"Alas! good gentlemen, he is up in the vineyard, but I will send the dog after him at once. Here! now quickly to the vineyard, and tell your master some gentlemen are here who wish to speak to him. Go as fast as you can." And she opened the door and let the dog out.
"You can really trust the dog to call your husband?" asked the robbers.
"Dear me, yes! He understands everything, and will always carry any message I give him."
By-and-bye the shoemaker came in and said, "Good morning, gentlemen; the dog tells me you wish to speak to me."
"Yes, we do," replied the robber; "we have come to speak to you about that guitar. It is your fault that we have murdered all our wives; and, though we played as you told us, none of them ever came back to life."
"You could not have played properly," said the shoemaker. "It was your own fault."
"Well, we will forget all about it," answered the robbers, "if you will only sell us your dog."
"Oh, that is impossible! I should never get on without him."
But the robbers offered him forty gold pieces, and at last he agreed to let them have the dog.
So they departed, taking the dog with them, and when they got back to their cave the captain declared that it was his right to have the first trial.
He then called his daughter, and said to her, "I am going to the inn; if anybody wants me, loose the dog, and send him to call me."
About an hour after some one arrived on business, and the girl untied the dog and said, "Go to the inn and call my father!" The dog bounded off, but ran straight to the shoemaker.
When the robber got home and found no dog he thought "He must have gone back to his old master," and, though night had already fallen, he went off after him.
"Master Joseph, is the dog here?" asked he.
"Ah! yes, the poor beast is so fond of me! You must give him time to get accustomed to new ways."
So the captain brought the dog back, and the following morning handed him over to another of the band, just saying that the animal really could do what the shoemaker had said.
The second robber carefully kept his own counsel, and fetched the dog secretly back from the shoemaker, and so on through the whole band. At length, when everybody had suffered, they met and told the whole story, and next day they all marched off in fury to the man who had made game of them. After reproaching him with having deceived them, they tied him up in a sack, and told him they were going to throw him into the sea.
The shoemaker lay quite still, and let them do as they would.
They went on till they came to a church, and the robbers said, "The sun is hot and the sack is heavy; let us leave it here and go in and rest."
So they put the sack down by the roadside, and went into the church.
Now, on a hill near by there was a swineherd looking after a great herd of pigs and whistling merrily.
When Master Joseph heard him he cried out as loud as he could, "I won"t; I won"t, I say."
"What won"t you do?" asked the swineherd.
"Oh," replied the shoemaker. "They want me to marry the king"s daughter, and I won"t do it."
"How lucky you are!" sighed the swineherd. "Now, if it were only me!"
"Oh, if that"s all!" replied the cunning shoemaker, "get you into this sack, and let me out."
Then the swineherd opened the sack and took the place of the shoemaker, who went gaily off, driving the pigs before him.
When the robbers were rested they came out of the church, took up the sack, and carried it to the sea, where they threw it in, and it sank directly. As they came back they met the shoemaker, and stared at him with open mouths.
"Oh, if you only knew how many pigs live in the sea," he cried. "And the deeper you go the more there are. I have just brought up these, and mean to return for some more."
"There are still some left there?"
"Oh, more than I could count," replied the shoemaker. "I will show you what you must do." Then he led the robbers back to the sh.o.r.e. "Now,"
said he, "you must each of you tie a stone to your necks, so that you may be sure to go deep enough, for I found the pigs that you saw very deep down indeed."
Then the robbers all tied stones round their necks, and jumped in, and were drowned, and Master Joseph drove his pigs home, and was a rich man to the end of his days.
The King Who Would Have a Beautiful Wife
Sicilianische Mahrchen.
Fifty years ago there lived a king who was very anxious to get married; but, as he was quite determined that his wife should be as beautiful as the sun, the thing was not so easy as it seemed, for no maiden came up to his standard. Then he commanded a trusty servant to search through the length and breadth of the land till he found a girl fair enough to be queen, and if he had the good luck to discover one he was to bring her back with him.
The servant set out at once on his journey, and sought high and low-in castles and cottages; but though pretty maidens were plentiful as blackberries, he felt sure that none of them would please the king.
One day he had wandered far and wide, and was feeling very tired and thirsty. By the roadside stood a tiny little house, and here he knocked and asked for a cup of water. Now in this house dwelt two sisters, and one was eighty and the other ninety years old. They were very poor, and earned their living by spinning. This had kept their hands very soft and white, like the hands of a girl, and when the water was pa.s.sed through the lattice, and the servant saw the small, delicate fingers, he said to himself: "A maiden must indeed be lovely if she has a hand like that."
And he made haste back, and told the king.
"Go back at once," said his majesty, "and try to get a sight of her."
The faithful servant departed on his errand without losing any time, and again he knocked at the door of the little house and begged for some water. As before, the old woman did not open the door, but pa.s.sed the water through the lattice.
"Do you live here alone?" asked the man.
"No," replied she, "my sister lives with me. We are poor girls, and have to work for our bread."
"How old are you?"
"I am fifteen, and she is twenty."
Then the servant went back to the king, and told him all he knew. And his majesty answered: "I will have the fifteen-year-old one. Go and bring her here."
The servant returned a third time to the little house and knocked at the door. In reply to his knock the lattice window was pushed open, and a voice inquired what it was he wanted.
"The king has desired me to bring back the youngest of you to become his queen," he replied.
"Tell his majesty I am ready to do his bidding, but since my birth no ray of light has fallen upon my face. If it should ever do so I shall instantly grow black. Therefore beg, I pray you, his most gracious majesty to send this evening a shut carriage, and I will return in it to the castle.
When the king heard this he ordered his great golden carriage to be prepared, and in it to be placed some magnificent robes; and the old woman wrapped herself in a thick veil, and was driven to the castle.