Indian Fairy Tales 21
The farmer and the money-lender
There was once a farmer who suffered much at
the hands of a money- lender. Good harvests, or bad, the farmer was
always poor, the money- lender rich. At the last, when he hadn't a
farthing left, farmer went to the money-lender's house, and said, "You
can't squeeze water from a stone, and as you have nothing to get by me
now, you might tell me the secret of becoming rich."
"My friend," returned the money-lender, piously, "riches come from Ram —ask him."
"Thank you, I will!" replied the simple
farmer; so he prepared three girdle-cakes to last him on the journey,
and set out to find Ram.
First he met a Brahman, and to him he gave a
cake, asking him to point out the road to Ram; but the Brahman only
took the cake and went on his way without a word, Next the farmer met a
Jogi or devotee, and to him he gave a cake, without receiving any help
in return. At last, he came upon a poor man sitting under a tree, and
finding out he was hungry, the kindly farmer gave him his last cake,
and sitting down to rest beside him, entered into conversation.
"And where are you going?" asked the poor man, at length.
"Oh, I have a long journey before me, for I am
going to find Ram!" replied the farmer. "I don't suppose you could
tell me which way to go?"
"Perhaps I can," said the poor man, smiling, "for I am Ram! What do you want of me?"
Then the farmer told the whole story, and Ram,
taking pity on him, gave him a conch shell, and showed him how to blow
it in a particular way, saying, "Remember! whatever you wish for, you
have only to blow the conch that way, and your wish will be fulfilled.
Only have a care of that money-lender, for even magic is not proof
against their wiles!"
The farmer went back to his village rejoicing.
In fact the money-lender noticed his high spirits at once, and said to
himself, "Some good fortune must have befallen the stupid fellow, to
make him hold his head so jauntily." Therefore he went over to the
simple farmer's house, and congratulated him on his good fortune, in
such cunning words, pretending to have heard all about it, that before
long the farmer found himself telling the whole story—all except the
secret of blowing the conch, for, with all his simplicity, the farmer
was not quite such a fool as to tell that.
Nevertheless, the money-lender determined to
have the conch by hook or by crook, and as he was villain enough not to
stick at trifles, he waited for a favourable opportunity and stole the
conch.
But, after nearly bursting himself with
blowing the conch in every conceivable way, he was obliged to give up
the secret as a bad job. However, being determined to succeed he went
back to the farmer, and said, coolly, "Look here; I've got your conch,
but I can't use it; you haven't got it, so it's clear you can't use it
either. Business is at a stand-still unless we make a bargain. Now, I
promise to give you back your conch, and never to interfere with your
using it, on one condition, which is this,—whatever you get from it, I
am to get double."
"Never!" cried the farmer; "that would be the old business all over again!"
"Not at all!" replied the wily money-lender; "you will have your share! Now, don't be a dog in the manger, for if you get all you want, what can it matter to you if I am rich or poor?"
At last, though it went sorely against the
grain to be of any benefit to a money-lender, the farmer was forced to
yield, and from that time, no matter what he gained by the power of the
conch, the money-lender gained double. And the knowledge that this was
so preyed upon the farmer's mind day and night, so that he had no
satisfaction out of anything.
At last, there came a very dry season,—so dry
that the farmer's crops withered for want of rain. Then he blew his
conch, and wished for a well to water them, and lo! there was the well,
but the money-lender had two!—two beautiful new wells! This
was too much for any farmer to stand; and our friend brooded over it,
and brooded over it, till at last a bright idea came into his head. He
seized the conch, blew it loudly, and cried out, "Oh, Ram! I wish to be
blind of one eye!" And so he, was, in a twinkling, but the
money-lender of course was blind of both, and in trying to steer his
way between the two new wells, he fell into one, and was drowned.
Now this true story shows that a farmer once got the better of a money- lender—but only by losing one of his eyes.
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