'I was in such a hurry in dressing, that I forgot my clothes.'
The Cogia had a scalt head. Once he went to the barber, had his head
shaved, paid an aspre, and went away. The following week he went again,
was shaved, and had a looking-glass placed before him. 'As the half of
my head is scalt,' said the Cogia, 'is not an aspre for shaving it too
much by half?'
One day the Cogia went with some men a-fishing. They cast the net into
the sea, and the Cogia cast himself into the net. 'O Cogia,' said they,
'what are you about?' 'I imagined myself a fish,' said the Cogia.
One day the boys of the town said to one another, 'Come, let us get the
Cogia to climb a tree, and we will steal away his sandals.' The boys
coming to the foot of a tree stopped, and said, 'No one can climb this
tree.' The Cogia coming up, said, 'I can climb it.' 'No, you can't,'
said they. Forthwith the Cogia tied the skirts of his robe about his
loins and put his sandals in his bosom. 'O Cogia Efendi,' said the boys,
'what will you do with your slippers in the tree?' Said the Cogia, 'If I
find a road when I am above there, I shall have my slippers ready to put
on.'
One day a man coming from the country brought the Cogia a hare. The
Cogia, with much politeness and civility, gave him some broth to eat.
Pages:
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52