149 The Old Man Made Young Again.rtf

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Bajka dnia - Today's fairy tale : The Old Man Made Young Again

 

At the time when our Lord still walked this earth, he and St.

Peter stopped one evening at a smith's and received free

quarters. Then it came to pass that a poor beggar, hard pressed

by age and infirmity, came to this house and begged alms of the

smith. St. Peter had compassion on him and said, Lord and

master, if it please you, cure his torments that he may be able

to win his own bread. The Lord said kindly, smith, lend me your

forge, and put on some coals for me, and then I will make this

ailing old man young again. The smith was quite willing, and

St. Peter blew the bellows, and when the coal fire sparkled up

large and high our Lord took the little old man, pushed him in

the forge in the midst of the red-hot fire, so that he glowed like

a rose-bush, and praised God with a loud voice. After that the

Lord went to the quenching tub, put the glowing little man into

it so that the water closed over

him, and after he had carefully cooled him, gave him his blessing,

when behold the little man sprang nimbly out, looking fresh,

straight, healthy, and as if he were but twenty. The smith, who

had watched everything closely and attentively, invited them

all to supper. He, however, had an old half-blind crooked,

mother-in-law who went to the youth, and with great earnestness

asked if the fire had burnt him much. He answered that he had never

felt more comfortable, and that he had sat in the red heat

as if he had been in cool dew. The youth's words echoed in the

ears of the old woman all night long, and early next morning,

when the Lord had gone on his way again and had heartily thanked

the smith, the latter thought he might make his old mother-in-law

young again likewise, as he had watched everything so carefully,

and it lay in the province of his trade. So he called to ask her

if she, too, would like to go bounding about like a girl of

eighteen. She said, with all my heart, as the youth has come

out of it so well. So the smith made a great fire, and thrust

the old woman into it, and she writhed about this way and that,

and uttered terrible cries of murder. Sit still. Why are

you screaming and jumping about so, cried he, and as he spoke

he blew the bellows again until all her rags were burnt. The

old woman cried without ceasing, and the smith thought to himself,

I have not quite the right art, and took her out and threw her

into the cooling-tub. Then she screamed so loudly that the smith's

wife upstairs and her daughter-in-law heard it, and they both

ran downstairs, and saw the old woman lying in a heap in the

quenching-tub, howling and screaming, with her face wrinkled and

shriveled and all out of shape. Thereupon the two, who were

both with child, were so terrified that that very night two

boys were born who were not made like men but apes, and they ran

into the woods, and from them sprang the race of apes.

 

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