120 lines
7.9 KiB
Plaintext
120 lines
7.9 KiB
Plaintext
THE WISE LlTTLE GIRL
|
|
|
|
Once upon a time . . . in the immense Russian steppe, lay a little village
|
|
where nearly all the inhabitants bred horses. It was the month of October,
|
|
when a big livestock market was held yearly in the main town. Two brothers,
|
|
one rich and the other one poor, set off for market. The rich man rode a
|
|
stallion, and the poor brother a young mare.
|
|
At dusk, they stopped beside an empty hut and tethered their horses
|
|
outside, before going to sleep themselves on two heaps of straw. Great was
|
|
their surprise, when, next morning they saw three horses outside, instead of
|
|
two. Well, to be exact the newcomer was not really a horse. It was a foal, to
|
|
which the mare had given birth during the night. Soon it had the strength to
|
|
struggle to its feet, and after a drink of its mother's milk, the foal
|
|
staggered its first few steps. The stallion greeted it with a cheerful whinny,
|
|
and when the two brothers set eyes on it for the first time, the foal was
|
|
standing beside the stallion.
|
|
"It belongs to me!" exclaimed Dimitri, the rich brother, the minute he saw
|
|
it. "It's my stallion's foal." Ivan, the poor brother, began to laugh.
|
|
"Whoever heard of a stallion having a foal? It was born to my mare!"
|
|
"No, that's not true! It was standing close to the stallion, so it's the
|
|
stallion's foal. And therefore it's mine!" The brothers started to quarrel,
|
|
then they decided to go to town and bring the matter before the judges. Still
|
|
arguing, they headed for the big square where the courtroom stood. But what
|
|
they didn't know was that it was a special day, the day when, once a year, the
|
|
Emperor himself administered the law. He himself received all who came seeking
|
|
justice. The brothers were ushered into his presence, and they told him all
|
|
about the dispute.
|
|
Of course, the Emperor knew perfectly well who was the owner of the foal.
|
|
He was on the point of proclaiming in favour of the poor brother, when
|
|
suddenly Ivan developed an unfortunate twitch in his eye. The Emperor was
|
|
greatly annoyed by this familiarity by a humble peasant, and decided to punish
|
|
Ivan for his disrespect. After listening to both sides of the story, he
|
|
declared it was difficult, indeed impossible, to say exactly who was the
|
|
foal's rightful owner. And being in the mood for a spot of fun, and since he
|
|
loved posing riddles and solving them as well, to the amusement of his
|
|
counsellors, he exclaimed:
|
|
"I can't judge which of you should have the foal, so it will be awarded to
|
|
whichever of you solves the following four riddles: what is the fastest thing
|
|
in the world? What is the fattest? What's the softest and what is the most
|
|
precious? I command you to return to the palace in a week's time with your
|
|
answers!" Dimitri started to puzzle over the answers as soon as he left the
|
|
courtroom. When he reached home, however, he realised he had nobody to help
|
|
him.
|
|
"Well, I'll just have to seek help, for if I can't solve these riddles,
|
|
I'll lose the foal!" Then he remembered a woman, one of his neighbours, to
|
|
whom he had once lent a silver ducat. That had been some time ago, and with
|
|
the interest, the neighbour now owed him three ducats. And since she had a
|
|
reputation for being quick-witted, but also very astute, he decided to ask her
|
|
advice, in exchange for cancelling part of her debt. But the woman was not
|
|
slow to show how astute she really was, and promptly demanded that the whole
|
|
debt be wiped out in exchange for the answers.
|
|
"The fastest thing in the world is my husband's bay horse," she said.
|
|
"Nothing can beat it! The fattest is our pig! Such a huge beast has never
|
|
been seen! The softest is the quilt I made for the bed, using my own goose's
|
|
feathers. It's the envy of all my friends. The most precious thing in the
|
|
world is my three-month old nephew. There isn't a more handsome child. I
|
|
wouldn't exchange him for all the gold on earth, and that makes him the most
|
|
precious thing on earth!"
