Once, long ago, in a little town that
lay in the midst of high hills and wild forests, a
party of shepherds sat one night in the kitchen of
the inn talking over old times, and telling of the
strange things that had befallen them in their youth.
Presently up spoke the silver-haired Father Martin.
‘Comrades,’ said he, ’you
have had wonderful adventures; but I will tell you
something still more astonishing that happened to myself.
When I was a young lad I had no home and no one to
care for me, and I wandered from village to village
all over the country with my knapsack on my back;
but as soon as I was old enough I took service with
a shepherd in the mountains, and helped him for three
years. One autumn evening as we drove the flock
homeward ten sheep were missing, and the master bade
me go and seek them in the forest. I took my
dog with me, but he could find no trace of them, though
we searched among the bushes till night fell; and
then, as I did not know the country and could not find
my way home in the dark, I decided to sleep under
a tree. At midnight my dog became uneasy, and
began to whine and creep close to me with his tail
between his legs; by this I knew that something was
wrong, and, looking about, I saw in the bright moonlight
a figure standing beside me. It seemed to be
a man with shaggy hair, and a long beard which hung
down to his knees. He had a garland upon his
head, and a girdle of oak-leaves about his body, and
carried an uprooted fir-tree in his right hand.
I shook like an aspen leaf at the sight, and my spirit
quaked for fear. The strange being beckoned with
his hand that I should follow him; but as I did not
stir from the spot he spoke in a hoarse, grating voice:
“Take courage, fainthearted shepherd. I
am the Treasure Seeker of the mountain. If you
will come with me you shall dig up much gold.”
’Though I was still deadly cold
with terror I plucked up my courage and said:
“Get away from me, evil spirit; I do not desire
your treasures.”
’At this the spectre grinned
in my face and cried mockingly:
’"Simpleton! Do you scorn
your good fortune? Well, then, remain a ragamuffin
all your days.”
’He turned as if to go away
from me, then came back again and said: “Bethink
yourself, bethink yourself, rogue. I will fill
your knapsack I will fill your pouch.”
’"Away from me, monster,”
I answered, “I will have nothing to do with
you.”
’When the apparition saw that
I gave no heed to him he ceased to urge me, saying
only: “Some day you will rue this,”
and looked at me sadly. Then he cried: “Listen
to what I say, and lay it well to heart, it may be
of use to you when you come to your senses. A
vast treasure of gold and precious stones lies in
safety deep under the earth. At twilight and
at high noon it is hidden, but at midnight it may be
dug up. For seven hundred years have I watched
over it, but now my time has come; it is common property,
let him find it who can. So I thought to give
it into your hand, having a kindness for you because
you feed your flock upon my mountain.”
’Thereupon the spectre told
me exactly where the treasure lay, and how to find
it. It might be only yesterday so well do I remember
every word he spoke.
’"Go towards the little mountains,”
said he, “and ask there for the Black King’s
Valley, and when you come to a tiny brook follow the
stream till you reach the stone bridge beside the
saw-mill. Do not cross the bridge, but keep to
your right along the bank till a high rock stands
before you. A bow-shot from that you will discover
a little hollow like a grave. When you find this
hollow dig it out; but it will be hard work, for the
earth has been pressed down into it with care.
Still, work away till you find solid rock on all sides
of you, and soon you will come to a square slab of
stone; force it out of the wall, and you will stand
at the entrance of the treasure house. Into this
opening you must crawl, holding a lamp in your mouth.
Keep your hands free lest you knock your nose against
a stone, for the way is steep and the stones sharp.
If it bruises your knees never mind; you are on the
road to fortune. Do not rest till you reach a
wide stairway, down which you will go till you come
out into a spacious hall, in which there are three
doors; two of them stand open, the third is fastened
with locks and bolts of iron. Do not go through
the door to the right lest you disturb the bones of
the lords of the treasure. Neither must you go
through the door to the left, it leads to the snake’s
chamber, where adders and serpents lodge; but open
the fast-closed door by means of the well-known spring-root,
which you must on no account forget to take with you,
or all your trouble will be for naught, for no crowbar
or mortal tools will help you. If you want to
procure the root ask a wood-seller; it is a common
thing for hunters to need, and it is not hard to find.
