Page:The art of story-telling, with nearly half a hundred stories, y Julia Darrow Cowles .. (IA artofstorytellin00cowl).pdf/43

 "The Three Bears," or "The Cock and the Mouse."

For older children there may be introduced a little more of the descriptive form, but it is well to beware of adding much of either description or explanation. Even "grown-ups" enjoy the straightforward narrative that delights the child, and the introduction of detail soon grows irksome and uninteresting, even to the most conscientious listener. And no child is a "conscientious listener." He listens for love of the story. If it does not interest him he stops listening and does something else.

The story must reach a climax and stop there. Many a good story has been spoiled by its ending. Story-tellers sometimes remind one of a man holding the handles of an electric battery. The current is so strong that he cannot let go. The story-teller must know when and how to "let go." Let us suppose that, in telling Hans Christian Anderson's story of "The Nightingale," the story-teller—after the delightful denouement of the supposedly dead Emperor's greeting to his attendants, where he "to their astonishment said 'Good morning!'"—*