Story about the wonderful musician

in #story8 years ago

There was once a wonderful musician, who went quite alone through a  forest and thought of all manner of things, and when nothing was left  for him to think about, he said to himself, “Time is beginning to pass  heavily with me here in the forest, I will fetch hither a good companion  for myself.” 

Then he took his fiddle from his back, and played so that  it echoed through the trees. It was not long before a wolf came trotting  through the thicket towards him. “Ah, here is a wolf coming! I have no  desire for him!” said the musician; but the wolf came nearer and said to  him, “Ah, dear musician, how beautifully thou dost play. I should like  to learn that, too.” – “It is soon learnt,” the musician replied, “thou  hast only to do all that I bid thee.” – “Oh, musician,” said the wolf,  “I will obey thee as a scholar obeys his master.” 

The musician bade him  follow, and when they had gone part of the way together, they came to an  old oak-tree which was hollow inside, and cleft in the middle. “Look,”  said the musician, “if thou wilt learn to fiddle, put thy fore paws into  this crevice.” The wolf obeyed, but the musician quickly picked up a  stone and with one blow wedged his two paws so fast that he was forced  to stay there like a prisoner. “Stay there until I come back again,”  said the musician, and went his way. After a while he again said to himself, “Time is beginning to pass  heavily with me here in the forest, I will fetch hither another  companion,” and took his fiddle and again played in the forest.

It was  not long before a fox came creeping through the trees towards him. “Ah,  there’s a fox coming!” said the musician. “I have no desire for him.”  The fox came up to him and said, “Oh, dear musician, how beautifully  thou dost play! I should like to learn that too.” – “That is soon  learnt,” said the musician. “Thou hast only to do everything that I bid  thee.” – “Oh, musician,” then said the fox, “I will obey thee as a  scholar obeys his master.” – “Follow me,” said the musician; and when  they had walked a part of the way, they came to a footpath, with high  bushes on both sides of it. There the musician stood still, and from one  side bent a young hazel-bush down to the ground, and put his foot on  the top of it, then he bent down a young tree from the other side as  well, and said, “Now little fox, if thou wilt learn something, give me  thy left front paw.” The fox obeyed, and the musician fastened his paw  to the left bough. “Little fox,” said he, “now reach me thy right paw”  and he tied it to the right bough.

When he had examined whether they  were firm enough, he let go, and the bushes sprang up again, and jerked  up the little fox, so that it hung struggling in the air. “Wait there  till I come back again,” said the musician, and went his way. Again he said to himself, “Time is beginning to pass heavily with me  here in the forest, I will fetch hither another companion,” so he took  his fiddle, and the sound echoed through the forest. Then a little hare  came springing towards him. “Why, a hare is coming,” said the musician,  “I do not want him.” – “Ah, dear musician,” said the hare, “how  beautifully thou dost fiddle; I too, should like to learn that.” – “That  is soon learnt,” said the musician, “thou hast only to do everything  that I bid thee.” – “Oh, musician,” replied the little hare, “I will  obey thee as a scholar obeys his master.” They went a part of the way  together until they came to an open space in the forest, where stood an  aspen tree. The musician tied a long string round the little hare’s  neck, the other end of which he fastened to the tree. “Now briskly,  little hare, run twenty times round the tree!” cried the musician, and  the little hare obeyed, and when it had run round twenty times, it had  twisted the string twenty times round the trunk of the tree, and the  little hare was caught, and let it pull and tug as it liked, it only  made the string cut into its tender neck. “Wait there till I come back,”  said the musician, and went onwards. The wolf, in the meantime, had pushed and pulled and bitten at the  stone, and had worked so long that he had set his feet at liberty and  had drawn them once more out of the cleft. Full of anger and rage he  hurried after the musician and wanted to tear him to pieces.

When the  fox saw him running, he began to lament, and cried with all his might,  “Brother wolf, come to my help, the musician has betrayed me!” The wolf  drew down the little tree, bit the cord in two, and freed the fox, who  went with him to take revenge on the musician. They found the tied-up  hare, whom likewise they delivered, and then they all sought the enemy  together. The musician had once more played his fiddle as he went on his way,  and this time he had been more fortunate.

The sound reached the ears of a  poor wood-cutter, who instantly, whether he would or no, gave up his  work and came with his hatchet under his arm to listen to the music. “At  last comes the right companion,” said the musician, “for I was seeking a  human being, and no wild beast.” And he began and played so beautifully  and delightfully that the poor man stood there as if bewitched, and his  heart leaped with gladness. And as he thus stood, the wolf, the fox,  and the hare came up, and he saw well that they had some evil design. So  he raised his glittering axe and placed himself before the musician, as  if to say, “Whoso wishes to touch him let him beware, for he will have  to do with me!” Then the beasts were terrified and ran back into the  forest. The musician, however, played once more to the man out of  gratitude, and then went onwards. 

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