If the door bursts open suddenly with great crackings
and groanings do not be afraid, the noise is caused
by the power of the magic root, and you will not be
hurt. Now trim your lamp that it may not fail
you, for you will be nearly blinded by the flash and
glitter of the gold and precious stones on the walls
and pillars of the vault; but beware how you stretch
out a hand towards the jewels! In the midst of
the cavern stands a copper chest, in that you will
find gold and silver, enough and to spare, and you
may help yourself to your heart’s content.
If you take as much as you can carry you will have
sufficient to last your lifetime, and you may return
three times; but woe betide you if you venture to
come a fourth time. You would have your trouble
for your pains, and would be punished for your greediness
by falling down the stone steps and breaking your leg.
Do not neglect each time to heap back the loose earth
which concealed the entrance of the king’s treasure
chamber.”
’As the apparition left off
speaking my dog pricked up his ears and began to bark.
I heard the crack of a carter’s whip and the
noise of wheels in the distance, and when I looked
again the spectre had disappeared.’
So ended the shepherd’s tale;
and the landlord who was listening with the rest,
said shrewdly:
’Tell us now, Father Martin,
did you go to the mountain and find what the spirit
promised you; or is it a fable?’
‘Nay, nay,’ answered the
graybeard. ’I cannot tell if the spectre
lied, for never a step did I go towards finding the
hollow, for two reasons: one was that my
neck was too precious for me to risk it in such a
snare as that; the other, that no one could ever tell
me where the spring-root was to be found.’
Then Blaize, another aged shepherd, lifted up his
voice.
“Tis a pity, Father Martin,
that your secret has grown old with you. If you
had told it forty years ago truly you would not long
have been lacking the spring-root. Even though
you will never climb the mountain now, I will tell
you, for a joke, how it is to be found. The easiest
way to get it is by the help of a black woodpecker.
Look, in the spring, where she builds her nest in
a hole in a tree, and when the time comes for her
brood to fly off block up the entrance to the nest
with a hard sod, and lurk in ambush behind the tree
till the bird returns to feed her nestlings.
When she perceives that she cannot get into her nest
she will fly round the tree uttering cries of distress,
and then dart off towards the sun-setting. When
you see her do this, take a scarlet cloak, or if that
be lacking to you, buy a few yards of scarlet cloth,
and hurry back to the tree before the woodpecker returns
with the spring-root in her beak. So soon as
she touches with the root the sod that blocks the
nest, it will fly violently out of the hole. Then
spread the red cloth quickly under the tree, so that
the woodpecker may think it is a fire, and in her
terror drop the root. Some people really light
a fire and strew spikenard blossoms in it; but that
is a clumsy method, for if the flames do not shoot
up at the right moment away will fly the woodpecker,
carrying the root with her.”
The party had listened with interest
to this speech, but by the time it was ended the hour
was late, and they went their ways homeward, leaving
only one man who had sat unheeded in a corner the whole
evening through.
Master Peter Bloch had once been a
prosperous innkeeper, and a master-cook; but he had
gone steadily down in the world for some time, and
was now quite poor.
Formerly he had been a merry fellow,
fond of a joke, and in the art of cooking had no equal
in the town. He could make fish-jelly, and quince
fritters, and even wafer-cakes; and he gilded the ears
of all his boars’ heads. Peter had looked
about him for a wife early in life, but unluckily
his choice fell upon a woman whose evil tongue was
well known in the town. Ilse was hated by everybody,
and the young folks would go miles out of their way
rather than meet her, for she had some ill-word for
everyone. Therefore, when Master Peter came along,
and let himself be taken in by her boasted skill as
a housewife, she jumped at his offer, and they were
married the next day. But they had not got home
before they began to quarrel. In the joy of his
heart Peter had tasted freely of his own good wine,
and as the bride hung upon his arm he stumbled and
fell, dragging her down with him; whereupon she beat
him soundly, and the neighbours said truly that things
did not promise well for Master Peter’s comfort.
