Once upon a time, ages and ages
ago, there was a little white hen. One day she was busily engaged in
scratching the soil to find worms and insects for her breakfast. As
she worked she sang over and over again her little crooning song, "Quirrichi,
quirrichi, quirrichi." Suddenly she noticed a tiny piece of paper
lying on the ground. "Quirrichi, quirrichi, what luck!" she said to
herself. "This must be a letter. One time when the king, the great
ruler of our country, held his court in the meadow close by, many
people brought him letters and laid them at his feet. Now I, too,
even I, the little white hen, have a letter. I am going to carry my
letter to the king."
The next morning the little white hen started bravely out on her
long journey. She carried the letter very carefully in her little
brown basket. It was a long distance to the royal palace where the
king lived. The little white hen had never been so far from home in
all her life.
After a while she met a friendly fox. Foxes and little white hens
are not usually very good friends, you know, but this fox was a
friend of the little white hen. Once upon a time she had helped the
fox to escape from a trap and the fox had never forgotten her
kindness to him.
"O, little white hen, where are you going?" asked the fox.
"Quirrichi, quirrichi," replied the little white hen, "I am going to
the royal palace to carry a letter to the king."
"Indeed, little white hen," said the fox, "I should like to go with
you. Give me your permission to accompany you on your journey."
"I shall be glad to have you go with me," said the little white hen.
"It is a very long journey to the royal palace where the king lives.
Wouldn't you like me to carry you in my little brown basket?"
The fox climbed into the little brown basket. After the little white
hen had gone on for some distance farther she met a river. Once upon
a time the little white hen had done the river a kindness. He had,
with great difficulty, thrown some ugly worms upon the bank and he
was afraid they would crawl back in again. The little white hen had
eaten them for him. Always after that the river had been her friend.
"O, little white hen, where are you going?" the river called out as
soon as he saw her.
"Quirrichi, quirrichi, I am going to the royal palace to carry a
letter to the king," replied the little white hen.
"O, little white hen, may I go with you?" asked the river.
The little white hen told the river that he might go with her and
asked him to ride in the little brown basket. So the river climbed
into the little brown basket.
After the little white hen had journeyed along for a time she came
to a fire. Once upon a time, when the fire had been dying the little
white hen had brought some dried grass. The grass had given the fire
new life and always after that he had been the friend of the little
white hen.
"O, little white hen, where are you going?" the fire asked.
"Quirrichi, quirrichi, I am going to the royal palace to carry a
letter to the king," replied the little white hen.
"O, little white hen, may I go with you?" asked the fire. "I have
never been to the royal palace and I have never had even a peep at
the king."
The little white hen told the fire that he might go with her and
asked him to climb into the little brown basket. By this time the
little brown basket was so full, that, try as they might, they
couldn't make room for the fire. At last they thought of a plan. The
fire changed himself into ashes and then there was room for him to
get into the basket.
The little white hen journeyed on and on, and finally she arrived at
the royal palace.
"Who are you and what are you carrying in your little brown basket?"
asked the royal doorkeeper when he opened the door.
"I am the little white hen and I am carrying a letter to the king,"
replied the little white hen. She didn't say a word about the fox
and the river and the fire which she had in her little brown basket.
She was so frightened before the great royal doorkeeper of the
palace that she could hardly find her voice at all.
The royal doorkeeper invited the little white hen to enter the
palace and he led her to the royal throne where the king was
sitting. The little white hen bowed very low before the king—so low,
in fact, that it mussed up all her feathers.
"Who are you and what is your business?" asked the king in his big,
deep, kingly voice.
"Quirrichi, quirrichi, I am the little white hen," replied the
little white hen in her low, frightened, little voice. "I have come
to bring my letter to your royal majesty." She handed the king the
piece of paper which had remained all this time at the bottom of the
little brown basket. There were marks of dirt upon it where the
friendly fox's feet had rested. It was damp where the river had
lain. It had tiny holes in it where the fire had sat after he had
turned himself into hot ashes.
"What do you mean by bringing me this dirty piece of paper?" shouted
the king in his biggest, deepest, gruffest voice. "I am highly
offended. I always knew that hens were stupid little creatures but
you are quite the stupidest little hen I ever saw in all my life."
"Here," and he turned to one of the attendants standing by the
throne, "take this stupid, little white hen and throw her out into
the royal poultry yard. I think we will have her for dinner
to-morrow."
The little white hen was roughly seized by the tallest royal
attendant and carried down the back stairs, through the back gate,
out into the royal poultry yard. She still clung to the little brown
basket which she had brought with her on her long journey to the
royal palace and through all the sad experiences she had met there.
When the little white hen reached the royal poultry yard all the
royal fowls flew at her. Some plucked at her rumpled white feathers.
Others tried to pick out her eyes. One pulled off the cover of the
little brown basket.
Out sprang the fox from the little brown basket and in the twinkling
of an eye he fell upon the fowls of the royal poultry yard. Not a
single fowl was left alive.
There was such a great commotion that the king, the queen, the royal
attendants and all the royal servants of the palace came rushing out
to see what was the matter. The fox had already taken to his heels
and the little white hen lost no time in running away too. She did
not, however, forget to take her little brown basket with her.
The royal household all ran after her in swift pursuit. They had
almost caught her when the river suddenly sprang out of the little
brown basket and flowed between the little white hen and her royal
pursuers. They couldn't get across without canoes.
While they were getting the canoes and climbing into them the little
white hen had time to run a long way. She had almost reached a thick
forest where she could easily hide herself when the royal pursuers
again drew near. Then the fire which had changed itself into hot
ashes jumped out of the little brown basket. It immediately became
dark, so dark that the royal household could not even see each
other's faces and, of course, they could not see in which direction
the little white hen was running. There was nothing for them to do
but to return to the royal palace and live on beef and mutton.
The fire which had turned itself into ashes sprang out of the little
brown basket so suddenly that it scattered ashes all over the little
white hen. From that day she was always speckled where the ashes
fell upon her. The chickens of the little white hen (who was now a
little speckled hen) were all speckled too. So were their chickens
and their chickens and their chickens' chickens, even down to this
very day. Whenever you see a speckled hen you may know that she is
descended from the little white hen who carried a letter to the
king, and who, in her adventures, became the first speckled hen.