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
THE POMEGRANATE SEEDS
 

presumed to poke itself out of the ground, without the special permission of Ceres, you may conceive what a terrible calamity had here fallen upon the earth. The husbandmen planted and ploughed as usual; but there lay the rich black furrows, all as barren as a desert of sand. The pastures looked as brown in the sweet month of June as ever they did in chill November. The rich man's broad acres and the cottager's small garden patch were equally blighted. Every little girl's flower bed showed nothing but dry stalks. The old people shook their white heads, and said that the earth had grown aged like themselves, and was no longer capable of wearing the warm smile of summer on its face. It was really piteous to see the poor, starving cattle and sheep, how they followed behind Ceres, lowing and bleating, as if their instinct taught them to expect help from her; and everybody that was acquainted with her power besought her to have mercy on the human race, and, at all events, to let the grass grow. But Mother Ceres, though naturally of an affectionate disposition, was now inexorable.

'Never,' said she. 'If the earth is ever again to see any verdure, it must first grow along the path which my daughter will tread in coming back to me.'

Finally, as there seemed to be no other remedy, our old friend Quicksilver was sent post haste to King Pluto, in hopes that he might be persuaded to undo the mischief he had done, and to set everything right again, by giving up Proserpina. Quicksilver accordingly made the best of his

185