Page:Popular Tales of the Germans (Volume 2).djvu/122

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
118
LEGENDS CONCERNING

‘lays hands upon his wife is to have his bones ſuffer for it. The men are a naughty tribe; therefore, ſays the proverb, After marriage comes ſorrow,—but I muſt e’en ſubmit to it, ſince I once have vowed to take it for better and worſe.’

‘That is indeed true; but if thou wert ſure the men were a naughty tribe beforehand, it was but a fooliſh bargain to take one for better and for worſe.’

‘Perhaps it was; but Stephen was a briſk handſome wild young man, with a good trade; as for me, I was but a poor ſimple girl, without a farthing for my portion. So he came to me and gave me a dollar earneſt, and the bargain was ſtruck. Afterwards, indeed, he took away the dollar, but I have the wild man left ſtill.’

The ſpirit ſmiled: ‘But perhaps it is thou that makeſt him wild by thy perverſeneſs.’

‘Oh! he has long ſince driven that de-

‘vil