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<h2> The Cunning Shoemaker </h2>
<h3> Sicilianische Mahrchen. </h3>
<p>Once upon a time there lived a shoemaker who could get no work to do, and
was so poor that he and his wife nearly died of hunger. At last he said to
her, ‘It is no use waiting on here—I can find nothing; so I shall go
down to Mascalucia, and perhaps there I shall be more lucky.’</p>
<p>So down he went to Mascalucia, and walked through the streets crying, ‘Who
wants some shoes?’ And very soon a window was pushed up, and a woman’s
head was thrust out of it.</p>
<p>‘Here are a pair for you to patch,’ she said. And he sat down on her
doorstep and set about patching them.</p>
<p>‘How much do I owe you?’ she asked when they were done.</p>
<p>‘A shilling.’</p>
<p>‘Here is eighteen pence, and good luck to you.’ And he went his way. He
turned into the next street and set up his cry again, and it was not long
before another window was pushed up and another head appeared.</p>
<p>‘Here are some shoes for you to patch.’</p>
<p>And the shoemaker sat down on the doorstep and patched them.</p>
<p>‘How much do I owe you?’ asked the woman when the shoes were finished.</p>
<p>‘A florin.’</p>
<p>‘Here is a crown piece, and good luck to you.’ And she shut the window.</p>
<p>‘Well,’ thought the shoemaker, ‘I have done finely. But I will not go back
to my wife just yet, as, if I only go on at this rate, I shall soon have
enough money to buy a donkey.’</p>
<p>Having made up his mind what was best to do, he stayed in the town a few
days longer till he had four gold pieces safe in his purse. Then he went
to the market and for two of them he bought a good strong donkey, and,
mounting on its back, he rode home to Catania. But as he entered a thick
wood he saw in the distance a band of robbers who were coming quickly
towards him.</p>
<p>‘I am lost,’ thought he; ‘they are sure to take from me all the money that
I have earned, and I shall be as poor as ever I was. What can I do?’
However, being a clever little man and full of spirit, he did not lose
heart, but, taking five florins, he fastened them out of sight under the
donkey’s thick mane. Then he rode on.</p>
<p>Directly the robber came up to him they seized him exactly as he had
foretold and took away all his money.</p>
<p>‘Oh, dear friends!’ he cried, wringing his hands, ‘I am only a poor
shoemaker, and have nothing but this donkey left in the world.’</p>
<p>As he spoke the donkey gave himself a shake, and down fell the five
florins.</p>
<p>‘Where did that come from?’ asked the robbers.</p>
<p>‘Ah,’ replied the shoemaker, ‘you have guessed my secret. The donkey is a
golden donkey, and supplies me with all my money.’</p>
<p>‘Sell him to us,’ said the robbers. ‘We will give you any price you like.’</p>
<p>The shoemaker at first declared that nothing would induce him to sell him,
but at last he agreed to hand him over to the robbers for fifty gold
pieces. ‘But listen to what I tell you,’ said he. ‘You must each take it
in turn to own him for a night and a day, or else you will all be fighting
over the money.’</p>
<p>With these words they parted, the robbers driving the donkey to their cave
in the forest and the shoemaker returning home, very pleased with the
success of his trick. He just stopped on the way to pick up a good dinner,
and the next day spent most of his gains in buying a small vineyard.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the robbers had arrived at the cave where they lived, and the
captain, calling them all round him, announced that it as his right to
have the donkey for the first night. His companions agreed, and then he
told his wife to put a mattress in the stable. She asked if he had gone
out of his mind, but he answered crossly, ‘What is that to you? Do as you
are bid, and to-morrow I will bring you some treasures.’</p>
<p>Very early the captain awoke and searched the stable, but could find
nothing, and guessed that Master Joseph had been making fun of them.
‘Well,’ he said to himself, ‘if I have been taken in, the others shall not
come off any better.’</p>
<p>So, when one of his men arrived and asked him eagerly how much money he
had got, he answered gaily, ‘Oh, comrade, if you only knew! But I shall
say nothing about it till everyone has had his turn!’</p>
<p>One after another they all took the donkey, but no money was forthcoming
for anybody. At length, when all the band had been tricked, they held a
council, and resolved to march to the shoemaker’s house and punish him
well for his cunning. Just as before, the shoemaker saw them a long way
off, and began to think how he could outwit them again. When he had hit
upon a plan he called his wife, and said to her, ‘Take a bladder and fill
it with blood, and bind it round your neck. When the robbers come and
demand the money they gave me for the donkey I shall shout to you and tell
you to get it quickly. You must argue with me, and decline to obey me, and
then I shall plunge my knife into the bladder, and you must fall to the
ground as if you were dead. There you must lie till I play on my guitar;
then get up and begin to dance.’</p>
<p>The wife made haste to do as she was bid, and there was no time to lose,
for the robbers were drawing very near the house. They entered with a
great noise, and overwhelmed the shoemaker with reproaches for having
deceived them about the donkey.</p>
<p>‘The poor beast must have lost its power owing to the change of masters,’
said he; ‘but we will not quarrel about it. You shall have back the fifty
gold pieces that you gave for him. ‘Aite,’ he cried to his wife, ‘go
quickly to the chest upstairs, and bring down the money for these
gentlemen.’</p>
<p>‘Wait a little,’ answered she; ‘I must first bake this fish. It will be
spoilt if I leave it now.’</p>
<p>‘Go this instant, as you are bid,’ shouted the shoemaker, stamping as if
he was in a great passion; but, as she did not stir, he drew his knife,
and stabbed her in the neck. The blood spurted out freely, and she fell to
the ground as if she was dead.</p>
<p>‘What have you done?’ asked the robbers, looking at him in dismay. ‘The
poor woman was doing nothing.’</p>
<p>‘Perhaps I was hasty, but it is easily set right,’ replied the shoemaker,
taking down his guitar and beginning to play. Hardly had he struck the
first notes than his wife sat up; then got on her feet and danced.</p>
<p>The robbers stared with open mouths, and at last they said, ‘Master
Joseph, you may keep the fifty gold pieces. But tell us what you will take
for your guitar, for you must sell it to us?’</p>
<p>‘Oh, that is impossible!’ replied the shoemaker, ‘for every time I have a
quarrel with my wife I just strike her dead, and so give vent to my anger.
