The Street Musicians
A man once possessed a donkey which had served him faithfully
for many years, but at last the poor beast grew old and feeble, and every day
his work became more of a burden. As he was no longer of any use, his master
made up his mind to shoot him; but when the donkey learnt the fate that was in
store for him, he determined not to die, but to run away to the nearest town
and there to become a street musician.
When he had trotted along for some distance he came upon a
greyhound lying on the road, and panting for dear life. 'Well, brother,' said
the donkey, 'what's the matter with you? You look rather tired.'
'So I am,' replied the dog, 'but because I am getting old and
am growing weaker every day, and cannot go out hunting any longer, my master
wanted to poison me; and, as life is still sweet, I have taken leave of him.
But how I am to earn my own livelihood I haven't a notion.'
'Well,' said the donkey, 'I am on my way to the nearest big town,
where I mean to become a street musician. Why don't you take up music as a
profession and come along with me? I'll play the flute and you can play the
kettle-drum.'
The greyhound was quite pleased at the idea, and the two set
off together. When they had gone a short distance they met a cat with a face as
long as three rainy days. 'Now, what has happened to upset your happiness,
friend puss?' inquired the donkey.
'It's impossible to look cheerful when one feels depressed,'
answered the cat. 'I am well up in years now, and have lost most of my teeth;
consequently I prefer sitting in front of the fire to catching mice, and so my
old mistress wanted to drown me. I have no wish to die yet, so I ran away from
her; but good advice is expensive, and I don't know where I am to go to, or
what I am to do.'
'Come to the nearest big town with us,' said the donkey, 'and
try your fortune as a street musician. I know what sweet music you make at
night, so you are sure to be a success.'
The cat was delighted with the donkey's proposal, and they
all continued their journey together. In a short time they came to the
courtyard of an inn, where they found a cock crowing lustily. 'What in the
world is the matter with you?' asked the donkey. 'The noise you are making is
enough to break the drums of our ears.'
'I am only prophesying good weather,' said the cock; 'for
to-morrow is a feast day, and just because it is a holiday and a number of
people are expected at the inn, the landlady has given orders for my neck to be
wrung to-night, so that I may be made into soup for to-morrow's dinner.'
'I'll tell you what, redcap,' said the donkey; 'you had much
better come with us to the nearest town. You have got a good voice, and could
join a street band we are getting up.' The cock was much pleased with the idea,
and the party proceeded on their way.
But the nearest big town was a long way off, and it took them
more than a day to reach it. In the evening they came to a wood, and they made
up their minds to go no further, but to spend the night there. The donkey and
the greyhound lay down under a big tree, and the cat and the cock got up into
the branches, the cock flying right up to the topmost twig, where he thought he
would be safe from all danger. Before he went to sleep he looked round the four
points of the compass, and saw a little spark burning in the distance. He
called out to his companions that he was sure there must be a house not far
off, for he could see a light shining.
When he heard this, the donkey said at, once: 'Then we must
get up, and go and look for the house, for this is very poor shelter.' And the
greyhound added: 'Yes; I feel I'd be all the better for a few bones and a scrap
or two of meat.'
So they set out for the spot where the light was to be seen
shining faintly in the distance, but the nearer they approached it the brighter
it grew, till at last they came to a brilliantly lighted house. The donkey
being the biggest of the party, went to the window and looked in.
'Well, greyhead, what do you see?' asked the cock.
'I see a well-covered table,' replied the donkey, 'with
excellent food and drink, and several robbers are sitting round it, enjoying
themselves highly.'
'I wish we were doing the same,' said the cock.
'So do I,' answered the donkey. 'Can't we think of some plan
for turning out the robbers, and taking possession of the house ourselves?'
So they consulted together what they were to do, and at last
they arranged that the donkey should stand at the window with his fore-feet on
the sill, that the greyhound should get on his back, the cat on the dog's
shoulder, and the cock on the cat's head. When they had grouped themselves in
this way, at a given signal, they all began their different forms of music. The
donkey brayed, the greyhound barked, the cat miawed, and the cock crew. Then
they all scrambled through the window into the room, breaking the glass into a
thousand pieces as they did so.
The robbers were all startled by the dreadful noise, and thinking
that some evil spirits at the least were entering the house, they rushed out
into the wood, their hair standing on end with terror. The four companions,
delighted with the success of their trick, sat down at the table, and ate and
drank all the food and wine that the robbers had left behind them.
When they had finished their meal they put out the lights,
and each animal chose a suitable sleeping-place. The donkey lay down in the
courtyard outside the house, the dog behind the door, the cat in front of the
fire, and the cock flew up on to a high shelf, and, as they were all tired
after their long day, they soon went to sleep.
Shortly after midnight, when the robbers saw that no light
was burning in the house and that all seemed quiet, the captain of the band
said: 'We were fools to let ourselves be so easily frightened away;' and,
turning to one of his men, he ordered him to go and see if all was safe.
The man found everything in silence and darkness, and going
into the kitchen he thought he had better strike a light. He took a match, and
mistaking the fiery eyes of the cat for two glowing coals, he tried to light
his match with them. But the cat didn't see the joke, and sprang at his face,
spitting and scratching him in the most vigorous manner. The man was terrified
out of his life, and tried to run out by the back door; but he stumbled over
the greyhound, which bit him in the leg. Yelling with pain he ran across the
courtyard only to receive a kick from the donkey's hind leg as he passed him.
In the meantime the cock had been roused from his slumbers, and feeling very
cheerful he called out, from the, shelf where he was perched, 'Kikeriki!'
Then the robber hastened back to his captain and said: 'Sir,
there is a dreadful witch in the house, who spat at me and scratched my face
with her long fingers; and before the door there stands a man with a long
knife, who cut my leg severely. In the courtyard outside lies a black monster,
who fell upon me with a huge wooden club; and that is not all, for, sitting on
the roof, is a judge, who called out: "Bring the rascal to me." So I
fled for dear life.'
After this the robbers dared not venture into the house
again, and they abandoned it for ever. But the four street musicians were so
delighted with their lodgings that they determined to take up their abode in
the robbers' house, and, for all I know to the contrary, they may be living
there to this day.
[From the German, Kletke.]
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