Moorish Literature eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 393 pages of information about Moorish Literature.

Moorish Literature eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 393 pages of information about Moorish Literature.

“Give me a fat lamb,” answered the jackal.  “You will follow my advice.  To-morrow when the lion comes, I will be there.  I will arrive on that hill on the other side.  You will bring your axe very well sharpened and when I say to you, ‘What is that which I see with you now?’ you must answer, ’It is an ass which I have taken with me to carry barley.’  I will say to you, ‘I am looking for the lion, and not for an ass,’ Then he will ask you, ’Who is speaking to you?’ Answer him, ‘It is the nems!’ He will say to you, ‘Hide me, for I am afraid of him,’ When I ask you, ’Who is that stretched there before you?’ answer, ‘It is a beaver,’ I will say, ’Take your axe and strike, to know if it be not the lion,’ You will take your axe and you will strike the lion hard between the eyes.  Then I will continue:  ’I have not heard very well.  Strike him again once more until he shall really be dead,’” The next day he came to him as before to eat an ox.  When the jackal saw him he called his friend and said, “Who is that with you?”

“It is a beaver which is before me.”

The jackal answered:  “Where is the lion?  I am looking for him.”

“Who is talking to you?” asked the lion, of the laborer.

“The ‘nems.’”

“Hide me,” cried the lion, “for I fear him.”

The laborer said to him, “Stretch yourself out before me, shut your eyes, and don’t move.”  The lion stretched out before him, shut his eyes, and held his breath.

The peasant said to the jackal, “I have not seen the lion pass to-day.”

“What is that stretched before you?”

“It is a beaver.”

“Take your axe,” said the jackal, “and strike that beaver.”  The laborer obeyed and struck the lion violently between the eyes.

“Strike hard,” said the jackal again; “I did not hear very well.”

He struck him three or four times more, until he had killed him.  Then he called the jackal:  “See, I have killed him.  Come, let me embrace you for your good advice.  To-morrow you must come here to get the lamb which I will give you.”  They separated and each went his way.  As for the peasant, the next day, as soon as dawn, he took a lamb, put it into a sack, tied it up, went into the court-yard and hung it up.  Then while he went to get his oxen to till his fields, at that moment, his wife opened the sack, set the lamb free, and replaced it by a dog.  The peasant took the sack and went to his work.  He attached his oxen and set to work, till the arrival of the jackal.  The jackal said to him, “Where is that promise you made me?”

“It is in the sack.  Open it and you’ll find the lamb which I give you.”

He followed his advice, opened the sack, and saw two eyes which shone more brightly than those of a lamb, and said to the laborer, “My friend, you have deceived me.”

“How have I deceived you?” asked the other.  “As for the lamb, I put him in the sack.  Open it well; I do not lie.”

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Project Gutenberg
Moorish Literature from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.