|
|
Dimitri was rather doubtful about the woman's answers being correct. On the
|
|
other hand, he had to take some kind of solution back to the Emperor. And he
|
|
guessed, quite rightly, that if he didn't, he would be punished.
|
|
In the meantime, Ivan, who was a widower, had gone back to the humble
|
|
cottage where he lived with his small daughter. Only seven years old, the
|
|
little girl was often left alone, and as a result, was thoughtful and very
|
|
clever for her age. The poor man took the little girl into his confidence, for
|
|
like his brother, he knew he would never be able to find the answers by
|
|
himself. The child sat in silence for a moment, then firmly said:
|
|
"Tell the Emperor that the fastest thing in the world is the cold north
|
|
wind in winter. The fattest is the soil in our fields whose crops give life to
|
|
men and animals alike, the softest thing is a child's caress and the most
|
|
precious is honesty."
|
|
The day came when the two brothers were to return before the Emperor. They
|
|
were led into his presence. The Emperor was curious to hear what they had to
|
|
say, but he roared with laughter at Dimitri's foolish answers. However, when
|
|
it was Ivan's turn to speak, a frown spread over the Emperor's face. The poor
|
|
brother's wise replies made him squirm, especially the last one, about
|
|
honesty, the most precious thing of all. The Emperor knew perfectly well that
|
|
he had been dishonest in his dealings with the poor brother, for he had denied
|
|
him justice. But he could not bear to admit it in front of his own
|
|
counsellors, so he angrily demanded:
|
|
"Who gave you these answers?" Ivan told the Emperor that it was his small
|
|
daughter. Still annoyed, the great man said: -~
|
|
"You shall be rewarded for having such a wise and clever daughter. You
|
|
shall be awarded the foal that your brother claimed, together with a hundred
|
|
silver ducats . . . But . . . but . . ." and the Emperor winked at his
|
|
counsellors:
|
|
"You will come before me in seven days' time, bringing your daughter. And
|
|
since she's so clever, she must appear before me neither naked nor dressed,
|
|
neither on foot nor on horseback, neither bearing gifts nor empty-handed. And
|
|
if she does this, you will have your reward. If not, you'll have your head
|
|
chopped off for your impudence!"
|
|
The onlookers began to laugh, knowing that the poor man would never to able
|
|
to fulfill the Emperor's conditions. Ivan went home in despair, his eyes
|
|
brimming with tears. But when he had told his daughter what had happened, she
|
|
calmly said:
|
|
"Tomorrow, go and catch a hare and a partridge. Both must be alive! You'll
|
|
have the foal and the hundred silver ducats! Leave it to me!" Ivan _did as his
|
|
daughter said. He had no idea what the two creatures were for, but he trusted
|
|
in his daughter's wisdom.
|
|
On the day of the audience with the Emperor, the palace was thronged with
|
|
bystanders, waiting for Ivan and his small daughter to arrive. At last, the
|
|
little girl appeared, draped in a fishing net, riding the hare and holdig the
|
|
partridge in her hand. She was neither naked nor dressed, on foot or on
|
|
horseback. Scowling, the Emperor told her:
|
|
"I said neither bearing gifts nor empty-handed!" At these words, the little
|
|
girl held out the partridge. The Emperor stretched out his hand to grasp it,
|
|
but the bird fluttered into the air. The third condition had been fulfilled.
|
|
In spite of himself, the Emperor could not help admirlng the llttle girl who
|
|
had so cleverly passed such a test, and in a gentler volce, he sald:
|
|
"Is your father terribly poor, and does he desperately need the foal.
|
|
"Oh, yes!" replied the little girl. "We live on the hares he catches in the
|
|
rivers and the fish he picks from the trees!"
|
|
"Aha!" cried the Emperor triumphantly. "So you're not as clever as you seem
|
|
to be! Whoever heard of hares in the river and fish in the trees! To which the
|
|
little girl swiftly replied:
|
|
"And whoever heard of a stallion having a foal?" At that, both Emperor and
|
|
Court burst into peals of laughter. Ivan was immediately glven his hundred
|
|
silver ducats and the foal, and the Emperor proclalmed:
|
|
"Only in my kingdom could such a wise little girl be born!"
|