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"What would you have me give you for the deliverance of my daughter?"
The Shepherd answered, "Only let me understand the language of animals; I want nothing else."
Then the King said, "That is not good for you; for if I were to bestow upon you the gift of the knowledge of the tongue of animals, and you were to tell anyone of it, you would instantly die. Ask, therefore, for something else; whatever you desire to possess, I will give to you."
To which the Shepherd replied-
"If you wish to give me anything, then grant me the knowledge of the language of brute creatures; but if you do not care to give me that- farewell, and G.o.d protect you! I want nothing else." And the Shepherd turned to leave the place.
Then the King called him back, saying-
"Stay! come here to me, since you will have it at all hazards. Open your mouth."
The Shepherd opened his mouth, and the King of the snakes breathed into it, and said-
"Do you now breathe into my mouth."
The Shepherd breathed into his mouth, and the Snake King breathed again into that of the Shepherd. After they had breathed each three times into the other's mouth, the King said-
"Now you understand the language of animals, and of all created things.
Go in peace, and G.o.d be with you! but for the life of you, tell no one of this; if you do, you will die on the instant!"
The Shepherd returned home through the forest. As he walked he heard and understood all that the birds said, and the gra.s.s and all the other things that are upon the earth. When he came to his sheep and found them all together and quite safe, he laid himself down to rest.
Scarcely had he lain down when there flew two ravens toward him, who took their perch upon a tree, and began to talk together in their own language.
"What if that Shepherd only knew that underneath the place where the black lamb lies there is a cellar full of silver and gold!'
When the Shepherd heard this, he went to his master, and told him of it. The master took a cart with him, and they dug down to a door leading to the cave, and removed the treasure to his house. But the master was an honest man, and gave all the treasure to the Shepherd, saying-
"My son, all this treasure is yours, for heaven has given it to you.
Buy yourself a house with it, marry, and live happily in it."
The Shepherd took the treasure, built himself a house, and, having married, lived a happy life. Soon he became known as the richest man, not only in his own village, but so rich that there was not his equal in the whole neighborhood. He had his own shepherd, cow keeper, hostler, and swineherd; plenty of goods and chattels, and great riches.
One day, just before Christmas, he said to his wife, "Get some wine, and some brandy, and all things necessary; to-morrow we will go to the farmyard and take the good things to the shepherds that they may also enjoy themselves."
The wife followed his directions and prepared all that he had told her.
When they arrived on the following day at the farmhouse, the master said to the shepherds in the evening--
"Come here, all of you; eat, drink, and be merry. I will watch over the flocks for you to-night." And he went, in very deed, and remained with the flocks.
About midnight the wolves began to howl and the dogs to bark, and the wolves said in their language-
"May we come in and do what mischief we like? Then you, too, shall have your share."
And the dogs answered in their language, "Come in; and we will eat our fill with you."
But among the dogs there was an old one, who had but two teeth in his head, and he said to the wolves-
"That will not do. So long as I have my two teeth in my head you shall do no harm to my master nor his."
The master heard it all, and understood what was said. On the following morning he ordered all the dogs to be killed save only the old one. The hinds said, "Heaven forbid, sir; that would be a great pity!" But the master answered, "Do what I have told you."
Then he prepared to return home with his wife, and they both mounted their horses. And as they rode on, the husband got a little ahead, while the wife fell behind. At last the husband's horse neighed, and called to the mare-
"Come on! make haste! Why do you lag behind!"
And the mare answered him, "Ah yes, it is all very easy for you: you have only one to carry, the master; while I have to carry two, the mistress and her baby."
The husband turned round and laughed, and his wife seeing this, urged the mare forward, overtook her husband, and asked him what he had been laughing at.
"Nothing; I do not know; just something that came into my mind,"
answered the husband.
But the wife was not satisfied with this answer, and she pressed him again and again to tell her why he had laughed.
But he excused himself, and said-
"Let me alone, wife! What is the matter with you? I do not know myself why I laughed."
But the more he denied her the more she insisted upon his telling her what he had been laughing at. At last the husband said to her-
"Know then, that if I tell you the reason, I shall instantly die."
The woman, however, did not care for that, but urged him to tell her notwithstanding.
Meanwhile they had reached home. The husband ordered a coffin to be made immediately, and when it was ready he had it placed before the house, and said to his wife-
"See now, I now lay me down in this coffin, and then tell you why I laughed; but as soon as I have told you I shall die."
The husband lay down in the coffin, and looked around him for the last time. And there came the old Dog from the farmyard, and sat down at his head and whined. The husband seeing this, said to his wife-
"Bring a piece of bread and give it to this Dog."
The wife brought out a piece of bread, and threw it down to the Dog; but the Dog would not even look at it. Then the House c.o.c.k ran up, and began to pick at the bread; and the Dog said to it-
"You miserable greedy thing, you! You can eat, and yet you see that the master is going to die!"
The c.o.c.k answered the Dog, "And let him die since he is such a fool. I have a hundred wives, and I call them all together whenever I find a grain of corn, and as soon as they have come round me, I swallow it myself. And if any one of them got angry, I should be at her directly with my beak. The master has only one wife, and he cannot even manage her."
When the husband heard this he quickly sprang out of the coffin, took up a stick, and called his wife into the room.
"Come, wife," he said, "I will tell you what you so much want to hear."
Then as he beat her with the stick he cried, "This is it, wife! This is it."
In this way he quieted his wife, and she never asked him again what he had been laughing at.
THE EMPEROR TROJAN'S GOAT'S EARS