Once upon a time there lived a man
who had only one son, a lazy, stupid boy, who would
never do anything he was told. When the father
was dying, he sent for his son and told him that he
would soon be left alone in the world, with no possessions
but the small cottage they lived in and a pear tree
which grew behind it, and that, whether he liked it
or not, he would have to work, or else he would starve.
Then the old man died.
But the boy did not work; instead,
he idled about as before, contenting himself with
eating the pears off his tree, which, unlike other
pear trees before or since, bore fruit the whole year
round. Indeed, the pears were so much finer than
any you could get even in the autumn, that one day,
in the middle of the winter, they attracted the notice
of a fox who was creeping by.
‘Dear me; what lovely pears!’
he said to the youth. ’Do give me a basket
of them. It will bring you luck!’
‘Ah, little fox, but if I give
you a basketful, what am I to eat?’ asked the
boy.
‘Oh, trust me, and do what I
tell you,’ said the fox; ’I know it will
bring you luck.’ So the boy got up and picked
some of the ripest pears and put them into a rush
basket. The fox thanked him, and, taking the
basket in his mouth, trotted off to the king’s
palace and made his way straight to the king.
’Your Majesty, my master sends
you a few of his best pears, and begs you will graciously
accept them,’ he said, laying the basket at the
feet of the king.
‘Pears! at this season?’
cried the king, peering down to look at them; ‘and,
pray, who is your master?’
‘The Count Piro,’ answered the fox.
‘But how does he manage to get pears in midwinter?’
asked the king.
‘Oh, he has everything he wants,’
replied the fox; ’he is richer even than you
are, your Majesty.’
‘Then what can I send him in return for his
pears?’ said the king.
‘Nothing, your Majesty, or you
would hurt his feelings,’ answered the fox.
’Well, tell him how heartily
I thank him, and how much I shall enjoy them.’
And the fox went away.
He trotted back to the cottage with
his empty basket and told his tale, but the youth
did not seem as pleased to hear as the fox was to tell.
‘But, my dear little fox,’
said he, ’you have brought me nothing in return,
and I am so hungry!’
‘Let me alone,’ replied
the fox; ’I know what I am doing. You will
see, it will bring you luck.’
A few days after this the fox came back again.
‘I must have another basket of pears,’
said he.
‘Ah, little fox, what shall
I eat if you take away all my pears?’ answered
the youth.
‘Be quiet, it will be all right,’
said the fox; and taking a bigger basket than before,
he filled it quite full of pears. Then he picked
it up in his mouth, and trotted off to the palace.
’Your Majesty, as you seemed
to like the first basket of pears, I have brought
you some more,’ said he, ’with my master,
the Count Piro’s humble respects.’
’Now, surely it is not possible
to grow such pears with deep snow on the ground?’
cried the king.
‘Oh, that never affects them,’
answered the fox lightly; ’he is rich enough
to do anything. But to-day he sends me to ask
if you will give him your daughter in marriage?’
‘If he is so much richer than
I am,’ said the king, ’I shall be obliged
to refuse. My honour would not permit me to accept
his offer.’
‘Oh, your Majesty, you must
not think that,’ replied the fox; ’and
do not let the question of a dowry trouble you.
The Count Piro would not dream of asking anything
but the hand of the princess.’
‘Is he really so rich that he
can do without a dowry?’ asked the king.
‘Did I not tell your Majesty
that he was richer than you?’ answered the fox
reproachfully.
‘Well, beg him to come here,
that we may talk together,’ said the king.
So the fox went back to the young
man and said: ’I have told the king that
you are Count Piro, and have asked his daughter in
marriage.’
‘Oh, little fox, what have you
done?’ cried the youth in dismay; ’when
the king sees me he will order my head to be cut off.’
‘Oh, no, he won’t!’
replied the fox; ‘just do as I tell you.’
And he went off to the town, and stopped at the house
of the best tailor.
