'Moti'
Once upon a time there was a youth called Moti, who was very
big and strong, but the clumsiest creature you can imagine. So clumsy was he
that he was always putting his great feet into the bowls of sweet milk or curds
which his mother set out on the floor to cool, always smashing, upsetting,
breaking, until at last his father said to him:
'Here, Moti, are fifty silver pieces which are the savings of
years; take them and go and make your living or your fortune if you can.'
Then Moti started off one early spring morning with his thick
staff over his shoulder, singing gaily to himself as he walked along.
In one way and another he got along very well until a hot
evening when he came to a certain city where he entered the travellers' 'serai'
or inn to pass the night. Now a serai, you must know, is generally just a large
square enclosed by a high wall with an open colonnade along the inside all
round to accommodate both men and beasts, and with perhaps a few rooms in
towers at the corners for those who are too rich or too proud to care about
sleeping by their own camels and horses. Moti, of course, was a country lad and
had lived with cattle all his life, and he wasn't rich and he wasn't proud, so
he just borrowed a bed from the innkeeper, set it down beside an old buffalo
who reminded him of home, and in five minutes was fast asleep.
In the middle of the night he woke, feeling that he had been
disturbed, and putting his hand under his pillow found to his horror that his
bag of money had been stolen. He jumped up quietly and began to prowl around to
see whether anyone seemed to be awake, but, though he managed to arouse a few
men and beasts by falling over them, he walked in the shadow of the archways
round the whole serai without coming across a likely thief. He was just about
to give it up when he overheard two men whispering, and one laughed softly, and
peering behind a pillar, he saw two Afghan horsedealers counting out his bag of
money! Then Moti went back to bed!
In the morning Moti followed the two Afghans outside the city
to the horsemarket in which they horses were offered for sale. Choosing the
best-looking horse amongst them he went up to it and said:
'Is this horse for sale? may I try it?' and, the merchants
assenting, he scrambled up on its back, dug in his heels, and off they flew.
Now Moti had never been on a horse in his life, and had so much ado to hold on
with both hands as well as with both legs that the animal went just where it
liked, and very soon broke into a break-neck gallop and made straight back to
the serai where it had spent the last few nights.
'This will do very well,' thought Moti as they whirled in at
the entrance. As soon as the horse had arrived at its table it stopped of its
own accord and Moti immediately rolled off; but he jumped up at once, tied the
beast up, and called for some breakfast. Presently the Afghans appeared, out of
breath and furious, and claimed the horse.
'What do you mean?' cried Moti, with his mouth full of rice,
'it's my horse; I paid you fifty pieces of silver for it--quite a bargain, I'm
sure!'
'Nonsense! it is our horse,' answered one of the Afghans
beginning to untie the bridle.
'Leave off,' shouted Moti, seizing his staff; 'if you don't
let my horse alone I'll crack your skulls! you thieves! I know you! Last night
you took my money, so to-day I took your horse; that's fair enough!'
Now the Afghans began to look a little uncomfortable, but
Moti seemed so determined to keep the horse that they resolved to appeal to the
law, so they went off and laid a complaint before the king that Moti had stolen
one of their horses and would not give it up nor pay for it.
Presently a soldier came to summon Moti to the king; and,
when he arrived and made his obeisance, the king began to question him as to
why he had galloped off with the horse in this fashion. But Moti declared that
he had got the animal in exchange for fifty pieces of silver, whilst the horse
merchants vowed that the money they had on them was what they had received for
the sale of other horses; and in one way and another the dispute got so
confusing that the king (who really thought that Moti had stolen the horse)
said at last, 'Well, I tell you what I will do. I will lock something into this
box before me, and if he guesses what it is, the horse is his, and if he
doesn't then it is yours.'
To this Moti agreed, and the king arose and went out alone by
a little door at the back of the Court, and presently came back clasping
something closely wrapped up in a cloth under his robe, slipped it into the
little box, locked the box, and set it up where all might see.
'Now,' said the king to Moti, 'guess!'
It happened that when the king had opened the door behind
him, Moti noticed that there was a garden outside: without waiting for the
king's return he began to think what could be got out of the garden small
enough to be shut in the box. 'Is it likely to be a fruit or a flower? No, not
a flower this time, for he clasped it too tight. Then it must be a fruit or a
stone. Yet not a stone, because he wouldn't wrap a dirty stone in his nice
clean cloth. Then it is a fruit! And a fruit without much scent, or else he
would be afraid that I might smell it. Now what fruit without much scent is in
season just now? When I know that I shall have guessed the riddle!'
