Folklore and Fables

 

The Junior Classics V1, by Willam Patten

 

The Golden Fish

 

By L. M. Gask

 

UPON a certain island in the middle of the sea dwelt an old man and his

wife.  They were so poor that they often went short of bread, for the

fish he caught were their only means of livelihood.

 

One day when the man had been fishing for many hours without success,

he hooked a small Gold Fish, whose eyes were bright as diamonds.

 

"Let me go, kind man," the little creature cried.  "I should not make a

mouthful either for yourself or your wife, and my own mate waits for me

down in the waters."

 

The old man was so moved by his pleadings that he took him off the hook

and threw him back into the sea.  Before he swam off to rejoin his

mate, the Gold Fish promised that in return for his kindness he would

come to the fisherman's help if ever he wanted him.  Laughing merrily

at this, for he did not believe that a fish could help him except by

providing him with food, the old man went home and told his wife.

 

"What!" she cried, "you actually let him go when you had caught him?

It was just like your stupidity.  We have not a scrap of bread in the

house, and now, I suppose, we must starve!"

 

Her reproaches continued for so long that though he scarcely believed

what the fish had said, the poor old man thought that at least it would

do no harm to put him to the test.  He therefore hastened back to the

shore, and stood at the very edge of the waves.

 

"Golden Fish, Golden Fish!" he called.  "Come to me, I pray, with your

tail in the water, and your head lifted up toward me!"

 

As the last word was uttered the Gold Fish popped up his head.

 

"You see I have kept my promise," he said.  "What can I do for you, my

good friend?"

 

"There is not a scrap of bread in the house," quavered the old man,

"and my wife is very angry with me for letting you go.

 

"Don't trouble about that!" said the Gold Fish in an off-hand manner;

"you will find bread, and to spare, when you go home."  And the old man

hurried away to see if his little friend had spoken truly.

 

Surely enough, he found that the pan was full of fine white loaves.

 

"I did not do so badly for you after all, good wife!"  he said, as they

ate their supper; but his wife was anything but satisfied.  The more

she had, the more she wanted, and she lay awake planning what they

should demand from the Gold Fish next.

 

"Wake up, you lazy man!" she cried to her husband, early next morning.

"Go down to the sea and tell your fish that I must have a new washtub."

 

The old man did as his wife bade him, and the moment he called the Gold

Fish reappeared.  He seemed quite willing to grant the new request, and

on his return home the old man found a beautiful new washtub in the

small yard at the back of their cabin.

 

"Why didn't you ask for a new cabin too?"  his wife said angrily.  "If

you had had a grain of sense you would have done this without being

told.  Go back at once, and say that we must have one.

 

The old man was rather ashamed to trouble his friend again so soon; but

the Gold Fish was as obliging as ever.

 

"Very well," he said, "a new cabin you shall have."  And the old mart

found one so spick-and-span that he hardly dare cross the floor for

fear of soiling it.  It would have pleased him greatly had his wife

been contented, but she, good woman, did nothing but grumble still.

 

"Tell your Gold Fish," she said next day, "that I want to be a duchess,

with many servants at my beck and call, and a splendid carriage to

drive in.

 

Once more her wish was granted, but now her husband's plight was hard

indeed.  She would not let him share her palace, but ordered him off to

the stables, where he was forced to keep company with her grooms.  In a

few days, however, he grew reconciled to his lot, for here he could

live in peace, while he learned that she was leading those around her a

terrible life, it was not long before she sent for him again.

 

"Summon the Gold Fish," she commanded haughtily, "and tell him I wish

to be Queen of the Waters, and to rule over all the fish."

 

The poor old man felt sorry for the fish if they had to be under her

rule, for prosperity had quite spoiled her.  However, he dared not

disobey, and once more summoned his powerful friend.

 

"Make your wife the Queen of the Waters?" exclaimed the Gold Fish.

"That is the last thing I should do.  She is unfit to reign, for she

cannot rule herself or her desires.  I shall make her once more a poor

old woman.  Adieu!  You will see me no more."

 

The old man returned sorrowfully with this unpleasant message, to find

the palace transformed into a humble cabin, and his wife in a skirt of

threadbare stuff in place of the rich brocade which she had worn of

late.  She was sad and humble, and much more easy to live with than she

had been before.  Her husband therefore had occasion many times to

think gratefully of the Gold Fish, and sometimes when drawing up his

net the glint of the sun upon the scales of his captives would give him

a moment's hope-which, alas!  was as often disappointed-that once again

he was to see his benefactor.