Even when the ill-matched couple were presently blessed
with children, his happiness was but short lived, the
savage temper of his quarrelsome wife seemed to blight
them from the first, and they died like little kids
in a cold winter.
Though Master Peter had no great wealth
to leave behind him, still it was sad to him to be
childless; and he would bemoan himself to his friends,
when he laid one baby after another in the grave, saying:
’The lightning has been among the cherry-blossoms
again, so there will be no fruit to grow ripe.’
But, by-and-by, he had a little daughter
so strong and healthy that neither her mother’s
temper nor her father’s spoiling could keep her
from growing up tall and beautiful. Meanwhile
the fortunes of the family had changed. From
his youth up, Master Peter had hated trouble; when
he had money he spent it freely, and fed all the hungry
folk who asked him for bread. If his pockets
were empty he borrowed of his neighbours, but he always
took good care to prevent his scolding wife from finding
out that he had done so. His motto was:
‘It will all come right in the end’; but
what it did come to was ruin for Master Peter.
He was at his wits’ end to know how to earn
an honest living, for try as he might ill-luck seemed
to pursue him, and he lost one post after another,
till at last all he could do was to carry sacks of
corn to the mill for his wife, who scolded him well
if he was slow about it, and grudged him his portion
of food.
This grieved the tender heart of his
pretty daughter, who loved him dearly, and was the
comfort of his life.
Peter was thinking of her as he sat
in the inn kitchen and heard the shepherds talking
about the buried treasure, and for her sake he resolved
to go and seek for it. Before he rose from the
landlord’s arm-chair his plan was made, and
Master Peter went home more joyful and full of hope
than he had been for many a long day; but on the way
he suddenly remembered that he was not yet possessed
of the magic spring-root, and he stole into the house
with a heavy heart, and threw himself down upon his
hard straw bed. He could neither sleep nor rest;
but as soon as it was light he got up and wrote down
exactly all that was to be done to find the treasure,
that he might not forget anything, and when it lay
clear and plain before his eyes he comforted himself
with the thought that, though he must do the rough
work for his wife during one more winter at least,
he would not have to tread the path to the mill for
the rest of his life. Soon he heard his wife’s
harsh voice singing its morning song as she went about
her household affairs, scolding her daughter the while.
She burst open his door while he was still dressing:
‘Well, Toper!’ was her greeting, ’have
you been drinking all night, wasting money that you
steal from my housekeeping? For shame, drunkard!’
Master Peter, who was well used to
this sort of talk, did not disturb himself, but waited
till the storm blew over, then he said calmly:
’Do not be annoyed, dear wife.
I have a good piece of business in hand which may
turn out well for us.’
‘You with a good business?’
cried she, ’you are good for nothing but talk!’
‘I am making my will,’
said he, ’that when my hour comes my house may
be in order.’
These unexpected words cut his daughter
to the heart; she remembered that all night long she
had dreamed of a newly dug grave, and at this thought
she broke out into loud lamentations. But her
mother only cried: ’Wretch! have you not
wasted goods and possessions, and now do you talk
of making a will?’
And she seized him like a fury, and
tried to scratch out his eyes. But by-and-by
the quarrel was patched up, and everything went on
as before. From that day Peter saved up every
penny that his daughter Lucia gave him on the sly,
and bribed the boys of his acquaintance to spy out
a black woodpecker’s nest for him. He sent
them into the woods and fields, but instead of looking
for a nest they only played pranks on him. They
led him miles over hill and vale, stock and stone,
to find a raven’s brood, or a nest of squirrels
in a hollow tree, and when he was angry with them
they laughed in his face and ran away. This went
on for some time, but at last one of the boys spied
out a woodpecker in the meadow-lands among the wood-pigeons,
and when he had found her nest in a half-dead alder
tree, came running to Peter with the news of his discovery.
