Page:Slavonic Fairy Tales.djvu/133

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116
Slavonic Fairy Tales.

"How much is this worth?"

And they answered him,—

"Four paras."[1]

"Ah!" he exclaimed. "Good! Four paras to-day, four to-morrow, that makes eight, and four the day after to-morrow, that makes twelve, and so on. If I had understood this handicraft, I should not be tending cattle this day."

Then he told them who and what he was, and how he had come there. They were all delighted when they learnt that they had been wooing the daughter of a king and not of a cattle-herd; and the marriage of the youth and the maiden took place amid the greatest rejoicings. Then they gave to the father of the bride a ship and a guard of warriors, and he went over the sea and reached his own kingdom.

  1. A small Turkish coin, worth something less than a farthing.