Three Little Bears

An amateur photographer hiking though the woods in eastern Finland this past week was lucky enough to capture the moment that three little bear cubs danced in a circle on their hind legs, producing an image so adorable that it inevitably went viral: I can’t resist showing it here as well. In the accompanying story, Valterri Mulkahainen reports that the bears were scampering around like little children, while all the while he snapped away.

Bears in Finland first

Bears in Finland

Bears in Finland 2

Bears in Finland 3

Now these little bears are irresistible in any configuration, but look at the first two pictures in which they form a threesome and look almost unreal and positively magical: a good example of the “rule of three” as it applies to the animal kingdom. This must be why we have Goldilocks and the Three Bears, Three Blind Mice, Three Little Pigs, Three Little Kittens, and Three French Hens, and pubs with names like Three Pheasants and Three Foxes. The authors of fairy tales and nursery rhymes certainly recognized the power of three through the ages, as did their illustrators: these little bears (and Mr. Mulkahainen’s camera) have brought lore to life.

Three Bears Rackham 1922p

Three Bears Brooke 3p

Three White Kittens 1888

Three Pigs Brookep

Three Blind Mice JIp

Illustrations by Arthur Rackham (1922), L. Leslie Brooke (1905) and Walter Corbould (1909).


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