Page:The shoemaker's apron (1920).djvu/262

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242
THE DEVIL’S MATCH

Now the farmer suddenly remembered that his grandmother had once told him devils were afraid of lime trees because the bast from lime trees is the one thing in the world they are unable to break. That’s why, when you catch a devil, you must tie his hands together with bast.

So the farmer, recalling what his grandmother had said, remarked casually:

“Oh, I’m looking for a lime tree. I want to strip off some bast. Then I’m going after them”—and when he said them he paused significantly—“and tie them hand and foot.”

He peeped at the devil out of the corner of his eye and saw that the devil had turned almost white under his black skin.

“He is a foolish one!” he thought to himself.

“Oh, don’t do that!” the devil cried. “What have we ever done to you?”

The farmer pretended to be firm and repeated that that was just what he was going to do.

“Please listen to me,” the devil begged. “If you promise to let us alone I tell you what I’ll do: I’ll bring you such a big bag of gold that it will make you a rich man.”

At first the farmer, being a shrewd fellow, pretended