back, and could therefore make but one bow; but he said that if he were cut
off from a man’s hand, that man would be unfit for a soldier. Sweet-tooth,
his neighbor, dipped himself into sweet or sour, pointed to the sun and
moon, and formed the letters when the fingers wrote. Longman, the middle
finger, looked over the heads of all the others. Gold-band, the next finger,
wore a golden circle round his waist. And little Playman did nothing at all,
and seemed proud of it. They were boasters, and boasters they will remain;
and therefore I left them.”
“And now we sit here and glitter,” said the piece of broken bottle.
At the same moment more water streamed into the gutter, so that it
overflowed, and the piece of bottle was carried away.
“So he is promoted,” said the darning-needle, “while I remain here; I am
too fine, but that is my pride, and what do I care?” And so she sat there in
her pride, and had many such thoughts as these,-”I could almost fancy that I
came from a sunbeam, I am so fine. It seems as if the sunbeams were
always looking for me under the water. Ah! I am so fine that even my
mother cannot find me. Had I still my old eye, which was broken off, I
believe I should weep; but no, I would not do that, it is not genteel to cry.”
One day a couple of street boys were paddling in the gutter, for they
sometimes found old nails, farthings, and other treasures. It was dirty work,
but they took great pleasure in it. “Hallo!” cried one, as he pricked himself
with the darning-needle, “here’s a fellow for you.”
“I am not a fellow, I am a young lady,” said the darning-needle; but no
one heard her.
The sealing-wax had come off, and she was quite black; but black makes
a person look slender, so she thought herself even finer than before.
“Here comes an egg-shell sailing along,” said one of the boys; so they
stuck the darning-needle into the egg-shell.
“White walls, and I am black myself,” said the darning-needle, “that
looks well; now I can be seen, but I hope I shall not be sea-sick, or I shall