Indian Fairy Tales 11
Harisarman
There was a certain Brahman in a certain
village, named Harisarman. He was poor and foolish and in evil case for
want of employment, and he had very many children, that he might reap
the fruit of his misdeeds in a former life. He wandered about begging
with his family, and at last he reached a certain city, and entered the
service of a rich householder called Sthuladatta. His sons became
keepers of Sthuladatta's cows and other property, and his wife a
servant to him, and he himself lived near his house, performing the
duty of an attendant. One day there was a feast on account of the
marriage of the daughter of Sthuladatta, largely attended by many
friends of the bride- groom, and merry-makers. Harisarman hoped that he
would be able to fill himself up to the throat with ghee and flesh and
other dainties, and get the same for his family, in the house of his
patron. While he was anxiously expecting to be fed, no one thought of
him.
Then he was distressed at getting nothing to
eat, and he said to his wife at night, "It is owing to my poverty and
stupidity that I am treated with such disrespect here; so I will
pretend by means of an artifice to possess a knowledge of magic, so
that I may become an object of respect to this Sthuladatta; so, when
you get an opportunity, tell him that I possess magical knowledge." He
said this to her, and after turning the matter over in his mind, while
people were asleep he took away from the house of Sthuladatta a horse
on which his master's son-in-law rode. He placed it in concealment at
some distance, and in the morning the friends of the bridegroom could
not find the horse, though they searched in every direction. Then,
while Sthuladatta was distressed at the evil omen, and searching for
the thieves who had carried off the horse, the wife of Harisarman came
and said to him, "My husband is a wise man, skilled in astrology and
magical sciences; he can get the horse back for you; why do you not ask
him?"
When Sthuladatta heard that, he called
Harisarman, who said, "Yesterday I was forgotten, but to-day, now the
horse is stolen, I am called to mind," and Sthuladatta then propitiated
the Brahman with these words— "I forgot you, forgive me"—and asked him
to tell him who had taken away their horse. Then Harisarman drew all
kinds of pretended diagrams, and said: "The horse has been placed by
thieves on the boundary line south from this place. It is concealed
there, and before it is carried off to a distance, as it will be at
close of day, go quickly and bring it." When they heard that, many men
ran and brought the horse quickly, praising the discernment of
Harisarman. Then Harisarman was honoured by all men as a sage, and
dwelt there in happiness, honoured by Sthuladatta.
Now, as days went on, much treasure, both of
gold and jewels, had been stolen by a thief from the palace of the
king. As the thief was not known, the king quickly summoned Harisarman
on account of his reputation for knowledge of magic. And he, when
summoned, tried to gain time, and said, "I will tell you to-morrow,"
and then he was placed in a chamber by the king, and carefully guarded.
And he was sad because he had pretended to have knowledge. Now in that
palace there was a maid named Jihva (which means Tongue), who, with
the assistance of her brother, had stolen that treasure from the
interior of the palace. She, being alarmed at Harisarman's knowledge,
went at night and applied her ear to the door of that chamber in order
to find out what he was about. And Harisarman, who was alone inside,
was at that very moment blaming his own tongue, that had made a vain
assumption of knowledge. He said: "O Tongue, what is this that you have
done through your greediness? Wicked one, you will soon receive
punishment in full." When Jihva heard this, she thought, in her terror,
that she had been discovered by this wise man, and she managed to get
in where he was, and falling at his feet, she said to the supposed
wizard: "Brahman, here I am, that Jihva whom you have discovered to be
the thief of the treasure, and after I took it I buried it in the earth
in a garden behind the palace, under a pomegranate tree. So spare me,
and receive the small quantity of gold which is in my possession."
When Harisarman heard that, he said to her
proudly: "Depart, I know all this; I know the past, present and future;
but I will not denounce you, being a miserable creature that has
implored my protection. But whatever gold is in your possession you
must give back to me." When he said this to the maid, she consented,
and departed quickly. But Harisarman reflected in his astonishment:
"Fate brings about, as if in sport, things impossible, for when
calamity was so near, who would have thought chance would have brought
us success? While I was blaming my jihva, the thief Jihva suddenly
flung herself at my feet. Secret crimes manifest themselves by means of
fear." Thus thinking, he passed the night happily in the chamber. And
in the morning he brought the king, by some skilful parade of pretended
knowledge into the garden, and led him up to the treasure, which was
buried under the pomegranate tree, and said that the thief had escaped
with a part of it. Then the king was pleased, and gave him the revenue
of many villages.
But the minister, named Devajnanin, whispered in
the king's ear: "How can a man possess such knowledge unattainable by
men, without having studied the books of magic; you may be certain that
this is a specimen of the way he makes a dishonest livelihood, by
having a secret intelligence with thieves. It will be much better to
test him by some new artifice." Then the king of his own accord brought
a covered pitcher into which he had thrown a frog, and said to
Harisarman, "Brahman, if you can guess what there is in this pitcher, I
will do you great honour to-day." When the Brahman Harisarman heard
that, he thought that his last hour had come, and he called to mind the
pet name of "Froggie" which his father had given him in his childhood
in sport, and, impelled by luck, he called to himself by his pet name,
lamenting his hard fate, and suddenly called out: "This is a fine
pitcher for you, Froggie; it will soon become the swift destroyer of
your helpless self." The people there, when they heard him say that,
raised a shout of applause, because his speech chimed in so well with
the object presented to him, and murmured, "Ah! a great sage, he knows
even about the frog!" Then the king, thinking that this was all due to
knowledge of divination, was highly delighted, and gave Harisarman the
revenue of more villages, with gold, an umbrella, and state carriages
of all kinds. So Harisarman prospered in the world.
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