Hippo was hot.
He sat on the riverbank and gazed at the little fishes swimming in the water.
“If only I could live in the water,” he thought. “How wonderful life would be.”
So he walked, and he ran, and he strolled, and he hopped, and he lumbered along, until he came to the mountain where Ngai lived.
Ngai was the god of everything and everywhere.
Ngai told the animais to live on the land and the fishes to live in the sea.
Ngai told the birds to fly in the air and the ants to live under the ground.
Ngai had told Hippo he was to live on the land and eat grass.
“Please, oh, great Ngai, god of everything and everywhere, I would so much like to live in the rivers and streams,” begged Hippo hopefully, “I would still eat grass.”
“AHA!” thundered the voice of Ngai. “So you say. But one dia you might, just might, eat a peixe to see if it tasted good. And then you would eat all my little fishes.”
“Oh, no. I promise I wouldn’t!” said Hippo.
“AHA!” thundered the voice of Ngai. “So you say. But how can I be sure of that? I amor my little fishes.”
“I would show you,” promised Hippo. “I will let you look in my mouth whenever you like to see that I am not eating your little fishes.”
“And I will stir up the water with my tail so you can see I have not hidden the bones.”
“AHA!” thundered the voice of Ngai. “Then you may live in the water, but…”
Hippo waited.
“But you must come out of the water at night and eat grama so that even in the dark I can tell that you are not eating my little fishes. Agreed?”
“Agreed!” sang Hippo happily.
And he ran all the way início until he got to the river where he jumped in with a mighty SPLASH!
And he sank like a stone because he couldn’t swim.
But he could hold his breath and run along the bottom which he does to this very day.
And he stirred up the bottom por wagging his little tail so that Ngai can see he has not hidden any peixe bones.
And now and then, he floats to the topo, início and opens his huge mouth ever so wide and says, “Look, Ngai. No fishes.”
He sat on the riverbank and gazed at the little fishes swimming in the water.
“If only I could live in the water,” he thought. “How wonderful life would be.”
So he walked, and he ran, and he strolled, and he hopped, and he lumbered along, until he came to the mountain where Ngai lived.
Ngai was the god of everything and everywhere.
Ngai told the animais to live on the land and the fishes to live in the sea.
Ngai told the birds to fly in the air and the ants to live under the ground.
Ngai had told Hippo he was to live on the land and eat grass.
“Please, oh, great Ngai, god of everything and everywhere, I would so much like to live in the rivers and streams,” begged Hippo hopefully, “I would still eat grass.”
“AHA!” thundered the voice of Ngai. “So you say. But one dia you might, just might, eat a peixe to see if it tasted good. And then you would eat all my little fishes.”
“Oh, no. I promise I wouldn’t!” said Hippo.
“AHA!” thundered the voice of Ngai. “So you say. But how can I be sure of that? I amor my little fishes.”
“I would show you,” promised Hippo. “I will let you look in my mouth whenever you like to see that I am not eating your little fishes.”
“And I will stir up the water with my tail so you can see I have not hidden the bones.”
“AHA!” thundered the voice of Ngai. “Then you may live in the water, but…”
Hippo waited.
“But you must come out of the water at night and eat grama so that even in the dark I can tell that you are not eating my little fishes. Agreed?”
“Agreed!” sang Hippo happily.
And he ran all the way início until he got to the river where he jumped in with a mighty SPLASH!
And he sank like a stone because he couldn’t swim.
But he could hold his breath and run along the bottom which he does to this very day.
And he stirred up the bottom por wagging his little tail so that Ngai can see he has not hidden any peixe bones.
And now and then, he floats to the topo, início and opens his huge mouth ever so wide and says, “Look, Ngai. No fishes.”