2007-12-25 22:22
luanyuboluyuan
双语格林童话-万事通大夫
[size=2][color=black] Onceupon a time there was a poor peasant by the name of Crab who drove twooxen with a load of wood into town where he sold it to a doctor for twothalers. He received his moneyjust as the doctor was sitting down to eat. When the peasant saw howwell the doctor ate and drank, his heart took a longing for the samethings, and he decided that he would like to have been a doctor. He stood there for a while, and then asked if he too could not become a doctor. "Certainly," said the doctor, "in no time at all."
"What do I have to do?" asked the peasant.
First of all, buy yourself an ABC-book, one that has apicture of a rooster up front. Second, sell your wagon and your twooxen and buy yourself some clothing and other things that doctors use.Third, have yourself a sign painted with the words 'I am DoctorKnow-All' and nail it above the door to your house."
The peasant did everything he was told to do. After hehad doctored a little —— but not very much —— some money was stolenfrom a great and wealthy nobleman. Someone told him about the DoctorKnow-All who lived in such and such a village, and who must know wherethe money had gone. So the nobleman had his carriage hitched up, rodeout to the village, and asked him if he were Doctor Know-All.[/color][/size]
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"Yes, that I am."
"Then you must come with me and recover my stolen money."
"Yes, but my wife Grete must come along too."
The nobleman agreed and had them take their places in his carriage. They rode away together.
They arrived at the nobleman's court just at mealtime, and the nobleman invited him to eat.
"Yes, but include my wife Grete," he replied, and the two of them sat down behind the table.
When the first servant brought out a platter of finefood the peasant nudged his wife and said, "Grete, that's the firstone," meaning the meal's first course.
However, the servant thought that he meant, "That'sthe first thief," and because that is indeed what he was, he tookfright, and outside he said to his comrades, "The doctor knowseverything. It's going to go badly for us. He said that I'm the firstone."
The second one did not want to go inside at all, butfinally he had to, and when he entered, the peasant nudged his wife andsaid, "Grete, that's the second one."
This servant took fright as well, and went outside. Itdid not go any better for the third one. Once again the peasant said,"Grete, that's the third one."
The fourth one brought in a covered platter, and thenobleman told the doctor that he should demonstrate his art by guessingwhat it contained. It was crabs. The peasant looked at the platter, andseeing no way out of his dilemma, he said to himself, "Oh, poor Crab!"
Hearing this, the nobleman called out, "If he knows that then he must know who has the money as well!"
The servant grew very fearful and motioned to thedoctor to go outside. There all four of them confessed to him that theyhad stolen the money. They offered to give it all to him and a handsomesum in addition, if he would not turn them in. Otherwise they would allhang. They showed him where the money was hidden. The doctor wassatisfied with this, and he went back inside and sat down again at thetable.
"My lord," he said, "Now I will look in my book to see where the money is hidden.
However, the fifth servant climbed into the stove in order to hear if the doctor knewanything else. The doctor leafed back and forth in his book looking forthe picture of the rooster. Not finding it, he said, "I know that youare in there. Come on out."
The man in the stove thought that the doctor wastalking to him, and terrified, he jumped out, saying, "The man knowseverything!"
[/color][/size][size=2][color=black] Then Doctor Know-All showed the nobleman where themoney was, but he did not tell who had stolen it. Thus he received alarge reward from each side and became a famous man.
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