Aesop's Fables: Townsend (1867)
276. The Buffoon and the Countryman (Perry
527)
A RICH NOBLEMAN once opened the theaters without charge to the people,
and gave a public notice that he would handsomely reward any person who
invented a new amusement for the occasion. Various public performers contended
for the prize. Among them came a Buffoon well known among the populace
for his jokes, and said that he had a kind of entertainment which had
never been brought out on any stage before. This report being spread about
made a great stir, and the theater was crowded in every part. The Buffoon
appeared alone upon the platform, without any apparatus or confederates,
and the very sense of expectation caused an intense silence. He suddenly
bent his head towards his bosom and imitated the squeaking of a little
pig so admirably with his voice that the audience declared he had a porker
under his cloak, and demanded that it should be shaken out. When that
was done and nothing was found, they cheered the actor, and loaded him
with the loudest applause. A Countryman in the crowd, observing all that
has passed, said, 'So help me, Hercules, he shall not beat me at that
trick!' and at once proclaimed that he would do the same thing on the
next day, though in a much more natural way. On the morrow a still larger
crowd assembled in the theater, but now partiality for their favorite
actor very generally prevailed, and the audience came rather to ridicule
the Countryman than to see the spectacle. Both of the performers appeared
on the stage. The Buffoon grunted and squeaked away first, and obtained,
as on the preceding day, the applause and cheers of the spectators. Next
the Countryman commenced, and pretending that he concealed a little pig
beneath his clothes (which in truth he did, but not suspected by the audience
) contrived to take hold of and to pull his ear causing the pig to squeak.
The Crowd, however, cried out with one consent that the Buffoon had given
a far more exact imitation, and clamored for the Countryman to be kicked
out of the theater. On this the rustic produced the little pig from his
cloak and showed by the most positive proof the greatness of their mistake.
'Look here,' he said, 'this shows what sort of judges you are.'

George Fyler Townsend's translation of the fables, first published in 1867, is
in the public domain and can be found at many websites, including Project
Gutenberg.
Illustrations come from: Aesop's Fables, by George Fyler Townsend, with
illustrations by Harrison Weir, 1867, at Google
Books. |