’My master, the Count Piro,
begs that you will send him at once the finest coat
that you have in your shop,’ said the fox, putting
on his grandest air, ’and if it fits him I will
call and pay for it to-morrow! Indeed, as he
is in a great hurry, perhaps it might be as well if
I took it round myself.’ The tailor was
not accustomed to serve counts, and he at once got
out all the coats he had ready. The fox chose
out a beautiful one of white and silver, bade the
tailor tie it up in a parcel, and carrying the string
in his teeth, he left the shop, and went to a horse-dealer’s,
whom he persuaded to send his finest horse round to
the cottage, saying that the king had bidden his master
to the palace.
Very unwillingly the young man put
on the coat and mounted the horse, and rode up to
meet the king, with the fox running before him.
‘What am I to say to his Majesty,
little fox?’ he asked anxiously; ’you
know that I have never spoken to a king before.’
‘Say nothing,’ answered
the fox, ’but leave the talking to me. “Good
morning, your Majesty,” will be all that is necessary
for you.’
By this time they had reached the
palace, and the king came to the door to receive Count
Piro, and led him to the great hall, where a feast
was spread. The princess was already seated at
the table, but was as dumb as Count Piro himself.
‘The Count speaks very little,’
the king said at last to the fox, and the fox answered:
’He has so much to think about in the management
of his property that he cannot afford to talk like
ordinary people.’ The king was quite satisfied,
and they finished dinner, after which Count Piro and
the fox took leave.
The next morning the fox came round again.
‘Give me another basket of pears,’ he
said.
‘Very well, little fox; but
remember it may cost me my life,’ answered the
youth.
’Oh, leave it to me, and do
as I tell you, and you will see that in the end it
will bring you luck,’ answered the fox; and plucking
the pears he took them up to the king.
‘My master, Count Piro, sends
you these pears,’ he said, ’and asks for
an answer to his proposal.’
‘Tell the count that the wedding
can take place whenever he pleases,’ answered
the king, and, filled with pride, the fox trotted back
to deliver his message.
‘But I can’t bring the
princess here, little fox?’ cried the young man
in dismay.
‘You leave everything to me,’
answered the fox; ’have I not managed well so
far?’
And up at the palace preparations
were made for a grand wedding, and the youth was married
to the princess.
After a week of feasting, the fox
said to the king: ’My master wishes to
take his young bride home to his own castle.’
‘Very well, I will accompany
them,’ replied the king; and he ordered his
courtiers and attendants to get ready, and the best
horses in his stable to be brought out for himself,
Count Piro and the princess. So they all set
out, and rode across the plain, the little fox running
before them.
He stopped at the sight of a great
flock of sheep, which was feeding peacefully on the
rich grass. ‘To whom do these sheep belong?’
asked he of the shepherd. ‘To an ogre,’
replied the shepherd.
‘Hush,’ said the fox in
a mysterious manner. ’Do you see that crowd
of armed men riding along? If you were to tell
them that those sheep belonged to an ogre, they would
kill them, and then the ogre would kill you!
If they ask, just say the sheep belong to Count Piro;
it will be better for everybody.’ And the
fox ran hastily on, as he did not wish to be seen
talking to the shepherd.
Very soon the king came up.
‘What beautiful sheep!’
he said, drawing up his horse. ’I have none
so fine in my pastures. Whose are they?’
‘Count Piro’s,’
answered the shepherd, who did not know the king.
‘Well, he must be a very rich
man,’ thought the king to himself, and rejoiced
that he had such a wealthy son-in-law.
Meanwhile the fox had met with a huge
herd of pigs, snuffling about the roots of some trees.
‘To whom do these pigs belong?’
he asked of the swineherd.
‘To an ogre,’ replied he.
‘Hush!’ whispered the
fox, though nobody could hear him; ’do you see
that troop of armed men riding towards us? If
you tell them that the pigs belong to the ogre they
will kill them, and then the ogre will kill you!