This has become such a habit with me that I don’t think I could break
myself of it; and, of course, if I got rid of the guitar I could never
bring her back to life again.’</p>
<p>However, the robbers would not listen to him, and at last he consented to
take forty gold pieces for the guitar.</p>
<p>Then they all returned to their cave in the forest, delighted with their
new purchase, and longing for a chance of trying its powers. But the
captain declared that the first trial belonged to him, and after that the
others might have their turn.</p>
<p>That evening he called to his wife and said, ‘What have you got for
supper?’</p>
<p>‘Macaroni,’ answered she.</p>
<p>‘Why have you not boiled a fish?’ he cried, and stabber in the neck so
that she fell dead. The captain, who was not in the least angry, seized
the guitar and began to play; but, let him play as loud as he would, the
dead woman never stirred. ‘Oh, lying shoemaker! Oh, abominable knave!
Twice has he got the better of me. But I will pay him out!’</p>
<p>So he raged and swore, but it did him no good. The fact remained that he
had killed his wife and could not bring her back again.</p>
<p>The next morning came one of the robbers to fetch the guitar, and to hear
what had happened.</p>
<p>‘Well, how have you got on?’</p>
<p>‘Oh, splendidly! I stabbed my wife, and then began to play, and now she is
as well as ever.’</p>
<p>‘Did you really? Then this evening I will try for myself.’</p>
<p>Of course the same thing happened over again, till all the wives had been
killed secretly, and when there were no more left they whispered to each
other the dreadful tale, and swore to be avenged on the shoemaker.</p>
<p>The band lost no time in setting out for his house, and, as before, the
shoemaker saw them coming from afar. He called to his wife, who was
washing in the kitchen: ‘Listen, Aita: when the robbers come and ask for
me say I have gone to the vineyard. Then tell the dog to call me, and
chase him from the house.’</p>
<p>When he had given these directions he ran out of the back door and hid
behind a barrel. A few minutes later the robbers arrived, and called
loudly for the shoemaker.</p>
<p>‘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.</p>
<p>‘You can really trust the dog to call your husband?’ asked the robbers.</p>
<p>‘Dear me, yes! He understands everything, and will always carry any
message I give him.’</p>
<p>By-and-bye the shoemaker came in and said, ‘Good morning, gentlemen; the
dog tells me you wish to speak to me.’</p>
<p>‘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.’</p>
<p>‘You could not have played properly,’ said the shoemaker. ‘It was your own
fault.’</p>
<p>‘Well, we will forget all about it,’ answered the robbers, ‘if you will
only sell us your dog.’</p>
<p>‘Oh, that is impossible! I should never get on without him.’</p>
<p>But the robbers offered him forty gold pieces, and at last he agreed to
let them have the dog.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.’</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>‘Master Joseph, is the dog here?’ asked he.</p>
<p>‘Ah! yes, the poor beast is so fond of me! You must give him time to get
accustomed to new ways.’</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>Now, on a hill near by there was a swineherd looking after a great herd of
pigs and whistling merrily.</p>
<p>When Master Joseph heard him he cried out as loud as he could, ‘I won’t; I
won’t, I say.’</p>
<p>‘What won’t you do?’ asked the swineherd.</p>
<p>‘Oh,’ replied the shoemaker. ‘They want me to marry the king’s daughter,
and I won’t do it.’</p>
<p>‘How lucky you are!’ sighed the swineherd. ‘Now, if it were only me!’</p>
<p>‘Oh, if that’s all!’ replied the cunning shoemaker, ‘get you into this
sack, and let me out.’</p>
<p>Then the swineherd opened the sack and took the place of the shoemaker,
who went gaily off, driving the pigs before him.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>‘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.’</p>
<p>‘There are still some left there?’</p>
<p>‘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 shore. ‘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.’</p>
<p>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.</p>
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