Governor and beg for his daughter--there is no
help,' said the youth.
'But I dare not go to the Governor and say this. He is so rich and has
so much wealth of all kinds,' said the man.
'There is no help for it,' said the Master Thief; 'go you must, whether
you like it or not. If I can't get you to go by using good words, I will
soon make you go with bad ones.'
But the man was still unwilling, so the Master Thief followed him,
threatening him with a great birch stick, till he went weeping and
wailing through the door to the Governor of the province.
'Now, my man, and what's amiss with you?' said the Governor.
So he told him that he had three sons who had gone away one day, and
how he had given them permission to go where they chose, and take to
whatsoever work they fancied. 'Now,' he said, 'the youngest of them has
come home, and has threatened me till I have come to you to ask for your
daughter for him, and I am to say that he is a Master Thief,' and again
the man fell a-weeping and lamenting.
'Console yourself, my man,' said the Governor, laughing. 'You may tell
him from me that he must first give me some proof of this. If he can
steal the joint off the spit in the kitchen on Sunday, when every one of
us is watching it, he shall have my daughter. Will you tell him that?'
The man did tell him, and the youth thought it would be easy enough to
do it. So he set himself to work to catch three hares alive, put them
in a bag, clad himself in some old rags so that he looked so poor and
wretched that it was quite pitiable to see him, and in this guise on
Sunday forenoon he sneaked into the passage with his bag, like any
beggar boy. The Governor himself and every one in the house was in the
kitchen, keeping watch over the joint. While they were doing this the
youth let one of the hares slip out of his bag, and off it set and began
to run round the yard.
'Just look at that hare,' said the people in the kitchen, and wanted to
go out and catch it.
The Governor saw it too, but said, 'Oh, let it go! it's no use to think
of catching a hare when it's running away.'
It was not long before the youth let another hare out, and the people
in the kitchen saw this too, and thought that it was the same. So again
they wanted to go out and catch it, but the Governor again told them
that it was of no use to try.
Very soon afterwards, however, the youth let slip the third hare, and it
set off and ran round and round the co
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