| There was once a peasant who had driven his cow to the fair, and sold | |
| her for seven talers. On the way home he had to pass a pond, and | |
| already from afar he heard the frogs crying, aik, aik, aik, aik. | |
| Well, said he to himself, they are talking without rhyme or reason, | |
| it is seven that I have received, not eight. When he got to the | |
| water, he cried to them, stupid animals that you are. Don't you know | |
| better than that. It is seven thalers and not eight. The frogs, | |
| however, stuck to their, aik aik, aik, aik. Come, then, if you won't | |
| believe it, I can count it out to you. And he took his money out of | |
| his pocket and counted out the seven talers, always reckoning four | |
| and twenty groschen to a taler. The frogs, however, paid no | |
| attention to his reckoning, but still cried, aik, aik, aik, aik. | |
| What, cried the peasant, quite angry, if you know better than I, | |
| count it yourselves, and threw all the money at them into the water. | |
| He stood still and wanted to wait until they were through and had | |
| returned to him what was his, but the frogs maintained their opinion | |
| and cried continually, aik, aik, aik, aik. And besides that, did not | |
| throw the money out again. He still waited a long while until | |
| evening came on and he was forced to go home. Then he abused the | |
| frogs and cried, you water-splashers, you thick-heads, you | |
| goggle-eyes, you have great mouths and can screech till you hurt | |
| one's ears, but you cannot count seven talers. Do you think I'm | |
| going to stand here till you get through. And with that he went | |
| away, but the frogs still cried, aik, aik, aik, aik, after him till | |
| he went home sorely vexed. After a while he bought another cow, which | |
| he slaughtered, and he made the calculation that if he sold the meat | |
| well he might gain as much as the two cows were worth, and have the | |
| hide into the bargain. When therefore he got to the town with the | |
| meat, a great pack of dogs were gathered together in front of the | |
| gate, with a large greyhound at the head of them, which jumped at the | |
| meat, sniffed at it, and barked, wow, wow, wow. As there was no | |
| stopping him, the peasant said to him, yes, yes, I know quite well | |
| that you are saying wow, wow, wow, because you want some of the meat, | |
| but I should be in a fine state if I were to give it to you. The | |
| dog, however, answered nothing but wow, wow. Will you promise not to | |
| devour it all then, and will you go bail for your companions. Wow, | |
| wow, wow, said the dog. Well, if you insist on it, I will leave it | |
| for you, I know you well, and know whom you serve, but this I tell | |
| you, I must have my money in three days or else it will go ill with | |
| you, you can just bring it out to me. Thereupon he unloaded the meat | |
| and turned back again. The dogs fell upon it and loudly barked, wow, | |
| wow. The countryman, who heard them from afar, said to himself, hark, | |
| now they all want some, but the big one is responsible to me for it. | |
| When three days had passed, the countryman thought, to-night my money | |
| will be in my pocket, and was quite delighted. But no one would come | |
| and pay it. There is no trusting any one now, said he. At last he | |
| lost patience, and went into the town to the butcher and demanded his | |
| money. The butcher thought it was a joke, but the peasant said, | |
| jesting apart, I will have my money. Did not the big dog bring you | |
| the whole of the slaughtered cow three days ago. Then the butcher | |
| grew angry, snatched a broomstick and drove him out. Wait, said the | |
| peasant, there is still some justice in the world, and went to the | |
| royal palace and begged for an audience. He was led before the king, | |
| who sat there with his daughter, and asked him what injury he had | |
| suffered. Alas, said he, the frogs and the dogs have taken from me | |
| what is mine, and the butcher has paid me for it with the stick. And | |
| he related at full length what had happened. Thereupon the king's | |
| daughter began to laugh heartily, and the king said to him, I cannot | |
| give you justice in this, but you shall have my daughter to wife for | |
| it - in her whole life she has never yet laughed as she has just done | |
| at you, and I have promised her to him who could make her laugh. You | |
| may thank God for your good fortune. Oh, answered the peasant, I do | |
| not want her at all. I have a wife already, and she is one too many | |
| for me, when I go home, it is just as if I had a wife standing in | |
| every corner. Then the king grew angry, and said, you are a boor. | |
