<h2><SPAN name="THE_MAN_WITH_NO_MONEY" id="THE_MAN_WITH_NO_MONEY">THE MAN WITH NO MONEY</SPAN></h2>
<p>A FABLE FOR CAPITALISTS</p>
<p><ANTIMG style="float: left; height: 100px;" src="images/il007.jpg" alt="O" />nce upon a time there was a man
who found himself, suddenly and
sadly, without any money. I am
aware that in these days it is hard
to believe such a story. Nowadays,
everybody has money, and it may seem like a
stretch of the imagination to suggest a time when
a man should search his pockets and find them
empty. But this is merely a fairy tale; so, I
trust that the reader will help me out by taking
so apparently preposterous a statement for
granted.</p>
<p>The man had been a merchant of butterflies
in Ispahan, and, though his butterflies had flitted
all about the flowered world, the delight of many-tongued
and many-colored nations, he found himself
at the close of the day a very poor and
weary man.</p>
<p>He had but one consolation and companion<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</SPAN></span>
left—a strange, black butterfly, which he kept
in a silver cage, and only looked at now and
again, when he was quite sure that he was alone.
He had sold all his other butterflies—all the
rainbow wings—but this dark butterfly he would
keep till the end.</p>
<p>Kings and queens, in sore sorrow and need,
had offered him great sums for his black butterfly,
but it was the only beautiful thing he had
left—so, selfishly, he kept it to himself. Meanwhile,
he starved and wandered the country
roads, homeless and foodless: his breakfast the
morning star, his supper the rising moon. But,
sad as was his heart, and empty as was his stomach,
laughter still flickered in his tired eyes; and
he possessed, too, a very shrewd mind, as a man
who sells butterflies must. Making his breakfast
of blackberries one September morning, in the
middle of an old wood, with the great cages of
bramble overladen with the fruit of the solitude,
an idea came to him. Thereupon he sought out
some simple peasants and said: "Why do you
leave these berries to fall and wither in the solitude,
when in the markets of the world much
money may be made of them for you and for
your household? Gather them for me, and I will
sell them and give you a fair return for your labor."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Now, of course, the blackberries did not belong
to the dealer in butterflies. They were the free
gift of God to men and birds. But the simple
peasants never thought of that. Instead, they
gathered them, east and west, into bushel and
hogshead, and the man that had no money, that
September morning, smiled to himself as he paid
them their little wage, and filled his pockets, that
before had been so empty, with the money that
God and the blackberries and the peasants had
made for him.</p>
<p>Thus he grew so rich that he seldom looked
at the dark butterfly in the silver cage—but
sometimes, in the night, he heard the beating of
its wings.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />