格鲁吉亚English

The King's Counsellor

The counsellor of an Arabian king once bethought himself that[1], though

he had lived so many years, and knew so much, he had never yet found

out how much the king valued his services, and to what extent his

wife and friends really loved him. He decided to try them all at once,

so he went to the palace and stole a goat of which the king was very

fond, and of which he was the keeper. He then went home, told this

secret to his wife, and in her presence ordered the cook to roast the

goat. But afterwards he privately told the cook to hide the royal

goat, and roast a kid in its place. At supper his wife praised the

dish very highly. As soon as the king heard of the loss of his goat,

he was very angry, and cried in his wrath: 'If any man finds the

thief I shall load him with gold, if a woman finds him I shall marry

her!' The counsellor's wife, thinking it better to be a king's wife,

betrayed her husband. The king ordered his counsellor to be executed,

and married the woman. When the execution was about to take place,

the victim's old friends succeeded in saving him by a large bribe,

and another criminal was executed instead. The counsellor was hidden

in a neighbouring realm. Some years afterwards, troublesome questions

of state arose, and none of the council could solve them. The king

often longed for his old counsellor, and said: 'For the sake of a

goat I sacrificed a clever man, if he were alive he would get me

out of all my trouble in a day.' The counsellor's old friends at

last resolved to acknowledge the trick they had played. So one day,

when the king was in a good humour, they went and said: 'Pardon us,

O king! Your first counsellor is alive!' and they told him all. The

king was heartily glad, and ordered the exile to be brought back. He

was well received, and restored the goat to the king. The king said:

'My friend! we thus see that the greatest scourge of all is false

witness, and that we must beware, above all things, of our wives.'

[1] Francesco Strapparola's story of Salardo and the Falcon is

practically the same as this.