<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007"></SPAN></p>
<h2> The Partnership of the Thief and the Liar. </h2>
<p>There was once upon a time a thief, who, being out of a job, was wandering
by himself up and down the seashore. As he walked he passed a man who was
standing still, looking at the waves.</p>
<p>'I wonder,' said the thief, addressing the stranger, 'if you have ever
seen a stone swimming?'</p>
<p>'Most certainly I have,' replied the other man, 'and, what is more, I saw
the same stone jump out of the water and fly through the air.'</p>
<p>'This is capital,' replied the thief. 'You and I must go into partnership.
We shall certainly make our fortunes. Let us start together for the palace
of the king of the neighbouring country. When we get there, I will go into
his presence alone, and will tell him the most startling thing I can
invent. Then you must follow and back up my lie.'</p>
<p>Having agreed to do this, they set out on their travels. After several
days' journeying, they reached the town where the king's palace was, and
here they parted for a few hours, while the thief sought an interview with
the king, and begged his majesty to give him a glass of beer.</p>
<p>'That is impossible,' said the king, 'as this year there has been a
failure of all the crops, and of the hops and the vines; so we have
neither wine nor beer in the whole kingdom.'</p>
<p>'How extraordinary!' answered the thief. 'I have just come from a country
where the crops were so fine that I saw twelve barrels of beer made out of
one branch of hops.'</p>
<p>'I bet you three hundred florins that is not true,' answered the king.</p>
<p>'And I bet you three hundred florins it is true,' replied the thief.</p>
<p>Then each staked his three hundred florins, and the king said he would
decide the question by sending a servant into that country to see if it
was true.</p>
<p>So the servant set out on horseback, and on the way he met a man, and he
asked him whence he came. And the man told him that he came from the
self-same country to which the servant was at that moment bound.</p>
<p>'If that is the case,' said the servant, 'you can tell me how high the
hops grow in your country, and how many barrels of beer can be brewed from
one branch?'</p>
<p>'I can't tell you that,' answered the man, 'but I happened to be present
when the hops were being gathered in, and I saw that it took three men
with axes three days to cut down one branch.'</p>
<p>Then the servant thought that he might save himself a long journey; so he
gave the man ten florins, and told him he must repeat to the king what he
had just told him. And when they got back to the palace, they came
together into the king's presence.</p>
<p>And the king asked him: 'Well, is it true about the hops?'</p>
<p>'Yes, sire, it is,' answered the servant; 'and here is a man I have
brought with me from the country to confirm the tale.'</p>
<p>So the king paid the thief the three hundred florins; and the partners
once more set out together in search of adventures. As they journeyed, the
thief said to his comrade: 'I will now go to another king, and will tell
him something still more startling; and you must follow and back up my
lie, and we shall get some money out of him; just see if we don't.'</p>
<p>When they reached the next kingdom, the thief presented himself to the
king, and requested him to give him a cauliflower. And the king answered:
'Owing to a blight among the vegetables we have no cauliflower.'</p>
<p>'That is strange,' answered the thief. 'I have just come from a country
where it grows so well that one head of cauliflower filled twelve
water-tubs.'</p>
<p>'I don't believe it,' answered the king.</p>
<p>'I bet you six hundred florins it is true,' replied the thief.</p>
<p>'And I bet you six hundred florins it is not true,' answered the king. And
he sent for a servant, and ordered him to start at once for the country
whence the thief had come, to find out if his story of the cauliflower was
true. On his journey the servant met with a man. Stopping his horse he
asked him where he came from, and the man replied that he came from the
country to which the other was travelling.</p>
<p>'If that is the case,' said the servant, 'you can tell me to what size
cauliflower grows in your country? Is it so large that one head fills
twelve water-tubs?'</p>
<p>'I have not seen that,' answered the man. 'But I saw twelve waggons, drawn
by twelve horses, carrying one head of cauliflower to the market.'</p>
<p>And the servant answered: 'Here are ten florins for you, my man, for you
have saved me a long journey. Come with me now, and tell the king what you
have just told me.'</p>
<p>'All right,' said the man, and they went together to the palace; and when
the king asked the servant if he had found out the truth about the
cauliflower, the servant replied: 'Sire, all that you heard was perfectly
true; here is a man from the country who will tell you so.'</p>
<p>So the king had to pay the thief the six hundred florins. And the two
partners set out once more on their travels, with their nine hundred
florins. When they reached the country of the neighbouring king, the thief
entered the royal presence, and began conversation by asking if his
majesty knew that in an adjacent kingdom there was a town with a church
steeple on which a bird had alighted, and that the steeple was so high,
and the bird's beak so long, that it had pecked the stars till some of
them fell out of the sky.</p>
<p>'I don't believe it,' said the king.</p>
<p>'Nevertheless I am prepared to bet twelve hundred florins that it is
true,' answered the thief.</p>
<p>'And I bet twelve hundred florins that it is a lie,' replied the king. And
he straightway sent a servant into the neighbouring country to find out
the truth.</p>
<p>As he rode, the servant met a man coming in the opposite direction. So he
hailed him and asked him where he came from. And the man replied that he
came out of the very town to which the man was bound. Then the servant
asked him if the story they had heard about the bird with the long beak
was true.</p>
<p>'I don't know about that,' answered the man, 'as I have never seen the
bird; but I once saw twelve men shoving all their might and main with
brooms to push a monster egg into a cellar.'</p>
<p>'That is capital,' answered the servant, presenting the man with ten
florins. 'Come and tell your tale to the king, and you will save me a long
journey.'</p>
<p>So, when the story was repeated to the king, there was nothing for him to
do but to pay the thief the twelve hundred florins.</p>
<p>Then the two partners set out again with their ill-gotten gains, which
they proceeded to divide into two equal shares; but the thief kept back
three of the florins that belonged to the liar's half of the booty.