Peter could hardly believe his good fortune, and went
quickly to see for himself if it was really true;
and when he reached the tree there certainly was a
bird flying in and out as if she had a nest in it.
Peter was overjoyed at this fortunate discovery, and
instantly set himself to obtain a red cloak.
Now in the whole town there was only one red cloak,
and that belonged to a man of whom nobody ever willingly
asked a favour Master Hammerling the hangman.
It cost Master Peter many struggles before he could
bring himself to visit such a person, but there was
no help for it, and, little as he liked it, he ended
by making his request to the hangman, who was flattered
that so respectable a man as Peter should borrow his
robe of office, and willingly lent it to him.
Peter now had all that was necessary
to secure the magic root; he stopped up the entrance
to the nest, and everything fell out exactly as Blaize
had foretold. As soon as the woodpecker came back
with the root in her beak out rushed Master Peter
from behind the tree and displayed the fiery red cloak
so adroitly that the terrified bird dropped the root
just where it could be easily seen. All Peter’s
plans had succeeded, and he actually held in his hand
the magic root that master-key which would
unlock all doors, and bring its possessor unheard-of
luck. His thoughts now turned to the mountain,
and he secretly made preparations for his journey.
He took with him only a staff, a strong sack, and a
little box which his daughter Lucia had given him.
It happened that on the very day Peter
had chosen for setting out, Lucia and her mother went
off early to the town, leaving him to guard the house;
but in spite of that he was on the point of taking
his departure when it occurred to him that it might
be as well first to test the much-vaunted powers of
the magic root for himself. Dame Ilse had a strong
cupboard with seven locks built into the wall of her
room, in which she kept all the money she had saved,
and she wore the key of it always hung about her neck.
Master Peter had no control at all of the money affairs
of the household, so the contents of this secret hoard
were quite unknown to him, and this seemed to be a
good opportunity for finding out what they were.
He held the magic root to the keyhole, and to his
astonishment heard all the seven locks creaking and
turning, the door flew suddenly wide open, and his
greedy wife’s store of gold pieces lay before
his eyes. He stood still in sheer amazement, not
knowing which to rejoice over most this
unexpected find, or the proof of the magic root’s
real power; but at last he remembered that it was quite
time to be starting on his journey. So, filling
his pockets with the gold, he carefully locked the
empty cupboard again and left the house without further
delay. When Dame Ilse and her daughter returned
they wondered to find the house door shut, and Master
Peter nowhere to be seen. They knocked and called,
but nothing stirred within but the house cat, and
at last the blacksmith had to be fetched to open the
door. Then the house was searched from garret
to cellar, but no Master Peter was to be found.
‘Who knows?’ cried Dame
Ilse at last, ’the wretch may have been idling
in some tavern since early morning.’
Then a sudden thought startled her,
and she felt for her keys. Suppose they had fallen
into her good-for-nothing husband’s hands and
he had helped himself to her treasure! But no,
the keys were safe in their usual place, and the cupboard
looked quite untouched. Mid-day came, then evening,
then midnight, and still no Master Peter appeared,
and the matter became really serious. Dame Ilse
knew right well what a torment she had been to her
husband, and remorse caused her the gloomiest forebodings.
‘Ah! Lucia,’ she
cried, ’I greatly fear that your father has done
himself a mischief.’ And they sat till morning
weeping over their own fancies.
As soon as it was light they searched
every corner of the house again, and examined every
nail in the wall and every beam; but, luckily, Master
Peter was not hanging from any of them. After
that the neighbours went out with long poles to fish
in every ditch and pond, but they found nothing, and
then Dame Ilse gave up the idea of ever seeing her
husband again and very soon consoled herself, only
wondering how the sacks of corn were to be carried
to the mill in future. She decided to buy a strong
ass to do the work, and having chosen one, and after
some bargaining with the owner as to its price, she
went to the cupboard in the wall to fetch the money.
