| There was once upon a time a tailor who had three sons, and |
| only one goat. But as the goat supported all of them with |
| her milk, she was obliged to have good food, and to be taken |
| every day to pasture. The sons did this, in turn. Once the eldest |
| took her to the churchyard, where the finest herbs were to be found, |
| and let her eat and run about there. At night when it was time to |
| go home he asked, goat, have you had enough. The goat answered |
| I have eaten so much, |
| not a leaf more I'll touch, meh. Meh. |
|
|
| Come home, then, said the youth, and took hold of the cord |
| round her neck, led her into the stable and tied her up securely. |
| Well, said the old tailor, has the goat had as much food as she |
| ought. Oh, answered the son, she has eaten so much, not a |
| leaf more she'll touch. But the father wished to satisfy himself, |
| and went down to the stable, stroked the dear animal and asked, |
| goat, are you satisfied. The goat answered, |
| how should I be satisfied. |
| Among the ditches I leapt about, |
| found no leaf, so went without, meh. Meh. |
|
|
| What do I hear, cried the tailor, and ran upstairs and said to the |
| youth. HI, you liar, you said the goat had had enough, and have |
| let her hunger, and in his anger he took the yard-measure from |
| the wall, and drove him out with blows. |
|
|
| Next day it was the turn of the second son, who sought a place |
| in the fence of the garden, where nothing but good herbs grew, and |
| the goat gobbled them all up. At night when he wanted to go home, |
| he asked, goat, are you satisfied. The goat answered, |
| I have eaten so much, |
| not a leaf more I'll touch, meh. Meh. |
|
|
| Come home, then, said the youth, and led her home, and tied her |
| up in the stable. Well, said the old tailor, has the goat had as |
| much food as she ought. Oh, answered the son, she has eaten |
| so much, not a leaf more she'll touch. The tailor would not rely |
| on this, but went down to the stable and said, goat, have you had |
| enough. The goat answered, |
| how should I be satisfied. |
| Among the ditches I leapt about, |
| found no leaf, so went without, meh. Meh. |
|
|
| The godless wretch. Cried the tailor, to let such a good animal |
| hunger, and he ran up and drove the youth out of doors with the |
| yard-measure. |
|
|
| Now came the turn of the third son, who wanted to do his duty |
| well, and sought out some bushes with the finest leaves, and let the |
| goat devour them. In the evening when he wanted to go home, he |
| asked, goat, have you had enough. The goat answered, |
| I have eaten so much, |
| not a leaf more I'll touch, meh. Meh. |
|
|
| Come home, then, said the youth, and led her into the stable, and |
| tied her up. Well, said the old tailor, has the goat had her full |
| share of food. She has eaten so much, not a leaf more she'll |
| touch. The tailor was distrustful, went down and asked, goat, |
| have you had enough. The wicked beast answered, |
| how should I be satisfied. |
| Among the ditches I leapt about, |
| found no leaf, so went without, meh. Meh. |
|
|
| Oh, the brood of liars, cried the tailor, each as wicked and |
| forgetful of his duty as the other. You shall no longer make a |
| fool of me, and quite beside himself with anger, he ran upstairs |
| and belabored the poor young fellow so vigorously with the |
| yard-measure that he sprang out of the house. |
|
|
| The old tailor was now alone with his goat. Next morning he |
| went down into the stable, stroked the goat and said, come, my |
| dear little animal, I myself will take you to feed. He took her |
| by the rope and conducted her to green hedges, and amongst milfoil |
| and whatever else goats like to eat. There you may for once eat to |
| your heart's content, said he to her, and let her browse till |
| evening. Then he asked, goat, are you satisfied. She replied. |
| I have eaten so much, |
| not a leaf more I'll touch, meh. Meh. |
|
|
| Come home, then, said the tailor, and led her into the stable, and |
| tied her fast. When he was going away, he turned round again and |
| said, well, are you satisfied for once. But the goat behaved no |
| better to him, and cried, |
| how should I be satisfied. |
| Among the ditches I leapt about, |
| found no leaf, so went without, meh. Meh. |
|
|
| When the tailor heard that, he was shocked, and saw clearly that |
| he had driven away his three sons without cause. Wait, you |
| ungrateful creature, cried he, it is not enough to drive you forth, |
| I will brand you so that you will no more dare to show yourself |
| amongst honest tailors. In great haste he ran upstairs, fetched his |
| razor, lathered the goat's head, and shaved her as clean as the palm |
| of his hand. And as the yard-measure would have been too good for |
| her, he brought the horsewhip, and gave her such cuts with it that |
| she bounded away with tremendous leaps. |
|
|
| When the tailor was thus left quite alone in his house he fell into |
| great grief, and would gladly have had his sons back again, but no |
| one knew whither they were gone. The eldest had apprenticed |
| himself to a joiner, and learnt industriously and indefatigably, |
| and when the time came for him to go traveling, his master presented |
| him with a little table which was not particularly beautiful, and |
| was made of common wood, but which had one good property. If |
| anyone set it out, and said, little table, spread yourself, the good |
| little table was at once covered with a clean little cloth, and a |
| plate was there, and a knife and fork beside it, and dishes with |
| boiled meats and roasted meats, as many as there was room for, and a |
| great glass of red wine shone so that it made the heart glad. The |
| young journeyman thought, with this you have enough for your |
| whole life, and went joyously about the world and never troubled |
| himself at all whether an inn was good or bad, or if anything was |
| to be found in it or not. When it suited him he did not enter an |
| inn at all, but either on the plain, in a wood, a meadow, or |
| wherever he fancied, he took his little table off his back, set it |
| down before him, and said, spread yourself, and then everything |
| appeared that his heart desired. At length he took it into his head |
| to go back to his father, whose anger would now be appeased, and |
| who would now willingly receive him with his magic table. It came |
| to pass that on his way home, he came one evening to an inn which |
| was filled with guests. They bade him welcome, and invited him to |
| sit and eat with them, for otherwise he would have difficulty in |
| getting anything. No, answered the joiner, I will not take the few |
| morsels out of |
| your mouths. Rather than that, you shall be my guests. They |
| laughed, and thought he was jesting with them. He but placed his |
| wooden table in the middle of the room, and said, little table, |
| spread yourself. Instantly it was covered with food, so good that |
| the host could never have procured it, and the smell of it |
| ascended pleasantly to the nostrils of the guests. Fall to, dear |
| friends, said the joiner, and the guests when they saw that he |
| meant it, did not need to be asked twice, but drew near, pulled out |
| their knives and attacked it valiantly. And what surprised them the |
| most was that when a dish became empty, a full one instantly took |
| its place of its own accord. The innkeeper stood in one corner and |
| watched the affair. He did not at all know what to say, but |
| thought, you could easily find a use for such a cook as that in your |
| household. The joiner and his comrades made merry until late |
| into the night. At length they lay down to sleep, and the young |
| apprentice also went to bed, and set his magic table against the |
| wall. The host's thoughts, however, let him have no rest. It |
| occurred to him that there was a little old table in his lumber-room |
| which looked just like the apprentice's and he brought it out, |
| and carefully exchanged it for the wishing table. Next morning |
| the joiner paid for his bed, took up his table, never thinking |
| that he had got a false one, and went his way. At mid-day he |
| reached his father, who received him with great joy. Well, my dear |
| son, what have you learnt. Said he to him. Father, I have become |
| a joiner. |
|
|
| A good trade, replied the old man, but what have you brought |
| back with you from your apprenticeship. Father, the best thing |
| which I have brought back with me is this little table. The |
| tailor inspected it on all sides and said, you did not make a |
| masterpiece when you made that. It is a bad old table. But it |
| is a table which furnishes itself, replied the son. When I set it |
| out, and tell it to spread itself, the most beautiful dishes stand |
| on it, and a wine also, which gladdens the heart. Just invite all |
| our relations and friends, they shall refresh and enjoy themselves |
| for once, for the table will give them all they require. When the |
| company was assembled, he put his table in the middle of the room and |
| said, little table, |
| spread yourself, but the little table did not bestir itself, and |
| remained just as bare as any other table which does not understand |
| language. Then the poor apprentice became aware that his table |
| had been changed, and was ashamed at having to stand there like a |
| liar. The relations, however, mocked him, and were forced to go |
| home without having eaten or drunk. The father brought out his |
| patches again, and went on tailoring, but the son went to a |
| master in the craft. |
|
|
| The second son had gone to a miller and had apprenticed himself |
| to him. When his years were over, the master said, as you |
| have conducted yourself so well, I give you an ass of a peculiar |
| kind, which neither draws a cart nor carries a sack. What good is |
| he, then. Asked the young apprentice. He spews forth gold, answered |
| the miller. If you set him on a cloth and say bricklebrit, |
| the good animal will spew forth gold pieces for you from back and |
| front. That is a fine thing, said the apprentice, and thanked the |
| master, and went out into the world. When he had need of gold, |
| he had only to say bricklebrit to his ass, and it rained gold |
| pieces, and he had nothing to do but pick them off the ground. |
| Wheresoever he went, the best of everything was good enough for |
| him, and the dearer the better, for he had always a full purse. |
| When he had looked about the world for some time, he thought, you |
| must seek out your father. If you go to him with the gold-ass he |
| will forget his anger, and receive you well. It came to pass |
| that he came to the same inn in which his brother's table had been |
| exchanged. He led his ass by the bridle, and the host was about |
| to take the animal from him and tie him up, but the young |
| apprentice said, don't trouble yourself, I will take my grey |
| horse into the stable, and tie him up myself too, for I must know |
| where he stands. This struck the host as odd, and he thought |
| that a man who was forced to look after his ass himself, could not |
| have much to spend. But when the stranger put his hand in his |
| pocket and brought out two gold pieces, and said he was to |
| provide something good for him, the host opened his eyes wide, and |
| ran and sought out the best he could muster. After dinner the |
| guest asked what he owed. The host did |
| not see why he should not double the reckoning, and said the |
| apprentice must give two more gold pieces. He felt in his pocket, |
| but his gold was just at an end. Wait an instant, sir host, said |
| he, I will go and fetch some money. But he took the table-cloth |
| with him. The host could not imagine what this could mean, and |
| being curious, stole after him, and as the guest bolted the stable |
| door, he peeped through a hole left by a knot in the wood. The |
| stranger spread out the cloth under the animal and cried, |
| bricklebrit, and immediately the beast began to let gold pieces fall |
| from back and front, so that it fairly rained down money on the |
| ground. Eh, my word, said the host, ducats are quickly coined |
| there. A purse like that is not to be sniffed at. The guest |
| paid his score, and went to bed, but in the night the host stole |
| down into the stable, led away the master of the mint, and tied up |
| another ass in his place. |
|
|
| Early next morning the apprentice traveled away with his ass, |
| and thought that he had his gold-ass. At mid-day he reached his |
| father, who rejoiced to see him again, and gladly took him in. |
| What have you made of yourself, my son. Asked the old man. |
| A miller, dear father, he answered. What have you brought back |
| with you from your travels. Nothing else but an ass. There are |
| asses enough here, said the father, I would rather have had a good |
| goat. Yes, replied the son, but it is no common ass, but a |
| gold-ass, when I say bricklebrit, the good beast spews forth a whole |
| sheetful of gold pieces. Just summon all our relations hither, |
| and I will make them rich folks. That suits me well, said the |
| tailor, for then I shall have no need to torment myself any longer |
| with the needle, and ran out himself and called the relations |
| together. As soon as they were assembled, the miller bade them |
| make way, spread out his cloth, and brought the ass into the room. |
| Now watch, said he, and cried, bricklebrit, but what fell were not |
| gold pieces, and it was clear that the animal knew nothing of the |
| art, for every ass does not attain such perfection. Then the poor |
| miller pulled a long face, saw that he was betrayed, and begged |
| pardon of the relatives, who went home as poor as they came. There |
| was no help for it, the old man had to betake him to his needle once |
| more, and the youth hired himself to a miller. |
|
|
| The third brother had apprenticed himself to a turner, and as that |
| is skilled labor, he was the longest in learning. His brothers, |
| however, told him in a letter how badly things had gone with them, |
| and how the innkeeper had cheated them of ther beautiful |
| wishing-gifts on the last evening before they reached home. When |
| the turner had served his time, and had to set out on his travels, |
| as he had conducted himself so well, his master presented him with a |
| sack and said, there is a cudgel in it. I can put on the sack, said |
| he, and it may be of good service to me, but why should the cudgel |
| be in it. It only makes it heavy. I will tell you why, replied |
| the master. If anyone has done anything to injure you, do but say, |
| out of the sack, cudgel. And the cudgel will leap forth among the |
| people, and play such a dance on their backs that they will not be |
| able to stir or move for a week, and it will not leave off until |
| you say, into the sack, cudgel. The apprentice thanked him, and |
| put the sack on his back, and when anyone came too near him, and |
| wished to attack him, he said, out of the sack, cudgel, and |
| instantly the cudgel sprang out, and dusted the coat or jacket of |
| one after the other on their backs, and never stopped until it had |
| stripped it off them, and it was done so quickly, that before anyone |
| was aware, it was already his own turn. In the evening the |
| young turner reached the inn where his brothers had been cheated. |
|
|
| He laid his sack on the table before him, and began to talk of all |
| the wonderful things which he had seen in the world. Yes, said |
| he, people may easily find a table which will spread itself, a |
| gold-ass, and things of that kind - extremely good things which |
| I by no means despise - but these are nothing in comparison with |
| the treasure which I have won for myself, and am carrying about |
| with me in my sack there. The innkeeper pricked up his ears. |
| What in the world can that be. Thought he. The sack must be filled |
| with nothing but jewels. I ought to get them cheap too, for all |
| good things go in threes. When it was time for sleep, the guest |
| stretched himself on the bench, and laid his sack beneath him |
| for a pillow. When the innkeeper thought his guest |
| was lying in a sound sleep, he went to him and pushed and pulled |
| quite gently and carefully at the sack to see if he could possibly |
| draw it away and lay another in its place. |
|
|
| The turner, however, had been waiting for this for a long time, and |
| now just as the inn-keeper was about to give a hearty tug, he cried, |
| out of the sack, cudgel. Instantly the little cudgel came forth, |
| and fell on the inn-keeper and gave him a sound thrashing. |
| The host cried for mercy. But the louder he cried, the harder the |
| cudgel beat the time on his back, until at length he fell to the |
| ground exhausted. Then the turner said, if you do not give back |
| the table which spreads itself, and the gold-ass, the dance shall |
| begin afresh. Oh, no, cried the host, quite humbly, I will gladly |
| produce everything, only make the accursed kobold creep back into |
| the sack. Then said the apprentice, I will let mercy take the |
| place of justice, but beware of getting into mischief again. So he |
| cried, into the sack, cudgel. And let him have rest. |
|
|
| Next morning the turner went home to his father with the |
| wishing-table, and the gold-ass. The tailor rejoiced when he saw |
| him once more, and asked him likewise what he had learned in foreign |
| parts. Dear father, said he, I have become a turner. A skilled |
| trade, said the father. What have you brought back with you from |
| your travels. |
|
|
| A precious thing, dear father, replied the son, a cudgel in the |
| sack. |
|
|
| What cried the father, a cudgel. That's certainly worth your |
| trouble. From every tree you can cut yourself one. But not one |
| like this, dear father. If I say, out of the sack, cudgel, the |
| cudgel springs out and leads anyone ill-disposed toward me a weary |
| dance, and never stops until he lies on the ground and prays for |
| fair weather. Look you, with this cudgel have I rescued the |
| wishing-table and the gold-ass which the thievish innkeeper took |
| away from my brothers. Now let them both be sent for, and invite |
| all our kinsmen. I will give them to eat and to drink, and will |
| fill their pockets with gold into the bargain. The old tailor |
| had not much confidence. Nevertheless he summoned the relatives |
| together. Then the turner spread a cloth in the room and led in the |
| gold-ass, and said to his brother, now, dear brother, speak to him. |
| The miller said, bricklebrit, and instantly the gold pices rained |
| down on the cloth like a thunder-shower, and the ass did not stop |
| until every one of them had so much that he could carry no more. |
| - I can see by your face that you also would have liked to be |
| there. - |
|
|
| Then the turner brought the little table, and said, now dear |
| brother, speak to it. And scarcely had the carpenter said, table, |
| spread yourself, than it was spread and amply covered with the |
| most exquisite dishes. Then such a meal took place as the good |
| tailor had never yet known in his house, and the whole party of |
| kinsmen stayed together till far in the night, and were all merry |
| and glad. The tailor locked away needle and thread, yard-measure |
| and goose, in a closet, and lived with his three sons in joy and |
| splendor. |
|
|
| What, however, happened to the goat who was to blame for the |
| tailor driving out his three sons? That I will tell you. She |
| was ashamed that she had a bald head, and ran to a fox's hole and |
| crept into it. When the fox came home, he was met by two great |
| eyes shining out of the darkness, and was terrified and ran away. |
| A bear met him, and as the fox looked quite disturbed, he said, |
| what is the matter with you, brother fox, why do you look like |
| that. Ah, answered redskin, a fierce beast is in my cave and stared |
| at me with its fiery eyes. We will soon drive him out, said |
| the bear, and went with him to the cave and looked in, but when |
| he saw the fiery eyes, fear seized on him likewise. He would have |
| nothing to do with the furious beast, and took to his heels. The |
| bee met him, and as she saw that he was ill at ease, she said, |
| bear, you are really pulling a very pitiful face. What has become |
| of all your gaiety. It is all very well for you to talk, replied |
| the bear, a furious beast with staring eyes is in redskin's house, |
| and we can't drive him out. The bee said, bear I pity you, I am |
| a poor weak creature whom you would not turn aside to look at, but |
| still, I believe, I can help you. She flew into the fox's cave, |
| lighted on the goat's smoothly-shorn head, and stung her so |
| violently, that she sprang up, crying meh, meh, and ran forth |
| into the world as if mad, and to this hour no one knows where she |
| has gone. |
|
|