Which
was the Foolishest?
In a
little village that stood on a wide plain, where you could see the sun from the
moment he rose to the moment he set, there lived two couples side by side. The
men, who worked under the same master, were quite good friends, but the wives
were always quarrelling, and the subject they quarrelled most about was--which
of the two had the stupidest husband.
Unlike
most women--who think that anything that belongs to them must be better than
what belongs to anyone else--each thought her husband the more foolish of the
two.
'You
should just see what he does!' one said to her neighbour. 'He puts on the
baby's frock upside down, and, one day, I found him trying to feed her with
boiling soup, and her mouth was scalded for days after. Then he picks up stones
in the road and sows them instead of potatoes, and one day he wanted to go into
the garden from the top window, because he declared it was a shorter way than
through the door.'
'That
is bad enough, of course,' answered the other; 'but it is really NOTHING to
what I have to endure every day from MY husband. If, when I am busy, I ask him
to go and feed the poultry, he is certain to give them some poisonous stuff
instead of their proper food, and when I visit the yard next I find them all
dead. Once he even took my best bonnet, when I had gone away to my sick mother,
and when I came back I found he had given it to the hen to lay her eggs in. And
you know yourself that, only last week, when I sent him to buy a cask of
butter, he returned driving a hundred and fifty ducks which someone had induced
him to take, and not one of them would lay.'
'Yes,
I am afraid he IS trying,' replied the first; 'but let us put them to the
proof, and see which of them is the most foolish.'
So,
about the time that she expected her husband home from work, she got out her
spinning-wheel, and sat busily turning it, taking care not even to look up from
her work when the man came in. For some minutes he stood with his mouth open
watching her, and as she still remained silent, he said at last:
'Have
you gone mad, wife, that you sit spinning without anything on the wheel?'
'YOU
may think that there is nothing on it,' answered she, 'but I can assure you
that there is a large skein of wool, so fine that nobody can see it, which will
be woven into a coat for you.'
'Dear
me!' he replied, 'what a clever wife I have got! If you had not told me I
should never have known that there was any wool on the wheel at all. But now I
really do seem to see something.'
The
woman smiled and was silent, and after spinning busily for an hour more, she
got up from her stoop, and began to weave as fast as she could. At last she got
up, and said to her husband: 'I am too tired to finish it to-night, so I shall
go to bed, and to-morrow I shall only have the cutting and stitching to do.'
So
the next morning she got up early, and after she had cleaned her house, and fed
her chickens, and put everything in its place again, she bent over the kitchen
table, and the sound of her big scissors might be heard snip! snap! as far as
the garden. Her husband could not see anything to snip at; but then he was so
stupid that was not surprising!
After
the cutting came the sewing. The woman patted and pinned and fixed and joined,
and then, turning to the man, she said:
'Now
it is ready for you to try on.' And she made him take off his coat, and stand
up in front of her, and once more she patted an pinned and fixed and joined,
and was very careful in smoothing out every wrinkle.
'It
does not feel very warm,' observed the man at last, when he had borne all this
patiently for a long time.
'That
is because it is so fine,' answered she; 'you do not want it to be as thick as
the rough clothes you wear every day.'
He
DID, but was ashamed to say so, and only answered: 'Well, I am sure it must be
beautiful since you say so, and I shall be smarter than anyone in the whole
village. "What a splendid coat!" they will exclaim when they see me.
But it is not everybody who has a wife as clever as mine.'
Meanwhile
the other wife was not idle. As soon as her husband entered she looked at him
with such a look of terror that the poor man was quite frightened.
'Why
do you stare at me so? Is there anything the matter?' asked he.
'Oh!
go to bed at once,' she cried; 'you must be very ill indeed to look like that!'
The
man was rather surprised at first, as he felt particularly well that evening;
but the moment his wife spoke he became quite certain that he had something
dreadful the matter with him, and grew quite pale.
'I
dare say it would be the best place for me,' he answered, trembling; and he
suffered his wife to take him upstairs, and to help him off with his clothes.
'If
you sleep well during the might there MAY be a chance for you,' said she,
shaking her head, as she tucked him up warmly; 'but if not--' And of course the
poor man never closed an eye till the sun rose.
'How
do you feel this morning?' asked the woman, coming in on tip-toe when her
house-work was finished.
'Oh,
bad; very bad indeed,' answered he; 'I have not slept for a moment. Can you think
of nothing to make me better?'
'I
will try everything that is possible,' said the wife, who did not in the least
wish her husband to die, but was determined to show that he was more foolish
that the other man. 'I will get some dried herbs and make you a drink, but I am
very much afraid that it is too late. Why did you not tell me before?'
'I
thought perhaps the pain would go off in a day or two; and, besides, I did not
want to make you unhappy,' answered the man, who was by this time quite sure he
had been suffering tortures, and had borne them like a hero. 'Of course, if I
had had any idea how ill I really was, I should have spoken at once.'
'Well,
well, I will see what can be done,' said the wife, 'but talking is not good for
you. Lie still, and keep yourself warm.'
All
that day the man lay in bed, and whenever his wife entered the room and asked
him, with a shake of the head, how he felt, he always replied that he was
getting worse. At last, in the evening, she burst into tears, and when he
inquired what was the matter, she sobbed out:
'Oh,
my poor, poor husband, are you really dead? I must go to-morrow and order your
coffin.'
Now,
when the man heard this, a cold shiver ran through his body, and all at once he
knew that he was as well as he had ever been in his life.
'Oh,
no, no!' he cried, 'I feel quite recovered! Indeed, I think I shall go out to
work.'
'You
will do no such thing,' replied his wife. 'Just keep quite quiet, for before
the sun rises you will be a dead man.'
The
man was very frightened at her words, and lay absolutely still while the
undertaker came and measured him for his coffin; and his wife gave orders to
the gravedigger about his grave. That evening the coffin was sent home, and in
the morning at nine o'clock the woman put him on a long flannel garment, and
called to the undertaker's men to fasten down the lid and carry him to the
grave, where all their friends were waiting them. Just as the body was being
placed in the ground the other woman's husband came running up, dressed, as far
as anyone could see, in no clothes at all. Everybody burst into shouts of
laughter at the sight of him, and the men laid down the coffin and laughed too,
till their sides nearly split. The dead man was so astonished at this behaviour,
that he peeped out of a little window in the side of the coffin, and cried out:
'I
should laugh as loudly as any of you, if I were not a dead man.'
When
they heard the voice coming from the coffin the other people suddenly stopped
laughing, and stood as if they had been turned into stone. Then they rushed
with one accord to the coffin, and lifted the lid so that the man could step
out amongst them.
'Were
you really not dead after all?' asked they. 'And if not, why did you let
yourself be buried?'
At
this the wives both confessed that they had each wished to prove that her
husband was stupider than the other. But the villagers declared that they could
not decide which was the most foolish--the man who allowed himself to be
persuaded that he was wearing fine clothes when he was dressed in nothing, or
the man who let himself be buried when he was alive and well.
So
the women quarrelled just as much as they did before, and no one ever knew
whose husband was the most foolish.
[Adapted
from the Neuislandische Volksmarchen.]
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