But what were her feelings when she perceived that
every shelf lay empty and bare before her! For
a moment she stood bewildered, then broke into such
frightful ravings that Lucia ran to her in alarm;
but as soon as she heard of the disappearance of the
money she was heartily glad, and no longer feared that
her father had come to any harm, but understood that
he must have gone out into the world to seek his fortune
in some new way.
About a month after this, someone
knocked at Dame Ilse’s door one day, and she
went to see if it was a customer for meal; but in stepped
a handsome young man, dressed like a duke’s son,
who greeted her respectfully, and asked after her
pretty daughter as if he were an old friend, though
she could not remember having ever set eyes upon him
before.
However, she invited him to step into
the house and be seated while he unfolded his business.
With a great air of mystery he begged permission to
speak to the fair Lucia, of whose skill in needlework
he had heard so much, as he had a commission to give
her. Dame Ilse had her own opinion as to what
kind of commission it was likely to be brought
by a young stranger to a pretty maiden; however, as
the meeting would be under her own eye, she made no
objection, but called to her industrious daughter,
who left off working and came obediently; but when
she saw the stranger she stopped short, blushing,
and casting down her eyes. He looked at her fondly,
and took her hand, which she tried to draw away, crying:
’Ah! Friedlin, why are
you here? I thought you were a hundred miles
away. Are you come to grieve me again?’
‘No, dearest girl,’ answered
he; ’I am come to complete your happiness and
my own. Since we last met my fortune has utterly
changed; I am no longer the poor vagabond that I was
then. My rich uncle has died, leaving me money
and goods in plenty, so that I dare to present myself
to your mother as a suitor for your hand. That
I love you I know well; if you can love me I am indeed
a happy man.’
Lucia’s pretty blue eyes had
looked up shyly as he spoke, and now a smile parted
her rosy lips; and she stole a glance at her mother
to see what she thought about it all; but the dame
stood lost in amazement to find that her daughter,
whom she could have declared had never been out of
her sight, was already well acquainted with the handsome
stranger, and quite willing to be his bride.
Before she had done staring, this hasty wooer had
smoothed his way by covering the shining table with
gold pieces as a wedding gift to the bride’s
mother, and had filled Lucia’s apron into the
bargain; after which the dame made no difficulties,
and the matter was speedily settled.
While Ilse gathered up the gold and
hid it away safely, the lovers whispered together,
and what Friedlin told her seemed to make Lucia every
moment more happy and contented.
Now a great hurry-burly began in the
house, and preparations for the wedding went on apace.
A few days later a heavily laden waggon drove up,
and out of it came so many boxes and bales that Dame
Ilse was lost in wonder at the wealth of her future
son-in-law. The day for the wedding was chosen,
and all their friends and neighbours were bidden to
the feast. As Lucia was trying on her bridal
wreath she said to her mother: ’This wedding-garland
would please me indeed if father Peter could lead
me to the church. If only he could come back again!
Here we are rolling in riches while he may be nibbling
at hunger’s table.’ And the very idea
of such a thing made her weep, while even Dame Ilse
said:
’I should not be sorry myself
to see him come back there is always something
lacking in a house when the good man is away.’
But the fact was that she was growing
quite tired of having no one to scold. And what
do you think happened?
On the very eve of the wedding a man
pushing a wheelbarrow arrived at the city gate, and
paid toll upon a barrel of nails which it contained,
and then made the best of his way to the bride’s
dwelling and knocked at the door.
The bride herself peeped out of the
window to see who it could be, and there stood father
Peter! Then there was great rejoicing in the house;
Lucia ran to embrace him, and even Dame Ilse held out
her hand in welcome, and only said: ‘Rogue,
mend your ways,’ when she remembered the empty
treasure cupboard. Father Peter greeted the bridegroom,
looking at him shrewdly, while the mother and daughter
hastened to say all they knew in his favour, and appeared
to be satisfied with him as a son-in-law. When
Dame Ilse had set something to eat before her husband,
she was curious to hear his adventures, and questioned
him eagerly as to why he had gone away.
