114 lines
7.6 KiB
Text
114 lines
7.6 KiB
Text
Master Pfriem (Master Cobbler’s Awl)
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Master Pfriem was a short, thin, but lively man, who never rested a
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moment. His face, of which his turned-up nose was the only prominent
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feature, was marked with small-pox and pale as death, his hair was gray
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and shaggy, his eyes small, but they glanced perpetually about on all
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sides. He saw everything, criticised everything, knew everything best,
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and was always in the right. When he went into the streets, he moved
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his arms about as if he were rowing; and once he struck the pail of a
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girl, who was carrying water, so high in the air that he himself was
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wetted all over by it. “Stupid thing,” cried he to her, while he was
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shaking himself, “couldst thou not see that I was coming behind thee?”
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By trade he was a shoemaker, and when he worked he pulled his thread
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out with such force that he drove his fist into every one who did not
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keep far enough off. No apprentice stayed more than a month with him,
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for he had always some fault to find with the very best work. At one
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time it was that the stitches were not even, at another that one shoe
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was too long, or one heel higher than the other, or the leather not cut
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large enough. “Wait,” said he to his apprentice, “I will soon show thee
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how we make skins soft,” and he brought a strap and gave him a couple
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of strokes across the back. He called them all sluggards. He himself
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did not turn much work out of his hands, for he never sat still for a
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quarter of an hour. If his wife got up very early in the morning and
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lighted the fire, he jumped out of bed, and ran bare-footed into the
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kitchen, crying, “Wilt thou burn my house down for me? That is a fire
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one could roast an ox by! Does wood cost nothing?” If the servants were
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standing by their wash-tubs and laughing, and telling each other all
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they knew, he scolded them, and said, “There stand the geese cackling,
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and forgetting their work, to gossip! And why fresh soap? Disgraceful
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extravagance and shameful idleness into the bargain! They want to save
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their hands, and not rub the things properly!” And out he would run and
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knock a pail full of soap and water over, so that the whole kitchen was
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flooded. Someone was building a new house, so he hurried to the window
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to look on. “There, they are using that red sand-stone again that never
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dries!” cried he. “No one will ever be healthy in that house! and just
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look how badly the fellows are laying the stones! Besides, the mortar
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is good for nothing! It ought to have gravel in it, not sand. I shall
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live to see that house tumble down on the people who are in it.” He sat
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down, put a couple of stitches in, and then jumped up again, unfastened
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his leather-apron, and cried, “I will just go out, and appeal to those
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men’s consciences.” He stumbled on the carpenters. “What’s this?” cried
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he, “you are not working by the line! Do you expect the beams to be
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straight?—one wrong will put all wrong.” He snatched an axe out of a
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carpenter’s hand and wanted to show him how he ought to cut; but as a
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cart loaded with clay came by, he threw the axe away, and hastened to
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the peasant who was walking by the side of it: “You are not in your
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right mind,” said he, “who yokes young horses to a heavily-laden cart?
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The poor beasts will die on the spot.” The peasant did not give him an
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answer, and Pfriem in a rage ran back into his workshop. When he was
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setting himself to work again, the apprentice reached him a shoe.
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“Well, what’s that again?” screamed he, “Haven’t I told you you ought
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not to cut shoes so broad? Who would buy a shoe like this, which is
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hardly anything else but a sole? I insist on my orders being followed
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exactly.” “Master,” answered the apprentice, “you may easily be quite
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right about the shoe being a bad one, but it is the one which you
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yourself cut out, and yourself set to work at. When you jumped up a
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while since, you knocked it off the table, and I have only just picked
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it up. An angel from heaven, however, would never make you believe
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that.”
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One night Master Pfriem dreamed he was dead, and on his way to heaven.
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When he got there, he knocked loudly at the door. “I wonder,” said he
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to himself, “that they have no knocker on the door,—one knocks one’s
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knuckles sore.” The apostle Peter opened the door, and wanted to see
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who demanded admission so noisily. “Ah, it’s you, Master Pfriem;” said
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he, “well, I’ll let you in, but I warn you that you must give up that
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habit of yours, and find fault with nothing you see in heaven, or you
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may fare ill.” “You might have spared your warning,” answered Pfriem.
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“I know already what is seemly, and here, God be thanked, everything is
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perfect, and there is nothing to blame as there is on earth.” So he
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went in, and walked up and down the wide expanses of heaven. He looked
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around him, to the left and to the right, but sometimes shook his head,
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or muttered something to himself. Then he saw two angels who were
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carrying away a beam. It was the beam which some one had had in his own
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eye whilst he was looking for the splinter in the eye of another. They
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did not, however, carry the beam lengthways, but obliquely. “Did any
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one ever see such a piece of stupidity?” thought Master Pfriem; but he
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said nothing, and seemed satisfied with it. “It comes to the same thing
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after all, whichever way they carry the beam, straight or crooked, if
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they only get along with it, and truly I do not see them knock against
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anything.” Soon after this he saw two angels who were drawing water out
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of a well into a bucket, but at the same time he observed that the
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bucket was full of holes, and that the water was running out of it on
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every side. They were watering the earth with rain. “Hang it,” he
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exclaimed; but happily recollected himself, and thought, “Perhaps it is
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only a pastime. If it is an amusement, then it seems they can do
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useless things of this kind even here in heaven, where people, as I
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have already noticed, do nothing but idle about.” He went farther and
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saw a cart which had stuck fast in a deep hole. “It’s no wonder,” said
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he to the man who stood by it; “who would load so unreasonably? what
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have you there?” “Good wishes,” replied the man, “I could not go along
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the right way with it, but still I have pushed it safely up here, and
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they won’t leave me sticking here.” In fact an angel did come and
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harnessed two horses to it. “That’s quite right,” thought Pfriem, “but
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two horses won’t get that cart out, it must at least have four to it.”
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Another angel came and brought two more horses; she did not, however,
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harness them in front of it, but behind. That was too much for Master
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Pfriem, “Clumsy creature,” he burst out with, “what are you doing
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there? Has any one ever since the world began seen a cart drawn in that
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way? But you, in your conceited arrogance, think that you know
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everything best.” He was going to say more, but one of the inhabitants
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of heaven seized him by the throat and pushed him forth with
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irresistible strength. Beneath the gateway Master Pfriem turned his
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head round to take one more look at the cart, and saw that it was being
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raised into the air by four winged horses.
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At this moment Master Pfriem awoke. “Things are certainly arranged in
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heaven otherwise than they are on earth,” said he to himself, “and that
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excuses much; but who can see horses harnessed both behind and before
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with patience; to be sure they had wings, but who could know that? It
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is, besides, great folly to fix a pair of wings to a horse that has
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four legs to run with already! But I must get up, or else they will
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make nothing but mistakes for me in my house. It is a lucky thing for
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me though, that I am not really dead.”
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