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Once upon
a time...
There lay three houses in a row, in one of which there lived
a tailor, in another a carpenter, and in the third a smith. All
three were married, and their wives were very good friends. They
often talked about how stupid their husbands were, but they could
never agree as to which of them had the most stupid one; each one
stuck up for her own husband, and maintained that it was he.
The three wives went to church together every Sunday, and had a
regular good gossip on the way, and when they were coming home from
church they always turned into the tavern which lay by the wayside
and drank half a pint together. This was at the time when half a
pint of brandy cost threepence, so that was just a penny from each
of them.
But the brandy went up in price, and the taverner said that he must
have fourpence for the half-pint.
They were greatly annoyed at this, for there were only the three of
them to share it, and none of them was willing to pay the extra
penny.
As they went home from the church that day they decided to wager
with each other as to whose husband was the most stupid, and the one
who, on the following Sunday, should be judged to have played her
husband the greatest trick should thereafter go free from paying,
and each of the two others would give twopence for their Sunday's
half-pint.
Next day the tailor's wife said to her husband, 'I have some girls
coming to-day to help to card my wool there is a great deal to do,
and we must be very busy. I am so annoyed that our watchdog is dead,
for in the evening the young fellows will come about to get fun with
the girls, and they will get nothing done. If we had only had a
fierce watchdog he would have kept them away.'
'Yes,' said the man, 'that would have been a good thing.'
'Listen, good man,' said the wife, 'you must just be the watchdog
yourself, and scare the fellows away from the house.'
The husband was not very sure about this, although otherwise he was
always ready to give in to her.
'Oh yes, you will see it will work all right,' said the wife.
And so towards evening she got the tailor dressed up in a shaggy fur
coat, tied a black woollen cloth round his head, and chained him up
beside the dog's kennel.'
There he stood and barked and growled at everyone that moved in his
neighbourhood. The neighbour wives knew all about this, and were
greatly amused at it.
On the day after this the carpenter had been out at work, and came
home quite merry; but as soon as he entered the house his wife
clapped her hands together and cried, 'My dear, what makes you look
like that? You are ill.'
The carpenter knew nothing about being ill; he only thought that he
wanted something to eat, so he sat down at the table and began his
dinner.
His wife sat straight in front of him, with her hands folded, and
shook her head, and looked at him with an anxious air.
'You are getting worse, my dear,' she said; 'you are quite pale now;
you have a serious illness about you; I can see it by your looks.'
The husband now began to grow anxious, and thought that perhaps he
was not quite well.
'No, indeed,' said she; 'it's high time that you were in bed.'
She then got him to lie down, and piled above him all the bedclothes
she could find, and gave him various medicines, while he grew worse
and worse.
'You will never get over it,' said she; 'I am afraid you are going
to die.'
'Do you think so?' said the carpenter; 'I can well believe it, for I
am indeed very poorly.'
In a little while she said again, 'Ah, now I must part with you.
Here comes Death. Now I must close your eyes.' And she did so.
The carpenter believed everything that his wife said, and so he
believed now that he was dead, and lay still and let her do as she
pleased.
She got her neighbours summoned, and they helped to lay him in the
coffin--it was one of those he himself had made; but his wife had
bored holes in it to let him get some air. She made a soft bed under
him, and put a coverlet over him, and she folded his hands over his
breast; but instead of a flower or a psalm-book, she gave him a
pint-bottle of brandy in his hands. After he had lain for a little
he took a little pull at this, and then another and another, and he
thought this did him good, and soon he was sleeping sweetly, and
dreaming that he was in heaven.
Meanwhile word had gone round the village that the carpenter was
dead, and was to be buried next day.
It was now the turn of the smith's wife. Her husband was lying
sleeping off the effects of a drinking bout, so she pulled off all
his clothes and made him black as coal from head to foot, and then
let him sleep till far on in the day.
The funeral party had already met at the carpenter's, and marched
oft towards the church with the coffin, when the smith's wife came
rushing in to her husband.
'Gracious, man,' said she, 'you are lying there yet? You are
sleeping too long. You know you are going to the funeral.'
The smith was quite confused; he knew nothing about any funeral.
'It's our neighbour the carpenter,' said his wife, 'who is to be
buried to-day. They are already half-way to church with him.'
'All right,' said the smith, 'make haste to help me on with my black
clothes.'
'What nonsense!' said his wife, 'you have them on already. Be off
with you now.'
The smith looked down at his person and saw that he was a good deal
blacker than he usually was, so he caught up his hat and ran out
after the funeral. This was already close to the church, and the
smith wanted to take part in carrying the coffin, like a good
neighbour. So he ran with all his might, and shouted after them,
'Hey! wait a little; let me get a hold of him!'
The people turned round and saw the black figure coming, and thought
it was the devil himself, who wanted to get hold of the carpenter,
so they threw down the coffin and took to their heels.
The lid sprang off the coffin with the shock, and the carpenter woke
up and looked out. He remembered the whole affair; he knew that he
was dead and was going to be buried, and recognising the smith, he
said to him, in a low voice, 'My good neighbour, if I hadn't been
dead already, I should have laughed myself to death now to see you
coming like this to my funeral.'
From that time forth the carpenter's wife drank free of expense
every Sunday, for the others had to admit that she had fooled her
husband the best.
The Merry Wives
from the Pink Fairy Book
Story Edited
by Andrew Lang |