As has been said before, Moti was a country lad, and was
accustomed to work in his father's garden. He knew all the common fruits, so he
thought he ought to be able to guess right; but so as not to let it seem too
easy, he gazed up at the ceiling with a puzzled expression, and looked down at
the floor with an air or wisdom and his fingers pressed against his forehead, and
then he said, slowly, with his eyes on the king,--
'It is freshly plucked! It is round and it is red! It is a
pomegranate!'
Now the king knew nothing about fruits except that they were
good to eat; and, as for seasons, he asked for whatever fruit he wanted
whenever he wanted it, and saw that he got it; so to him Moti's guess was like
a miracle, and clear proof not only of his wisdom but of his innocence, for it
was a pomegranate that he had put into the box. Of course when the king
marvelled and praised Moti's wisdom, everybody else did so too; and, whilst the
Afghans went off crestfallen, Moti took the horse and entered the king's
service.
Very soon after this, Moti, who continued to live in the
serai, came back one wet and stormy evening to find that his precious horse had
strayed. Nothing remained of him but a broken halter cord, and no one knew what
had become of him. After inquiring of everyone who was likely to know, Moti
seized the cord and his big staff and sallied out to look for him. Away and
away he tramped out of the city and into the neighbouring forest, tracking
hoof-marks in the mud. Presently it grew late, but still Moti wandered on until
suddenly in the gathering darkness he came right upon a tiger who was
contentedly eating his horse.
'You thief!' shrieked Moti, and ran up and, just as the
tiger, in astonishment, dropped a bone--whack! came Moti's staff on his head
with such good will that the beast was half stunned and could hardly breathe or
see. Then Moti continued to shower upon him blows and abuse until the poor
tiger could hardly stand, whereupon his tormentor tied the end of the broken
halter round his neck and dragged him back to the serai.
'If you had my horse,' he said, 'I will at least have you,
that's fair enough!' And he tied him up securely by the head and heels, much as
he used to tie the horse; then, the night being far gone, he flung himself
beside him and slept soundly.
You cannot imagine anything like the fright of the people in
the serai, when they woke up and found a tiger--very battered but still a
tiger--securely tethered amongst themselves and their beasts! Men gathered in
groups talking and exclaiming, and finding fault with the innkeeper for
allowing such a dangerous beast into the serai, and all the while the innkeeper
was just as troubled as the rest, and none dared go near the place where the
tiger stood blinking miserably on everyone, and where Moti lay stretched out
snoring like thunder.
At last news reached the king that Moti had exchanged his
horse for a live tiger; and the monarch himself came down, half disbelieving
the tale, to see if it were really true. Someone at last awaked Moti with the
news that his royal master was come; and he arose yawning, and was soon
delightedly explaining and showing off his new possession. The king, however,
did not share his pleasure at all, but called up a soldier to shoot the tiger,
much to the relief of all the inmates of the serai except Moti. If the king,
however, was before convinced that Moti was one of the wisest of men, he was
now still more convinced that he was the bravest, and he increased his pay a
hundredfold, so that our hero thought that he was the luckiest of men.
A week or two after this incident the king sent for Moti, who
on arrival found his master in despair. A neighbouring monarch, he explained,
who had many more soldiers than he, had declared war against him, and he was at
his wits' end, for he had neither money to buy him off nor soldiers enough to
fight him--what was he to do?
'If that is all, don't you trouble,' said Moti. 'Turn out
your men, and I'll go with them, and we'll soon bring this robber to reason.'
The king began to revive at these hopeful words, and took
Moti off to his stable where he bade him choose for himself any horse he liked.
There were plenty of fine horses in the stalls, but to the king's astonishment
Moti chose a poor little rat of a pony that was used to carry grass and water for
the rest of the stable.
'But why do you choose that beast?' said the king.
'Well, you see, your majesty,' replied Moti, 'there are so
many chances that I may fall off, and if I choose one of your fine big horses I
shall have so far to fall that I shall probably break my leg or my arm, if not
my neck, but if I fall off this little beast I can't hurt myself much.'
A very comical sight was Moti when he rode out to the war.
