
The Simple Wife (La Sposa Cece) (1)
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Rachel Harriette Busk
Roman Legends: A Collection Of The Fables And Folk-Lore Of Rome
Estes And Lauriat, Boston
1877
Italy
The Simple Wife (La Sposa Cece): marital comedy, foolishness, domestic misunderstanding, peasant humour, innocence, gender satire, household life, absurdity, mockery, marriage
Public Domain (copyright expired)
n/a
The Simple Wife (La Sposa Cece) (1)
There was a man and his wife who had a young daughter to marry; and there was a man who was seeking a wife. So the man who was seeking a wife came to the man who had a daughter to marry, and said, 'Give me your daughter for a wife.'
'Yes,' said the man who had a daughter to marry; 'you'll do very well; you're just about the sort of son-in-law I want.' And then he added: 'If our daughter is to be betrothed to-day, it is the occasion for a feast.' So to the wife he said, 'Prepare the table;' and to the daughter he said, 'Draw the wine.'
The daughter went down into the cellar to draw the wine. But as she drew the wine she began to cry, saying: 'If I am to be married I shall have a child, and the child will be a son, and the son will be a priest, and the priest will be a bishop, and the bishop will be a cardinal, and the cardinal will be a pope.' And she cried and cried, and the wine was running all the time, so that the bottle she was filling ran over, and went on running over.
Then said the father and mother: 'What can the girl be doing down in the cellar so long?' But the mother said: 'I must go and see.'
So the mother went down to see why she was so long, but the moment she came into the cellar she, too, began to cry; so that the wine still went on running over.
Then the father said: 'What can the girl and her mother both be doing so long down in the cellar? I must go and see.'
So the father went down into the cellar; but the moment he got into the cellar he, too, began to cry, and could do nothing for crying; so the wine still went on running over.
Then he who had come to seek a wife said: 'What can these people all be doing so long down in the cellar?' So he, too, went down to see, and found them all crying in the cellar and the wine running over. Only when the wine was all run out they left off crying and came upstairs again.
Then the betrothal and the marriage were happily celebrated.
One day after they were married the husband went into the market to buy meat, and he bought a large provision because he had invited a friend to dinner. When the wife saw him buy such a quantity of meat she began to cry, saying: 'What can we do with such a lot of meat?'
'Oh, never mind, don't make a misery of it,' said the husband; 'put it behind you.'
The simple wife took the meat and went home, saying to her parents, and crying the while: 'My husband says I am to put all this meat behind me! Do tell me what can I do?'
'You can't put the whole lot of it behind you, that's certain,' replied the equally simple mother; 'but we can manage it between us.'
Then she took the meat and put all the hard, bony part on one chair, where she made the father sit down on it; all the fat, skinny part she put on another chair, and made the wife sit down on it; and the fleshy, meaty part she put on another chair, and sat down on that herself.
Presently the husband came with his friend, ready for dinner, knocking at the door. None of the three dared to move, however, that they might not cease to be fulfilling his injunctions. Then he looked through the keyhole, and, seeing them all sitting down without moving when he knocked, he thought they must all be dead; so he ran and fetched a locksmith, who opened the door for him.
'What on earth are you all doing there,' exclaimed the hungry husband, 'instead of getting dinner ready?'
'You told me to put the meat behind me, and I have done so,' answered the simple wife.
Then he saw they were sitting on the meat. Out of all patience with such idiocy, he exclaimed: 'This is the last you'll ever see of me. At least I promise you not to come back till I have met three other people as idiotic as you, and that's hardly likely to occur.'
With that he took his friend to a tavern to dine, and then put on a pilgrim's dress and went wandering over the country.
In the first city he came to there was great public rejoicing going on. The princess had just been married, and the court was keeping high festival. As he came up to the palace the bride and bridegroom were just come back from church. The bride wore one of those very high round headdresses that they used to wear in olden time, with a long veil hanging from it. It was so very high that she could not by any means get in at the door, and there she stuck, not knowing what to do. Then she began to cry, saying: 'What shall I do? what shall I do?'
'Shall I tell you what to do?' said the pilgrim-husband, drawing near.
'Oh, pray do, if you can; I will give you a hundred scudi if you will only show me how to get in.'
So he went and made her go a few steps backward, and then bow her head very low, and so she could pass under the door.
'Really, I have found one woman as simple as my people at home,' said the pilgrim-husband, as he sat down to the banquet at the special invitation of the princess, in reward for his services. Afterwards she counted out a hundred scudi to him, and he went further.