If they ask, just say that the pigs belong to Count
Piro; it will be better for everybody.’
And he ran hastily on.
Soon after the king rode up.
‘What fine pigs!’ he said,
reining in his horse. ’They are fatter than
any I have got on my farms. Whose are they?’
‘Count Piro’s,’
answered the swineherd, who did not know the king;
and again the king felt he was lucky to have such
a rich son-in-law.
This time the fox ran faster than
before, and in a flowery meadow he found a troop of
horses feeding. ‘Whose horses are these?’
he asked of the man who was watching them.
‘An ogre’s,’ replied he.
‘Hush!’ whispered the
fox, ’do you see that crowd of armed men coming
towards us? If you tell them the horses belong
to an ogre they will drive them off, and then the
ogre will kill you! If they ask, just say they
are Count Piro’s; it will be better for everybody.’
And he ran on again.
In a few minutes the king rode up.
‘Oh, what lovely creatures!
how I wish they were mine!’ he exclaimed.
‘Whose are they?’
Count Piro’s,’ answered
the man, who did not know the king; and the king’s
heart leapt as he thought that if they belonged to
his rich son-in-law they were as good as his.
At last the fox came to the castle
of the ogre himself. He ran up the steps, with
tears falling from his eyes, and crying:
‘Oh, you poor, poor people, what a sad fate
is yours!’
‘What has happened?’ asked the ogre, trembling
with fright.
’Do you see that troop of horsemen
who are riding along the road? They are sent
by the king to kill you!’
‘Oh, dear little fox, help us,
we implore you!’ cried the ogre and his wife.
‘Well, I will do what I can,’
answered the fox. ’The best place is for
you both to hide in the big oven, and when the soldiers
have gone by I will let you out.’
The ogre and ogress scrambled into
the oven as quick as thought, and the fox banged the
door on them; just as he did so the king came up.
‘Do us the honour to dismount,
your Majesty,’ said the fox, bowing low.
‘This is the palace of Count Piro!’
‘Why it is more splendid than
my own!’ exclaimed the king, looking round on
all the beautiful things that filled the hall.
But why are there no servants?’
’His Excellency the Count Piro
wished the princess to choose them for herself,’
answered the fox, and the king nodded his approval.
He then rode on, leaving the bridal pair in the castle.
But when it was dark and all was still, the fox crept
downstairs and lit the kitchen fire, and the ogre
and his wife were burned to death. The next morning
the fox said to Count Piro:
’Now that you are rich and happy,
you have no more need of me; but, before I go, there
is one thing I must ask of you in return: when
I die, promise me that you will give me a magnificent
coffin, and bury me with due honours.’
‘Oh, little, little fox, don’t
talk of dying,’ cried the princess, nearly weeping,
for she had taken a great liking to the fox.
After some time the fox thought he
would see if the Count Piro was really grateful to
him for all he had done, and went back to the castle,
where he lay down on the door-step, and pretended to
be dead. The princess was just going out for
a walk, and directly she saw him lying there, she
burst into tears and fell on her knees beside him.
‘My dear little fox, you are
not dead,’ she wailed; ’you poor, poor
little creature, you shall have the finest coffin in
the world!’
‘A coffin for an animal?’
said Count Piro. ’What nonsense! just take
him by the leg and throw him into the ditch.’
Then the fox sprang up and cried:
’You wretched, thankless beggar; have you forgotten
that you owe all your riches to me?’
Count Piro was frightened when he
heard these words, as he thought that perhaps the
fox might have power to take away the castle, and leave
him as poor as when he had nothing to eat but the
pears off his tree. So he tried to soften the
fox’s anger, saying that he had only spoken in
joke, as he had known quite well that he was not really
dead. For the sake of the princess, the fox let
himself be softened, and he lived in the castle for
many years, and played with Count Piro’s children.
And when he actually did die, his coffin was made
of silver, and Count Piro and his wife followed him
to the grave.
[From Sicilianische Mahrchen.]