Folk Tales from the Russian eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 84 pages of information about Folk Tales from the Russian.

Folk Tales from the Russian eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 84 pages of information about Folk Tales from the Russian.

“No!” he exclaimed, “I certainly shall not pardon thee, thief and burglar!  I will give orders for thy cruel death!  I will have thee chained and thrown into my subterranean prison with nothing but bread and water for food until thou forget thy trade!”

“Great and merciful Tsar Archidei Aggeivitch, postpone thy orders.  Listen to my peasant talk,” prayed the seventh Simeon.  “Our old Russian saying is:  ’He is no thief who is not caught, and neither is he who steals, but the one who instigates the theft.’  If my wish had been to steal, I should have done it long ago.  I should have stolen thy treasures and thy judges would not have objected to take a small share of them, and I could have built a white-walled stone palace and have been rich.  But, mark this:  I am a stupid peasant of low origin.  I know well enough how to steal, but will not.  If thy wish were to learn my trade, how could I keep it from thee?  And if thou, for this sincere acknowledgment, wilt have me put to death, then what is the value of thy royal word?”

The Tsar thought a moment.  “For this time,” he said, “I will not let thee die, for it pleases me to grant thee my grace.  But from this very day, this very hour, thou never shalt see God’s light nor the bright sunshine nor the silvery moon.  Thou shalt never walk at liberty through the wide fields, but thou, my dear guest, shalt dwell in a palace where no sunny ray ever penetrates.  You, my servants, take him, chain his hands and his feet and lead him to my chief jailor.  And you six Simeons follow me.  You have my grace and reward.  To-morrow every one of you will begin to work for me according to his gifts and capacities.”

The six Simeons followed the Tsar Archidei, and the seventh brother, the youngest, the beloved one, was fallen upon by the servants, taken away to the dark prison and heavily chained.

The Tsar Archidei ordered carpenters to be sent to the first Simeon, as well as masons and blacksmiths and all sorts of workingmen.  He also ordered a supply of bricks, stones, iron, clay, and cement.  Without any delay, Simeon, the first brother, began to build a column, and according to his simple peasant’s habits his work progressed rapidly, and not a moment was wasted in clever combinations.  In a short time the white column was ready, and lo, how high it went! as high as the great planets.  The smaller stars were beneath it, and from above the people seemed to be like bugs.

The second Simeon climbed the column, looked around, listened to all sounds, and came down.  The Tsar Archidei, anxious to know about everything under the sun, ordered him to report, and Simeon did so.  He told the Tsar Archidei all the wonderful doings all over the world.  He told how one king was fighting another, where there was war and where there was peace, and with other things the second Simeon even mentioned deep secrets, quite surprising secrets, which made the Tsar Archidei smile; and the courtiers, encouraged by the royal smile, roared with laughter.

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Project Gutenberg
Folk Tales from the Russian from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.