Further along the road he came to a farm, with barns and cattle and plenty of stock about, and a large well at which a woman was drawing water. Instead of dipping in the pail, she had got the well-rope knotted into a huge knot, which she kept dipping into the water and squeezing out into the pail, and she kept crying as she did so: 'Oh, how long shall I be filling the pail! The pail will never be full!'
'Shall I show you how to fill it?' asked the pilgrim-husband, drawing near.
'Oh, yes, do show me if you can. I will give you a hundred scudi if you will only show me.'
Then he took all the knots out of the rope and let down the pail by it, and filled it in a minute.
'Here's a second woman as stupid as my people at home,' said the pilgrim-husband, as the farmer's wife asked him in to dinner in reward for his great services; 'if I go on at this rate I shall have to return to her at last, in spite of my protestations.'
After that the farmer's wife counted out the hundred scudi of the promised reward, and he went on further, having first packed six eggs into his hollow staff as provision for the journey.
Towards nightfall he arrived at a lone cottage. Here he knocked and asked a bed for his night's lodging.
'I can't give you that,' said a voice from the inside; 'for I am a lone widow. I can't take a man in to sleep here.'
'But I am a pilgrim,' replied he; 'let me in at least to cook a bit of supper.'
'That I don't mind doing,' said the good wife, and she opened the door.
'Thanks, good friend!' said the pilgrim-husband as he sat down by the stove; 'now add to your charity a couple of eggs in a pan.'
So she gave him a pan and two eggs, and a bit of butter to cook them in; but he took the six eggs out of his staff and broke them into the pan, too.
Presently, when the good wife turned her head his way again, and saw eight eggs swimming in the pan instead of two, she said: 'Lack-a-day! you must surely be some strange being from the other world. Do you know so-and-so there' (naming her dead husband)?
'Oh, yes,' said the pilgrim-husband, enjoying the joke; 'I know him very well; he lives just next to me.'
'Only to think of that!' replied the poor woman. 'And do tell me, how do you get on in the other world? What sort of a life is it?'
'Oh, not so very bad; it depends what sort of a place you get. The part where we are is not very bad, except that we get very little to eat. Your husband, for instance, is nearly starved.'
'No, really!' cried the good wife, clasping her hands; 'only fancy! my good husband starving out there; so fond as he was of a good dinner, too!' Then she added, coaxingly: 'As you know him so well, perhaps you wouldn't mind doing him the charity of taking him a little somewhat to give him a treat. There are such lots of things I could easily send him.'
'O, dear no, not at all; I'll do it with great pleasure,' answered he; 'but I'm not going back till to-morrow; and if I don't sleep here I must go on further, and then I shan't come by this way.'
'That's true,' replied the widow. 'Ah, well, I mustn't mind what the folks say, for such an opportunity as this may never occur again. You must sleep in my bed, and I must sleep on the hearth; and in the morning I'll load a donkey with provisions for my poor dear husband.'
'Oh, no,' replied the pilgrim; 'you shan't be disturbed in your bed; only let me sleep on the hearth, that will do for me; and as I'm an early riser I can be gone before anyone's astir, so folks won't have anything to say.'
So it was done, and an hour before sunrise the woman was up loading the donkey with the best of her stores. There were ham, and maccaroni, and flour, and cheese, and wine. All this she committed to the pilgrim, saying: 'You'll send the donkey back, won't you?'
'Of course I would send him back; he'd be no use to us out there: but I shan't get out again myself for another hundred years or so, and I fear he won't find his way back alone, for it's no easy way to find.'
'To be sure not; I ought to have thought of that,' replied the widow. 'Ah, well, so as my poor husband gets a good meal never mind the donkey.'
So the pretended pilgrim from the other world went his way. He hadn't gone a hundred yards before the widow called him back.
'Ah, she's beginning to think better of it!' said he to himself; and he continued his way, pretending not to hear.
'Good pilgrim!' shouted the widow; 'I forgot one thing. Would any money be of use to my poor dear husband?'
'Oh dear yes, all the use in the world,' replied the pilgrim; 'you can always get anything for money everywhere.'
'Oh, do come back then, and I'll trouble you with a hundred scudi for him.'
The pretended pilgrim came back willingly for the hundred scudi, and the widow counted them out to him.
'There is no help for it,' soliloquised he as he went his way; 'I must go back to those at home. I have actually found three women each more stupid than they.'
So he went home to live, and complained no more of the simplicity of his wife.
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