13. Day-time Trouble. [[Note]]
a. Rabbit and Anansi.
Susan Watkins, Claremont, St. Ann.
Brar Nansi and Brar Rabbit went for a walk one day. Brar Rabbit ask Brar Anansi to show him ‘daytime trouble’. An’ while dey go on, Brar Anansi saw Tiger den wid a lot of young Tiger in it. Brar Anansi took out one an’ kill it an’ give Rabbit a basket wid a piece of de Tiger’s meat to carry for de Tiger’s fader, an’ took Rabbit along wid him to Tiger’s house an’ tol’ Brar Rabbit to han’ Tiger de basket. Anansi run, an’ Tiger catch at Rabbit to kill him, but he get away. Brar Anansi run up a tree an’ say, “Run, Brar Rabbit, run! run fe stone-hole!” Took a razor an’ give it to Rabbit. An’ Tiger got up a lot of men to get Rabbit out de hole an’ Tiger sent for Reindeer to dig him out, as he had a long neck to put down his head an’ dig him out; but Anansi tol’ Rabbit when Reindeer put down his head in de hole, he mus’ tak de razor an’ cut it off. A lot of people gadder to see Reindeer tak Rabbit out of de hole, but instead, Reindeer head was taken off an’ he drop an’ was dead an’ de whole crowd run away wid fright. [[16]]After Rabbit come out, Brar Nansi say to him, “Brar Rabbit, so ’daytime trouble’ stay. So, as long as you live, never ask anybody to show it to you again!”
b. Rat and Anansi.
Moses Hendricks, Mandeville.
Rat and Anansi went out one day. They came across Tiger’s four children,—Anansi knew exactly where they was. He had a handbasket, Rat had one. So Anansi said, “Brer, two fe me, two fe you!” Anansi tak up one, mak the attempt as if he going to kill it but he didn’t do so, put it in his basket alive. Rat t’ot Anansi kill it, an’ he tak up his now an’ kill it an’ put it in his basket. Anansi did the same with the second one,—didn’t kill it, put it in his basket. Rat took up the other one an’ him kill it. So Rat had two dead ones an’ Anansi had his alive.