‘God bless my native place,’
said he. ’I have been marching through the
country, and have tried every kind of work, but now
I have found a job in the iron trade; only, so far,
I have put more into it than I have earned by it.
This barrel of nails is my whole fortune, which I wish
to give as my contribution towards the bride’s
house furnishing.’
This speech roused Dame Ilse to anger,
and she broke out into such shrill reproaches that
the bystanders were fairly deafened, and Friedlin
hastily offered Master Peter a home with Lucia and
himself, promising that he should live in comfort,
and be always welcome. So Lucia had her heart’s
desire, and father Peter led her to the church next
day, and the marriage took place very happily.
Soon afterwards the young people settled in a fine
house which Friedlin had bought, and had a garden and
meadows, a fishpond, and a hill covered with vines,
and were as happy as the day was long. Father
Peter also stayed quietly with them, living, as everybody
believed, upon the generosity of his rich son-in law.
No one suspected that his barrel of nails was the
real ‘Horn of Plenty,’ from which all
this prosperity overflowed.
Peter had made the journey to the
treasure mountain successfully, without being found
out by anybody. He had enjoyed himself by the
way, and taken his own time, until he actually reached
the little brook in the valley which it had cost him
some trouble to find. Then he pressed on eagerly,
and soon came to the little hollow in the wood; down
he went, burrowing like a mole into the earth; the
magic root did its work, and at last the treasure
lay before his eyes. You may imagine how gaily
Peter filled his sack with as much gold as he could
carry, and how he staggered up the seventy-seven steps
with a heart full of hope and delight. He did
not quite trust the gnome’s promises of safety,
and was in such haste to find himself once more in
the light of day that he looked neither to the right
nor the left, and could not afterwards remember whether
the walls and pillars had sparkled with jewels or not.
However, all went well he
neither saw nor heard anything alarming; the only
thing that happened was that the great iron-barred
door shut with a crash as soon as he was fairly outside
it, and then he remembered that he had left the magic
root behind him, so he could not go back for another
load of treasure. But even that did not trouble
Peter much; he was quite satisfied with what he had
already. After he had faithfully done everything
according to Father Martin’s instructions, and
pressed the earth well back into the hollow, he sat
down to consider how he could bring his treasure back
to his native place, and enjoy it there, without being
forced to share it with his scolding wife, who would
give him no peace if she once found out about it.
At last, after much thinking, he hit upon a plan.
He carried his sack to the nearest village, and there
bought a wheelbarrow, a strong barrel, and a quantity
of nails. Then he packed his gold into the barrel,
covered it well with a layer of nails, hoisted it
on to the wheelbarrow with some difficulty, and set
off with it upon his homeward way. At one place
upon the road he met a handsome young man who seemed
by his downcast air to be in some great trouble.
Father Peter, who wished everybody to be as happy as
he was himself, greeted him cheerfully, and asked
where he was going, to which he answered sadly:
’Into the wide world, good father,
or out of it, where ever my feet may chance to carry
me.’
‘Why out of it?’ said
Peter. ‘What has the world been doing to
you?’
‘It has done nothing to me,
nor I to it,’ he replied. ’Nevertheless
there is not anything left in it for me.’
Father Peter did his best to cheer
the young man up, and invited him to sup with him
at the first inn they came to, thinking that perhaps
hunger and poverty were causing the stranger’s
trouble. But when good food was set before him
he seemed to forget to eat. So Peter perceived
that what ailed his guest was sorrow of heart, and
asked him kindly to tell him his story.
‘Where is the good, father?’
said he. ’You can give me neither help nor
comfort.’
‘Who knows?’ answered
Master Peter. ’I might be able to do something
for you. Often enough in life help comes to us
from the most unexpected quarter.’
The young man, thus encouraged, began his tale.
