98 lines
6.3 KiB
Text
98 lines
6.3 KiB
Text
The Devil's Sooty Brother
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A disbanded soldier had nothing to live on, and did not know how to get
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on. So he went out into the forest and when he had walked for a short
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time, he met a little man who was, however, the Devil. The little man
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said to him, "What ails you, you seem so very sorrowful?" Then the
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soldier said, "I am hungry, but have no money." The Devil said, "If you
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will hire yourself to me, and be my serving-man, you shall have enough
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for all your life. You shall serve me for seven years, and after that
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you shall again be free. But one thing I must tell you, and that is,
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you must not wash, comb, or trim yourself, or cut your hair or nails,
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or wipe the water from your eyes." The soldier said, "All right, if
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there is no help for it," and went off with the little man, who
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straightway led him down into hell. Then he told him what he had to do.
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He was to poke the fire under the kettles wherein the hell-broth was
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stewing, keep the house clean, drive all the sweepings behind the
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doors, and see that everything was in order, but if he once peeped into
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the kettles, it would go ill with him. The soldier said, "Good, I will
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take care." And then the old Devil went out again on his wanderings,
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and the soldier entered upon his new duties, made the fire, and swept
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the dirt well behind the doors, just as he had been bidden. When the
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old Devil came back again, he looked to see if all had been done,
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appeared satisfied, and went forth a second time. The soldier now took
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a good look on every side; the kettles were standing all round hell
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with a mighty fire below them, and inside they were boiling and
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sputtering. He would have given anything to look inside them, if the
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Devil had not so particularly forbidden him: at last, he could no
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longer restrain himself, slightly raised the lid of the first kettle,
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and peeped in, and there he saw his former corporal shut in. "Aha, old
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bird!" said he, "Do I meet you here? You once had me in your power, now
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I have you," and he quickly let the lid fall, poked the fire, and added
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a fresh log. After that, he went to the second kettle, raised its lid
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also a little, and peeped in; his former ensign was in that. "Aha, old
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bird, so I find you here! you once had me in your power, now I have
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you." He closed the lid again, and fetched yet another log to make it
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really hot. Then he wanted to see who might be sitting up in the third
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kettle it was actually be but a general. "Aha, old bird, do I meet you
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here? Once you had me in your power, now I have you." And he fetched
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the bellows and made hell-fire blaze right under him. So he did his
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work seven years in hell, did not wash, comb, or trim himself, or cut
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his hair or nails, or wash the water out of his eyes, and the seven
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years seemed so short to him that he thought he had only been half a
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year. Now when the time had fully gone by, the Devil came and said,
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"Well Hans, what have you done?" "I poked the fire under the kettles,
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and I have swept all the dirt well behind the doors."
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"But you have peeped into the kettles as well; it is lucky for you that
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you added fresh logs to them, or else your life would have been
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forfeited; now that your time is up, will you go home again?" "Yes,"
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said the soldier, "I should very much like to see what my father is
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doing at home." The Devil said, "In order that you may receive the
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wages you have earned, go and fill your knapsack full of the sweepings,
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and take it home with you. You must also go unwashed and uncombed, with
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long hair on your head and beard, and with uncut nails and dim eyes,
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and when you are asked whence you come, you must say, "From hell," and
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when you are asked who you are, you are to say, "The Devil's sooty
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brother, and my King as well." The soldier held his peace, and did as
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the Devil bade him, but he was not at all satisfied with his wages.
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Then as soon as he was up in the forest again, he took his knapsack
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from his back, to empty it, but on opening it, the sweepings had become
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pure gold. "I should never have expected that," said he, and was well
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pleased, and entered the town. The landlord was standing in front of
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the inn, and when he saw the soldier approaching, he was terrified,
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because Hans looked so horrible, worse than a scare-crow. He called to
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him and asked, "Whence comest thou?" "From hell." "Who art thou?" "The
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Devil's sooty brother, and my King as well." Then the host would not
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let him enter, but when Hans showed him the gold, he came and unlatched
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the door himself. Hans then ordered the best room and attendance, ate,
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and drank his fill, but neither washed nor combed himself as the Devil
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had bidden him, and at last lay down to sleep. But the knapsack full of
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gold remained before the eyes of the landlord, and left him no peace,
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and during the night he crept in and stole it away. Next morning,
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however, when Hans got up and wanted to pay the landlord and travel
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further, behold his knapsack was gone! But he soon composed himself and
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thought, "Thou hast been unfortunate from no fault of thine own," and
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straightway went back again to hell, complained of his misfortune to
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the old Devil, and begged for his help. The Devil said, "Seat yourself,
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I will wash, comb, and trim you, cut your hair and nails, and wash your
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eyes for you," and when he had done with him, he gave him the knapsack
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back again full of sweepings, and said, "Go and tell the landlord that
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he must return you your money, or else I will come and fetch him, and
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he shall poke the fire in your place." Hans went up and said to the
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landlord, "Thou hast stolen my money; if thou dost not return it, thou
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shalt go down to hell in my place, and wilt look as horrible as I."
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Then the landlord gave him the money, and more besides, only begging
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him to keep it secret, and Hans was now a rich man.
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He set out on his way home to his father, bought himself a shabby
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smock-frock to wear, and strolled about making music, for he had
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learned to do that while he was with the Devil in hell. There was
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however, an old King in that country, before whom he had to play, and
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the King was so delighted with his playing, that he promised him his
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eldest daughter in marriage. But when she heard that she was to be
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married to a common fellow in a smock-frock, she said, "Rather than do
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that, I would go into the deepest water." Then the King gave him the
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youngest, who was quite willing to do it to please her father, and thus
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the Devil's sooty brother got the King's daughter, and when the aged
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King died, the whole kingdom likewise.
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