Many, many years ago a poor fisherman and his
wife lived with their three sons in a village by
the sea. One day the old man set his snare in the
water not far from his house, and at night when he
went to look at it, he found that he had caught a great
white fish. This startled the old man very much, for
had never seen a fish like this before, and it occurred
him that it was the priest of the town.
He ran to his wife as fast as he could and cried:
"My wife, I have caught the priest."
"What?" said the old woman, terrified at the sight
her frightened husband.
"I have caught the priest," said the old man again.
T hey hurried together to the river where the snare
was set, and when the old woman saw the fish, she cried:
"Oh, it is not the priest but the governor."
"No, it is the priest," insisted the old man, and they
went home trembling with fear.
That night neither of them was able to sleep for
thought of the terrible thing that had happened and
wondering what they should do. Now the next day
was a great holiday in the town. At four o'clock in
morning cannons were fired and bells rang loudly.
The old man and woman, hearing all the noise and
not knowing the reason for it, thought that their crime
had been discovered, and the people were searching
for them to punish them, so they set out as fast as
they could to hide in the woods. On and on they went,
stopping only to rest so as to enable them to resume
their flight.
The next morning they reached the woods near Pilar,
where there also was a great holiday, and the sexton
was ringing the bells to call the people to mass. As
soon as the old man and woman heard the bells they
thought the people there had been notified of their
escape, and that they, too, were trying to catch them.
So they turned and started home again.
As they reached their house, the three sons came
home with their one horse and tied it to the trunk of
the caramay tree. Presently the bells began to ring
again, for it was twelve o'clock at noon. Not thinking what time of day it was, the old man and woman
ran out of doors in terror, and seeing the horse jumped
on its back with the intention of riding to the next town
before anyone could catch them. When they had
mounted they began to whip the horse. In their haste,
they had forgotten to untie the rope which was around
the trunk of the caramay tree. As the horse pulled at
the rope fruit fell from the tree upon the old man and
woman. Believing they were shot, they were so frightened that they died.[1]
[1] All the events here given represent present-day occurrences, and
the story appears to have been invented purely to amuse.
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