‘I am,’ said he, ’a
crossbow-man in the service of a noble count, in whose
castle I was brought up. Not long ago my master
went on a journey, and brought back with him, amongst
other treasures, the portrait of a fair maiden so
sweet and lovely that I lost my heart at first sight
of it, and could think of nothing but how I might
seek her out and marry her. The count had told
me her name, and where she lived, but laughed at my
love, and absolutely refused to give me leave to go
in search of her, so I was forced to run away from
the castle by night. I soon reached the little
town where the maiden dwelt; but there fresh difficulties
awaited me. She lived under the care of her mother,
who was so severe that she was never allowed to look
out of the window, or set her foot outside the door
alone, and how to make friends with her I did not know.
But at last I dressed myself as an old woman, and
knocked boldly at her door. The lovely maiden
herself opened it, and so charmed me that I came near
forgetting my disguise; but I soon recovered my wits,
and begged her to work a fine table-cloth for me,
for she is reported to be the best needlewoman in
all the country round. Now I was free to go and
see her often under the presence of seeing how the
work was going oil, and one day, when her mother had
gone to the town, I ventured to throw off my disguise,
and tell her of my love. She was startled at first;
but I persuaded her to listen to me, and I soon saw
that I was not displeasing to her, though she scolded
me gently for my disobedience to my master, and my
deceit in disguising myself. But when I begged
her to marry me, she told me sadly that her mother
would scorn a penniless wooer, and implored me to
go away at once, lest trouble should fall upon her.
’Bitter as it was to me, I was
forced to go when she bade me, and I have wandered
about ever since, with grief gnawing at my heart; for
how can a masterless man, without money or goods,
ever hope to win the lovely Lucia?’
Master Peter, who had been listening
attentively, pricked up his ears at the sound of his
daughter’s name, and very soon found out that
it was indeed with her that this young man was so
deeply in love.
‘Your story is strange indeed,’
said he. ’But where is the father of this
maiden why do you not ask him for her hand?
He might well take your part, and be glad to have
you for his son-in-law.’
‘Alas!’ said the young
man, ’her father is a wandering good-for-naught,
who has forsaken wife and child, and gone off who
knows where? The wife complains of him bitterly
enough, and scolds my dear maiden when she takes her
father’s part.’
Father Peter was somewhat amused by
this speech; but he liked the young man well, and
saw that he was the very person he needed to enable
him to enjoy his wealth in peace, without being separated
from his dear daughter.
‘If you will take my advice,’
said he, ’I promise you that you shall marry
this maiden whom you love so much, and that before
you are many days older.’
‘Comrade,’ cried Friedlin
indignantly, for he thought Peter did but jest with
him, ’it is ill done to mock at an unhappy man;
you had better find someone else who will let himself
be taken in with your fine promises.’ And
up he sprang, and was going off hastily, when Master
Peter caught him by the arm.
‘Stay, hothead!’ he cried;
’it is no jest, and I am prepared to make good
my words.’
Thereupon he showed him the treasure
hidden under the nails, and unfolded to him his plan,
which was that Friedlin should play the part of the
rich son-in-law, and keep a still tongue, that they
might enjoy their wealth together in peace.
The young man was overjoyed at this
sudden change in his fortunes, and did not know how
to thank father Peter for his generosity. They
took the road again at dawn the next morning, and
soon reached a town, where Friedlin equipped himself
as a gallant wooer should. Father Peter filled
his pockets with gold for the wedding dowry, and agreed
with him that when all was settled he should secretly
send him word that Peter might send off the waggon
load of house plenishings with which the rich bridegroom
was to make such a stir in the little town where the
bride lived. As they parted, father Peter’s
last commands to Friedlin were to guard well their
secret, and not even to tell it to Lucia till she was
his wife.
Master Peter long enjoyed the profits
of his journey to the mountain, and no rumour of it
ever got abroad. In his old age his prosperity
was so great that he himself did not know how rich
he was; but it was always supposed that the money
was Friedlin’s. He and his beloved wife
lived in the greatest happiness and peace, and rose
to great honour in the town. And to this day,
when the citizens wish to describe a wealthy man, they
say: ‘As rich as Peter Bloch’s son-in-law!’