| Ah, lord king, replied the peasant, what can you expect from an ox, | |
| but beef. Stop, answered the king, you shall have another reward. | |
| Be off now, but come back in three days, and then you shall have five | |
| hundred counted out in full. When the peasant went out by the gate, | |
| the sentry said, you have made the king's daughter laugh, so you will | |
| certainly receive something good. Yes, that is what I think, | |
| answered the peasant, five hundred are to be counted out to me. | |
| Listen, said the soldier, give me some of it. What can you do with | |
| all that money. As it is you, said the peasant, you shall have two | |
| hundred, present yourself in three days, time before the king, and | |
| let it be paid to you. A Jew, who was standing by and had heard the | |
| conversation, ran after the peasant, held him by the coat, and said, | |
| oh, wonder of God, what a child of fortune you are. I will change it | |
| for you, I will change it for you into small coins, what do you want | |
| with the great talers. Jew, said the countryman, three hundred can | |
| you still have, give it to me at once in coin, in three days from | |
| this, you will be paid for it by the king. The Jew was delighted | |
| with the small profit, and brought the sum in bad groschen, three of | |
| which were worth two good ones. After three days had passed, | |
| according to the king's command, the peasant went before the king. | |
| Pull his coat off, said the latter, and he shall have his five | |
| hundred. Ah, said the peasant, they no longer belong to me, I | |
| presented two hundred of them to the sentry, and three hundred the | |
| Jew has changed for me, so by right nothing at all belongs to me. In | |
| the meantime the soldier and the Jew entered and claimed what they | |
| had gained from the peasant, and they received the blows strictly | |
| counted out. The soldier bore it patiently and knew already how it | |
| tasted, but the Jew said sorrowfully, alas, alas, are these the heavy | |
| talers. The king could not help laughing at the peasant, and when | |
| all his anger was spent, he said, as you have already lost your | |
| reward before it fell to your lot, I will give you compensation. Go | |
| into my treasure chamber and get some money for yourself, as much as | |
| you will. The peasant did not need to be told twice, and stuffed | |
| into his big pockets whatsoever would go in. Afterwards he went to | |
| an inn and counted out his money. The Jew had crept after him and | |
| heard how he muttered to himself, that rogue of a king has cheated me | |
| after all, why could he not have given me the money himself, and then | |
| I should have known what I had. How can I tell now if what I have | |
| had the luck to put in my pockets is right or not. Good heavens, | |
| said the Jew to himself, that man is speaking disrespectfully of our | |
| lord the king, I will run and inform, and then I shall get a reward, | |
| and he will be punished as well. When the king heard of the peasant's | |
| words he fell into a passion, and commanded the Jew to go and bring | |
| the offender to him. The Jew ran to the peasant, you are to go at | |
| once to the lord king in the very clothes you have on. I know what's | |
| right better than that, answered the peasant, I shall have a new coat | |
| made first. Do you think that a man with so much money in his pocket | |
| should go there in his ragged old coat. The Jew, as he saw that the | |
| peasant would not stir without another coat, and as he feared that if | |
| the king's anger cooled, he himself would lose his reward, and the | |
| peasant his punishment, said, I will out of pure friendship lend you | |
| a coat for the short time. What people will not do for love. The | |
| peasant was contented with this, put the Jew's coat on, and went off | |
| with him. The king reproached the countryman because of the evil | |
| speaking of which the Jew had informed him. Ah, said the peasant, | |
| what a Jew says is always false - no true word ever comes out of his | |
| mouth. That rascal there is capable of maintaining that I have his | |
| coat on. What is that, shrieked the Jew, is the coat not mine. Have | |
| I not lent it to you out of pure friendship, in order that you might | |
| appear before the lord king. When the king heard that, he said, the | |
| Jew has assuredly deceived one or the other of us, either myself or | |
| the peasant. And again he ordered something to be counted out to him | |
| in hard thalers. The peasant, however, went home in the good coat, | |
| with the good money in his pocket, and said to himself, this time I | |
| have made it. | |