Shortly afterwards they each married, and settled down in homes of their
own with their wives. One day the liar discovered that he had been done
out of three florins by his partner, so he went to his house and demanded
them from him.</p>
<p>'Come next Saturday, and I will give them to you,' answered the thief. But
as he had no intention of giving the liar the money, when Saturday morning
came he stretched himself out stiff and stark upon the bed, and told his
wife she was to say he was dead. So the wife rubbed her eyes with an
onion, and when the liar appeared at the door, she met him in tears, and
told him that as her husband was dead he could not be paid the three
florins.</p>
<p>But the liar, who knew his partner's tricks, instantly suspected the
truth, and said: 'As he has not paid me, I will pay him out with three
good lashes of my riding whip.'</p>
<p>At these words the thief sprang to his feet, and, appearing at the door,
promised his partner that if he would return the following Saturday he
would pay him. So the liar went away satisfied with this promise.</p>
<p>But when Saturday morning came the thief got up early and hid himself
under a truss of hay in the hay-loft.</p>
<p>When the liar appeared to demand his three florins, the wife met him with
tears in her eyes, and told him that her husband was dead.</p>
<p>'Where have you buried him?' asked the liar.</p>
<p>'In the hay-loft,' answered the wife.</p>
<p>'Then I will go there, and take away some hay in payment of his debt,'
said the liar. And proceeding to the hay-loft, he began to toss about the
hay with a pitchfork, prodding it into the trusses of hay, till, in terror
of his life, the thief crept out and promised his partner to pay him the
three florins on the following Saturday.</p>
<p>When the day came he got up at sunrise, and going down into the crypt of a
neighbouring chapel, stretched himself out quite still and stiff in an old
stone coffin. But the liar, who was quite as clever as his partner, very
soon bethought him of the crypt, and set out for the chapel, confident
that he would shortly discover the hiding-place of his friend. He had just
entered the crypt, and his eyes were not yet accustomed to the darkness,
when he heard the sound of whispering at the grated windows. Listening
intently, he overheard the plotting of a band of robbers, who had brought
their treasure to the crypt, meaning to hide it there, while they set out
on fresh adventures. All the time they were speaking they were removing
the bars from the window, and in another minute they would all have
entered the crypt, and discovered the liar. Quick as thought he wound his
mantle round him and placed himself, standing stiff and erect, in a niche
in the wall, so that in the dim light he looked just like an old stone
statue. As soon as the robbers entered the crypt, they set about the work
of dividing their treasure. Now, there were twelve robbers, but by mistake
the chief of the band divided the gold into thirteen heaps. When he saw
his mistake he said they had not time to count it all over again, but that
the thirteenth heap should belong to whoever among them could strike off
the head of the old stone statue in the niche with one stroke. With these
words he took up an axe, and approached the niche where the liar was
standing. But, just as he had waved the axe over his head ready to strike,
a voice was heard from the stone coffin saying, in sepulchral tones:
'Clear out of this, or the dead will arise from their coffins, and the
statues will descend from the walls, and you will be driven out more dead
than alive.' And with a bound the thief jumped out of his coffin and the
liar from his niche, and the robbers were so terrified that they ran
helter-skelter out of the crypt, leaving all their gold behind them, and
vowing that they would never put foot inside the haunted place again. So
the partners divided the gold between them, and carried it to their homes;
and history tells us no more about them.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />