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<h2> The Believing Husbands </h2>
<p>Once upon a time there dwelt in the land of Erin a young man who was
seeking a wife, and of all the maidens round about none pleased him as
well as the only daughter of a farmer. The girl was willing and the father
was willing, and very soon they were married and went to live at the farm.
By and bye the season came when they must cut the peats and pile them up
to dry, so that they might have fires in the winter. So on a fine day the
girl and her husband, and the father and his wife all went out upon the
moor.</p>
<p>They worked hard for many hours, and at length grew hungry, so the young
woman was sent home to bring them food, and also to give the horses their
dinner. When she went into the stables, she suddenly saw the heavy
pack-saddle of the speckled mare just over her head, and she jumped and
said to herself:</p>
<p>'Suppose that pack-saddle were to fall and kill me, how dreadful it would
be!' and she sat down just under the pack-saddle she was so much afraid
of, and began to cry.</p>
<p>Now the others out on the moor grew hungrier and hungrier.</p>
<p>'What can have become of her?' asked they, and at length the mother
declared that she would wait no longer, and must go and see what had
happened.</p>
<p>As the bride was nowhere in the kitchen or the dairy, the old woman went
into the stable, where she found her daughter weeping bitterly.</p>
<p>'What is the matter, my dove?' and the girl answered, between her sobs:</p>
<p>'When I came in and saw the pack-saddle over my head, I thought how
dreadful it would be if it fell and killed me,' and she cried louder than
before.</p>
<p>The old woman struck her hands together: 'Ah, to think of it! if that were
to be, what should I do?' and she sat down by her daughter, and they both
wrung their hands and let their tears flow.</p>
<p>'Something strange must have occurred,' exclaimed the old farmer on the
moor, who by this time was not only hungry, but cross. 'I must go after
them.' And he went and found them in the stable.</p>
<p>'What is the matter?' asked he.</p>
<p>'Oh!' replied his wife, 'when our daughter came home, did she not see the
pack-saddle over her head, and she thought how dreadful it would be if it
were to fall and kill her.'</p>
<p>'Ah, to think of it!' exclaimed he, striking his hands together, and he
sat down beside them and wept too.</p>
<p>As soon as night fell the young man returned full of hunger, and there
they were, all crying together in the stable.</p>
<p>'What is the matter?' asked he.</p>
<p>'When thy wife came home,' answered the farmer, 'she saw the pack-saddle
over her head, and she thought how dreadful it would be if it were to fall
and kill her.'</p>
<p>'Well, but it didn't fall,' replied the young man, and he went off to the
kitchen to get some supper, leaving them to cry as long as they liked.</p>
<p>The next morning he got up with the sun, and said to the old man and to
the old woman and to his wife:</p>
<p>'Farewell: my foot shall not return to the house till I have found other
three people as silly as you,' and he walked away till he came to the
town, and seeing the door of a cottage standing open wide, he entered. No
man was present, but only some women spinning at their wheels.</p>
<p>'You do not belong to this town,' said he.</p>
<p>'You speak truth,' they answered, 'nor you either?'</p>
<p>'I do not,' replied he, 'but is it a good place to live in?'</p>
<p>The women looked at each other.</p>
<p>'The men of the town are so silly that we can make them believe anything
we please,' said they.</p>
<p>'Well, here is a gold ring,' replied he, 'and I will give it to the one
amongst you who can make her husband believe the most impossible thing,'
and he left them.</p>
<p>As soon as the first husband came home his wife said to him:</p>
<p>'Thou art sick!'</p>
<p>'Am I?' asked he.</p>
<p>'Yes, thou art,' she answered; 'take off thy clothes and lie down.'</p>
<p>So he did, and when he was in his bed his wife went to him and said:</p>
<p>'Thou art dead.'</p>
<p>'Oh, am I?' asked he.</p>
<p>'Thou art,' said she; 'shut thine eyes and stir neither hand nor foot.'</p>
<p>And dead he felt sure he was.</p>
<p>Soon the second man came home, and his wife said to him:</p>
<p>'You are not my husband!'</p>
<p>'Oh, am I not?' asked he.</p>
<p>'No, it is not you,' answered she, so he went away and slept in the wood.</p>
<p>When the third man arrived his wife gave him his supper, and after that he
went to bed, just as usual. The next morning a boy knocked at the door,
bidding him attend the burial of the man who was dead, and he was just
going to get up when his wife stopped him.</p>
<p>'Time enough,' said she, and he lay still till he heard the funeral
passing the window.</p>
<p>'Now rise, and be quick,' called the wife, and the man jumped out of bed
in a great hurry, and began to look about him.</p>
<p>'Why, where are my clothes?' asked he.</p>
<p>'Silly that you are, they are on your back, of course,' answered the
woman.</p>
<p>'Are they?' said he.</p>
<p>'They are,' said she, 'and make haste lest the burying be ended before you
get there.'</p>
<p>Then off he went, running hard, and when the mourners saw a man coming
towards them with nothing on but his nightshirt, they forgot in their
fright what they were there for, and fled to hide themselves. And the
naked man stood alone at the head of the coffin.</p>
<p>Very soon a man came out of the wood and spoke to him.</p>
<p>'Do you know me?'</p>
<p>'Not I,' answered the naked man. 'I do not know you.'</p>
<p>'But why are you naked?' asked the first man.</p>
<p>'Am I naked? My wife told me that I had all my clothes on,' answered he.</p>
<p>'And my wife told me that I myself was dead,' said the man in the coffin.</p>
<p>But at the sound of his voice the two men were so terrified that they ran
straight home, and the man in the coffin got up and followed them, and it
was his wife that gained the gold ring, as he had been sillier than the
other two.</p>
<p>From 'West Highland Tales.'</p>
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