The only weapon he carried was his staff, and to help him to keep his balance
on horseback he had tied to each of his ankles a big stone that nearly touched
the ground as he sat astride the little pony. The rest of the king's cavalry
were not very numerous, but they pranced along in armour on fine horses. Behind
them came a great rabble of men on foot armed with all sorts of weapons, and
last of all was the king with his attendants, very nervous and ill at ease. So
the army started.
They had not very far to go, but Moti's little pony, weighted
with a heavy man and two big rocks, soon began to lag behind the cavalry, and
would have lagged behind the infantry too, only they were not very anxious to
be too early in the fight, and hung back so as to give Moti plenty of time. The
young man jogged along more and more slowly for some time, until at last,
getting impatient at the slowness of the pony, he gave him such a tremendous
thwack with his staff that the pony completely lost his temper and bolted.
First one stone became untied and rolled away in a cloud of dust to one side of
the road, whilst Moti nearly rolled off too, but clasped his steed valiantly by
its ragged mane, and, dropping his staff, held on for dear life. Then,
fortunately the other rock broke away from his other leg and rolled
thunderously down a neighbouring ravine. Meanwhile the advanced cavalry had
barely time to draw to one side when Moti came dashing by, yelling bloodthirsty
threats to his pony:
'You wait till I get hold of you! I'll skin you alive! I'll
wring your neck! I'll break every bone in your body!' The cavalry thought that
this dreadful language was meant for the enemy, and were filled with admiration
of his courage. Many of their horses too were quite upset by this whirlwind
that galloped howling through their midst, and in a few minutes, after a little
plunging and rearing and kicking, the whole troop were following on Moti's
heels.
Far in advance, Moti continued his wild career. Presently in
his course he came to a great field of castor-oil plants, ten or twelve feet
high, big and bushy, but quite green and soft. Hoping to escape from the back
of his fiery steed Moti grasped one in passing, but its roots gave way, and he
dashed on, with the whole plant looking like a young tree flourishing in his
grip.
The enemy were in battle array, advancing over the plain,
their king with them confident and cheerful, when suddenly from the front came
a desperate rider at a furious gallop.
'Sire!' he cried, 'save yourself! the enemy are coming!'
'What do you mean?' said the king.
'Oh, sire!' panted the messenger, 'fly at once, there is no
time to lose. Foremost of the enemy rides a mad giant at a furious gallop. He
flourishes a tree for a club and is wild with anger, for as he goes he cries,
"You wait till I get hold of you! I'll skin you alive! I'll wring your
neck! I'll break every bone in your body!" Others ride behind, and you
will do well to retire before this whirlwind of destruction comes upon you.'
Just then out of a cloud of dust in the distance the king saw
Moti approaching at a hard gallop, looking indeed like a giant compared with
the little beast he rode, whirling his castor-oil plant, which in the distance
might have been an oak tree, and the sound of his revilings and shoutings came
down upon the breeze! Behind him the dust cloud moved to the sound of the
thunder of hoofs, whilst here and there flashed the glitter of steel. The sight
and the sound struck terror into the king, and, turning his horse, he fled at
top speed, thinking that a regiment of yelling giants was upon him; and all his
force followed him as fast as they might go. One fat officer alone could not
keep up on foot with that mad rush, and as Moti came galloping up he flung
himself on the ground in abject fear. This was too much for Moti's excited
pony, who shied so suddenly that Moti went flying over his head like a sky
rocket, and alighted right on the top of his fat foe.
Quickly regaining his feet Moti began to swing his plant
round his head and to shout:
'Where are your men? Bring them up and I'll kill them. My
regiments! Come on, the whole lot of you! Where's your king? Bring him to me.
Here are all my fine fellows coming up and we'll each pull up a tree by the
roots and lay you all flat and your houses and towns and everything else! Come
on!'
But the poor fat officer could do nothing but squat on his
knees with his hands together, gasping. At last, when he got his breath, Moti
sent him off to bring his king, and to tell him that if he was reasonable his
life should be spared. Off the poor man went, and by the time the troops of
Moti's side had come up and arranged themselves to look as formidable as
possible, he returned with his king. The latter was very humble and apologetic,
and promised never to make war any more, to pay a large sum of money, and
altogether do whatever his conqueror wished.
So the armies on both sides went rejoicing home, and this was
really the making of the fortune of clumsy Moti, who lived long and contrived
always to be looked up to as a fountain of wisdom, valour, and discretion by
all except his relations, who could never understand what he had done to be
considered so much wiser than anyone else.
A Pushto Story.
0 Comments
If you have any Misunderstanding Please let me know