<h3><SPAN name="chap99"></SPAN>99 The Spirit in the Bottle</h3>
<p>There was once a poor woodcutter who toiled from early morning till late night.
When at last he had laid by some money he said to his boy, “You are my
only child, I will spend the money which I have earned with the sweat of my
brow on your education; if you learn some honest trade you can support me in my
old age, when my limbs have grown stiff and I am obliged to stay at
home.” Then the boy went to a High School and learned diligently so that
his masters praised him, and he remained there a long time. When he had worked
through two classes, but was still not yet perfect in everything, the little
pittance which the father had earned was all spent, and the boy was obliged to
return home to him. “Ah,” said the father, sorrowfully, “I
can give you no more, and in these hard times I cannot earn a farthing more
than will suffice for our daily bread.” “Dear father,”
answered the son, “don’t trouble yourself about it, if it is
God’s will, it will turn to my advantage I shall soon accustom myself to
it.” When the father wanted to go into the forest to earn money by
helping to pile and stack wood and also chop it, the son said, “I will go
with you and help you.” “Nay, my son,” said the father,
“that would be hard for you; you are not accustomed to rough work, and
will not be able to bear it, besides I have only one axe and no money left
wherewith to buy another.” “Just go to the neighbour,”
answered the son, “he will lend you his axe until I have earned one for
myself.” The father then borrowed an axe of the neighbour, and next
morning at break of day they went out into the forest together. The son helped
his father and was quite merry and brisk about it. But when the sun was right
over their heads, the father said, “We will rest, and have our dinner,
and then we shall work as well again.” The son took his bread in his
hands, and said, “Just you rest, father, I am not tired; I will walk up
and down a little in the forest, and look for birds’ nests.”
“Oh, you fool,” said the father, “why should you want to run
about there? Afterwards you will be tired, and no longer able to raise your
arm; stay here, and sit down beside me.” The son, however, went into the
forest, ate his bread, was very merry and peered in among the green branches to
see if he could discover a bird’s nest anywhere. So he went up and down
to see if he could find a bird’s nest until at last he came to a great
dangerous-looking oak, which certainly was already many hundred years old, and
which five men could not have spanned. He stood still and looked at it, and
thought, “Many a bird must have built its nest in that.” Then all
at once it seemed to him that he heard a voice. He listened and became aware
that someone was crying in a very smothered voice, “Let me out, let me
out!” He looked around, but could discover nothing; nevertheless, he
fancied that the voice came out of the ground. Then he cried, “Where art
thou?” The voice answered, “I am down here amongst the roots of the
oak-tree. Let me out! Let me out!” The scholar began to loosen the earth
under the tree, and search among the roots, until at last he found a glass
bottle in a little hollow. He lifted it up and held it against the light, and
then saw a creature shaped like a frog, springing up and down in it. “Let
me out! Let me out!” it cried anew, and the scholar thinking no evil,
drew the cork out of the bottle. Immediately a spirit ascended from it, and
began to grow, and grew so fast that in a very few moments he stood before the
scholar, a terrible fellow as big as half the tree by which he was standing.
“Knowest thou,” he cried in an awful voice, “what thy wages
are for having let me out?” “No,” replied the scholar
fearlessly, “how should I know that?” “Then I will tell
thee,” cried the spirit; “I must strangle thee for it.”
“Thou shouldst have told me that sooner,” said the scholar,
“for I should then have left thee shut up, but my head shall stand fast
for all thou canst do; more persons than one must be consulted about
that.” “More persons here, more persons there,” said the
spirit. “Thou shalt have the wages thou hast earned. Dost thou think that
I was shut up there for such a long time as a favour. No, it was a punishment
for me. I am the mighty Mercurius. Whoso releases me, him must I
strangle.” “Softly,” answered the scholar, “not so
fast. I must first know that thou really wert shut up in that little bottle,
and that thou art the right spirit. If, indeed, thou canst get in again, I will
believe and then thou mayst do as thou wilt with me.” The spirit said
haughtily, “that is a very trifling feat,” drew himself together,
and made himself as small and slender as he had been at first, so that he crept
through the same opening, and right through the neck of the bottle in again.
Scarcely was he within than the scholar thrust the cork he had drawn back into
the bottle, and threw it among the roots of the oak into its old place, and the
spirit was betrayed.</p>
<p>And now the scolar was about to return to his father, but the spirit cried very
piteously, “Ah, do let me out! ah, do let me out!”
“No,” answered the scholar, “not a second time! He who has
once tried to take my life shall not be set free by me, now that I have caught
him again.” “If thou wilt set me free,” said the spirit,
“I will give thee so much that thou wilt have plenty all the days of thy
life.” “No,” answered the boy, “thou wouldst cheat me
as thou didst the first time.” “Thou art playing away with thy own
good luck,” said the spirit; “I will do thee no harm but will
reward thee richly.” The scholar thought, “I will venture it,
perhaps he will keep his word, and anyhow he shall not get the better of
me.” Then he took out the cork, and the spirit rose up from the bottle as
he had done before, stretched himself out and became as big as a giant.
“Now thou shalt have thy reward,” said he, and handed the scholar a
little bag just like a plaster, and said, “If thou spreadest one end of
this over a wound it will heal, and if thou rubbest steel or iron with the
other end it will be changed into silver.” “I must just try
that,” said the scholar, and went to a tree, tore off the bark with his
axe, and rubbed it with one end of the plaster. It immediately closed together
and was healed. “Now, it is all right,” he said to the spirit,
“and we can part.” The spirit thanked him for his release, and the
boy thanked the spirit for his present, and went back to his father.</p>
<p>“Where hast thou been racing about?” said the father; “why
hast thou forgotten thy work? I said at once that thou wouldst never get on
with anything.” “Be easy, father, I will make it up.”
“Make it up indeed,” said the father angrily, “there’s
no art in that.” “Take care, father, I will soon hew that tree
there, so that it will split.” Then he took his plaster, rubbed the axe
with it, and dealt a mighty blow, but as the iron had changed into silver, the
edge turned; “Hollo, father, just look what a bad axe you’ve given
me, it has become quite crooked.” The father was shocked and said,
“Ah, what hast thou done? now I shall have to pay for that, and have not
the wherewithal, and that is all the good I have got by thy work.”
“Don’t get angry,” said the son, “I will soon pay for
the axe.” “Oh, thou blockhead,” cried the father,
“wherewith wilt thou pay for it? Thou hast nothing but what I give thee.
These are students’ tricks that are sticking in thy head, but thou hast
no idea of wood-cutting.” After a while the scholar said, “Father,
I can really work no more, we had better take a holiday.” “Eh,
what!” answered he, “Dost thou think I will sit with my hands lying
in my lap like thee? I must go on working, but thou mayst take thyself off
home.” “Father, I am here in this wood for the first time, I
don’t know my way alone. Do go with me.” As his anger had now
abated, the father at last let himself be persuaded and went home with him.
Then he said to the son, “Go and sell thy damaged axe, and see what thou
canst get for it, and I must earn the difference, in order to pay the
neighbour.” The son took the axe, and carried it into town to a
goldsmith, who tested it, laid it in the scales, and said, “It is worth
four hundred thalers, I have not so much as that by me.” The son said,
“Give me what thou hast, I will lend you the rest.” The goldsmith
gave him three hundred thalers, and remained a hundred in his debt. The son
thereupon went home and said, “Father, I have got the money, go and ask
the neighbour what he wants for the axe.” “I know that
already,” answered the old man, “one thaler, six groschen.”
“Then give him two thalers, twelve groschen, that is double and enough;
see, I have money in plenty,” and he gave the father a hundred thalers,
and said, “You shall never know want, live as comfortably as you
like.” “Good heavens!” said the father, “how hast thou
come by these riches?” The scholar then told how all had come to pass,
and how he, trusting in his luck, had made such a good hit. But with the money
that was left, he went back to the High School and went on learning more, and
as he could heal all wounds with his plaster, he became the most famous doctor
in the whole world.</p>
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