登陆注册
5435500000092

第92章

With that he went into an inn, ate the bread, and ordered one kreuzer's worth of beer. When he had had it, he journeyed onwards, and then St. Peter, who had assumed the appearance of a discharged soldier, met and spoke to him thus. Good day, comrade, can you not give me a bit of bread, and a kreuzer to get a drink. Where am I to procure it, answered brother lustig. I have been discharged, and Igot nothing but a loaf of ammunition-bread and four kreuzers in money. I met three beggars on the road, and I gave each of them a quarter of my bread, and one kreuzer. The last quarter I ate in the inn, and had a drink with the last kreuzer. Now my pockets are empty, and if you also have nothing we can go a-begging together.

No, answered St. Peter, we need not quite do that. I know a little about medicine, and I will soon earn as much as I require by that.

Indeed, said brother lustig, I know nothing of that, so I must go and beg alone. Just come with me, said St. Peter, and if I earn anything, you shall have half of it.

All right, said brother lustig, and they went away together. Then they came to a peasant's house inside which they heard loud lamentations and cries. So they went in, and there the husband was lying sick unto death, and very near his end, and his wife was crying and weeping quite loudly. Stop that howling and crying, said St.

Peter, I will make the man well again, and he took a salve out of his pocket, and healed the sick man in a moment, so that he could get up, and was in perfect health.

In great delight the man and his wife said, how can we reward you.

What shall we give you. But St. Peter would take nothing, and the more the peasant folks offered him, the more he refused. Brother lustig, however, nudged St. Peter, and said, take something. Sure enough we are in need of it.

At length the woman brought a lamb and said to St. Peter that he really must take that, but he would not. Then brother lustig gave him a poke in the side, and said, do take it, you stupid fool. We are in great want of it. Then St. Peter said at last, well, I will take the lamb, but I won't carry it. If you insist on having it, you must carry it. That is nothing, said brother lustig. I will easily carry it, and took it on his shoulder.

Then they departed and came to a wood, but brother lustig had begun to feel the lamb heavy, and he was hungry, so he said to St. Peter, look, that's a good place, we might cook the lamb there, and eat it.

As you like, answered St. Peter, but I can't have anything to do with the cooking. If you will cook, there is a kettle for you, and in the meantime I will walk about a little until it is ready. But you must not begin to eat until I have come back. I will come at the right time. Well, go, then, said brother lustig. I understand cookery, Iwill manage it.

Then St. Peter went away, and brother lustig killed the lamb, lighted a fire, threw the meat into the kettle, and boiled it. When the lamb, however, was quite ready, and the apostle peter had not come back, brother lustig took it out of the kettle, cut it up, and found the heart. That is said to be the best part, said he, and tasted it, but at last he ate it all up. At length St. Peter returned and said, you may eat the whole of the lamb yourself, I will only have the heart, give me that.

Then brother lustig took a knife and fork, and pretended to look anxiously about amongst the lamb's flesh, but not to be able to find the heart, and at last he said abruptly, there is none here. But where can it be, said the apostle. I don't know, replied brother lustig, but look, what fools we both are, to seek for the lamb's heart, and neither of us to remember that a lamb has no heart. Oh, said St. Peter, that is something quite new. Every animal has a heart, why is a lamb to have none. No, be assured, my brother, said brother lustig, that a lamb has no heart. Just consider it seriously, and then you will see that it really has none. Well, it is all right, said St. Peter. If there is no heart, then I want none of the lamb. You may eat it alone.

What I can't eat now, I will carry away in my knapsack, said brother lustig, and he ate half the lamb, and put the rest in his knapsack.

They went farther, and then St. Peter caused a great stream of water to flow right across their path, and they were obliged to pass through it. Said St. Peter, do you go first. No, answered brother lustig, you must go first, and he thought, if the water is too deep Iwill stay behind. Then St. Peter strode through it, and the water just reached to his knee. So brother lustig began to go through also, but the water grew deeper and reached to his throat. Then he cried, brother, help me.

St. Peter said, then will you confess that you have eaten the lamb's heart. No, said he, I have not eaten it. Then the water grew deeper still and rose to his mouth. Help me, brother, cried the soldier.

St. Peter said, then will you confess that you have eaten the lamb's heart. No, he replied, I have not eaten it. St. Peter, however, would not let him be drowned, but made the water sink and helped him through it.

Then they journeyed onwards, and came to a kingdom where they heard that the king's daughter lay sick unto death. Hi, there, brother, said the soldier to St. Peter, this is a chance for us. If we can heal her we shall be provided for, for life.

But St. Peter was not half quick enough for him. Come, lift your legs, my dear brother, said he, that we may get there in time. But St. Peter walked slower and slower, though brother lustig did all he could to drive and push him on, and at last they heard that the princess was dead. Now we are done for, said brother lustig. That comes of your sleepy way of walking.

