A traveller arrived at a village,
and looking about for an inn, he found one that, although
rather shabby, would, he thought, suit him. So
he asked whether he could pass the night there, and
the mistress said certainly. No one lived at
the inn except the mistress, so that the traveller
was quite undisturbed.
The next morning, after he had finished
break-fast, the traveller went out of the house to
make arrangements for continuing his journey.
To his surprise, his hostess asked him to stop a moment.
She said that he owed her a thousand pounds, solemnly
declaring that he had borrowed that sum from her inn
long years ago. The traveller was astonished greatly
at this, as it seemed to him a preposterous demand.
So fetching his trunk, he soon hid himself by drawing
a curtain all round him.
After thus secluding himself for some
time, he called the woman and asked, “Was your
father an adept in the art of second sight?”
The woman replied, “Yes; my father secluded
himself just as you have done.” Said the
traveller, “Explain fully to me why you say I
owe you so large a sum.” The mistress then
related that when her father was going to die, he
bequeathed her all his possessions except his money.
He said, that on a certain day, ten years later, a
traveller would lodge at her house, and that, as the
said traveller owed him a thousand pounds, she could
reclaim at that time this sum from his debtor.
She must subsist in the meanwhile by the gradual sale
of her father’s goods.
Hitherto, being unable to earn as
much money as she spent, she had been disposing of
the inherited valuables, but had now exhausted nearly
all of them. In the meantime, the predicted date
had arrived, and a traveller had lodged at her house,
just as her father had foretold. Hence she concluded
he was the man from whom she should recover the thousand
pounds.
On hearing this the traveller said
that all that the woman had related was perfectly
true. Taking her to one side of the room, he told
her to tap gently with her knuckles all over a wooden
pillar. At one part the pillar gave forth a hollow
sound. The traveller said that the money spoken
about by the poor woman lay hidden in this part of
the pillar. Then advising her to spend it only
gradually, he went on his way.
The father of this woman had been
extremely skilful in the art of second sight or clairvoyance.
By its means he had discovered that his daughter would
pass through ten years of extreme poverty and that
on a certain future day a diviner would come and lodge
in the house. The father was also aware that
if he bequeathed his daughter his money at once, she
would spend it extravagantly. Upon consideration,
therefore, he hid the money in the pillar, and instructed
his daughter as related. In accordance with the
father’s prophecy, the man came and lodged in
the house on the predicted day, and by the art of
divination discovered the thousand pounds.