同类推荐
  • 彭祖摄生养性论

    彭祖摄生养性论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 宝星陀罗尼经

    宝星陀罗尼经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 云南风土记

    云南风土记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 锋剑春秋

    锋剑春秋

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Devil's Paw

    The Devil's Paw

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 佛说比丘听施经

    佛说比丘听施经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 安妮日记

    安妮日记

    本书主要记录了安妮·弗兰克遇难前对密室生活和身心成长历程,首篇写于1942年6月12日,末篇写于1944年8月1日。在被压抑和恐惧气氛笼罩的密室生活中,安妮虽然有时像大人一样情绪低落,但始终心存希望。她把日记本“吉蒂”作为假想的收信人,以写信的方式倾诉自己的内心感受。日记中既记载了安妮对家庭成员(尤其是对母亲)的好恶、对密室内部争论的分析和对战争的看法,甚至涉及对女性社会地位问题的见解,也记述了安妮对理想爱情的憧憬与渴望、对人性与人生的深刻探索……安妮在不断的自我反思与自我鼓励下,逐渐独立和自主。
  • 皇后娘娘爱上我

    皇后娘娘爱上我

    自从她穿越到了这里,每天只有一件事:撩!撩!撩!某男一脸委屈的说:“雪儿,你为什么不撩我呢?”某女一脸无语,说好的高冷呢?(此文爽文,宠文。欢迎入坑!)
  • 人一生要注意的100个健康细节

    人一生要注意的100个健康细节

    本书倡导了“细节决定健康”这一理念,提出了人一生当中必须注意的100个健康细节,这些健康细节是人们日常生活中最常见、接触最多、同时也最容易忽略的,而正是这些小细节给人们的健康带来了很大威胁,甚至影响到一生的幸福。本书带领读者认识忽略健康细节带来的危害,并提出了具体解决方法。
  • 无量宙之密钥

    无量宙之密钥

    一位中国高能物理学家李光瀚在国外研究学习期间落入阴谋集团的陷阱。从而意外得知自己的神秘身份和即将发生的末日灾难。他通过强子对撞机收集储存巨大能量,在平行宇宙中的昆仑智者和中国女特工的帮助下,跨越欧亚大陆,纵横青藏高原,经历生死离别。若干年后,终于在更大的末日危机爆发前,再次挫败阴谋拯救世界。
  • 民国的角落:嬉笑怒骂民国人,闲言碎语大历史

    民国的角落:嬉笑怒骂民国人,闲言碎语大历史

    张鸣老师有关民国历史的文化随笔,以另类的视角和举重若轻的笔触,将民国时期历史中的大小人物和各色轶事生动勾勒,鲜活展现。本书是别样的辛亥与五四、军阀那些事儿、民主与选举的变奏,引领读者反思中国封建文化、西方文化给中国历史、给国人,乃至当下的社会带来的影响。
  • 恋恋四季

    恋恋四季

    栖霞山庄住着一户林姓人家,男主人退休后工作由大女儿接替。二女儿考上了师范学院,在凤城扎根;小儿子则在山庄务农,三人不同的生活道路成就了不同的人生,不同生活环境对她们的生活和成长有着不可忽视的影响。
  • 点点梅花为我愁

    点点梅花为我愁

    胡适、张学良、林语堂、胡宗南、黎元洪、冯玉祥等,他们的名字,在那些年月里,如来势汹汹的风一样,四处激荡。爱,这是一个宽广无限的字。我只和你说,男欢女爱。给你看的,关于他们的,亦是男欢女爱之爱。没有比男欢女爱更叫人沉醉的东西了。也没有比男欢女爱更叫人忧伤的了。尘世最使人情不自禁沉醉的,往往最容易令人忧伤。可是,倘若爱了,忧伤亦是无比动人。当然,这份动人,不隔了时光之河回望,望不到。再说此书中的他们。我猜不出当你望见他们的爱情——也有一些人没有爱情,一生不明爱情为何物,仅有的是爱欲——当你望见,我猜不出你会怎样思想。
  • 意能战士

    意能战士

    2120年,地球迎来新时代~意能时代!一个崭新而无比神秘的文明世界在此诞生!实现了真正意义上的一切皆有可能!意能战士、意能战车,意能食物、意能武器…人们终于可以驾驶飞船,轻易到达任何无比遥远的星系!各种生命星系的文明世界,映入人类的眼帘!五行文明、光之文明、暗之文明、风之文明、雷之文明、时之文明、空之文明…
  • 师父大量吾乃小屁民

    师父大量吾乃小屁民

    清州,是图国最有名的商业城市。它地处浪沧江和运河的交汇冲要之地,与吴旭国隔海相望。因交通便利,清州物资交流频繁,经济迅速地繁荣昌盛。全国各地的商人来此经商贸易,富商大贾,动辄数百。其中最富的当属盐商。清州是产盐要地,盐业是高利润行业,它让清州人迅速发家致富,积累了巨额商业资本。用“富得流油”来形容他们最为恰当不过,而其中,又以世代盐商冷月……