A CERTAIN man had a donkey, which had carried the corn-sacks to
the mill indefatigably for many a long year; but his strength
was going, and he was growing more and more unfit for work. Then
his master began to consider how he might best save his keep;
but the donkey, seeing that no good wind was blowing, ran away
and set out on the road to Bremen. “There,” he thought, “I can
surely be town-musician.” When he had walked some distance, he
found a hound lying on the road, gasping like one who had run
till he was tired. “What are you gasping so for, you big
fellow?” asked the donkey.
“Ah,” replied the hound, “as I am old, and daily grow weaker,
and no longer can hunt, my master wanted to kill me, so I took
to flight; but now how am I to earn my bread?”
“I tell you what,” said the donkey, “I am going to Bremen, and
shall be town-musician there; go with me and engage yourself
also as a musician. I will play the lute, and you shall beat the
kettledrum.
The hound agreed, and on they went.
Before long they came to a cat, sitting on the path, with a face
like three rainy days! “Now then, old shaver, what has gone
askew with you?” asked the donkey.
“Who can be merry when his neck is in danger?” answered the cat.
“Because I am now getting old, and my teeth are worn to stumps,
and I prefer to sit by the fire and spin, rather than hunt about
after mice, my mistress wanted to drown me, so I ran away. But
now good advice is scarce. Where am I to go?”
“Go with us to Bremen. You understand night-music, so you can be
a town-musician.”
The cat thought well of it, and went with them. After this the
three fugitives came to a farm-yard, where the cock was sitting
upon the gate, crowing with all his might. “Your crow goes
through and through one,” said the donkey. “What is the matter?”
“I have been foretelling fine weather, because it is the day on
which Our Lady washes the Christ-child’s little shirts, and
wants to dry them,” said the cock; “but guests are coming for
Sunday, so the housewife has no pity, and has told the cook that
she intends to eat me in the soup to-morrow, and this evening I
am to have my head cut off. Now, I am crowing at full pitch
while I can.”
“Ah, but red-comb,” said the donkey, “you had better come away
with us. We are going to Bremen; you can find something better
than death everywhere: you have a good voice, and if we make
music together it must have some quality!”
The cock agreed to this plan, and all four went on together.
They could not, however, reach the city of Bremen in one day,
and in the evening they came to a forest where they meant to
pass the night. The donkey and the hound laid themselves down
under a large tree, the cat and the cock settled themselves in
the branches; but the cock flew right to the top, where he was
most safe. Before he went to sleep he looked round on all the
four sides, and thought he saw in the distance a little spark
burning; so he called out to his companions that there must be a
house not far off, for he saw a light. The donkey said, “If so,
we had better get up and go on, for the shelter here is bad.”
The hound thought that a few bones with some meat on would do
him good too!
So they made their way to the place where the light was, and
soon saw it shine brighter and grow larger, until they came to a
well-lighted robber’s house. The donkey, as the biggest, went to
the window and looked in.
“What do you see, my grey-horse?” asked the cock. “What do I
see?” answered the donkey; “a table covered with good things to
eat and drink, and robbers sitting at it enjoying themselves.”
“That would be the sort of thing for us,” said the cock. “Yes,
yes; ah, how I wish we were there!” said the donkey.
Then the animals took counsel together how they should manage to
drive away the robbers, and at last they thought of a plan. The
donkey was to place himself with his forefeet upon the
window-ledge, the hound was to jump on the donkey’s back, the
cat was to climb upon the dog, and lastly the cock was to fly up
and perch upon the head of the cat.
When this was done, at a given signal, they began to perform
their music together: the donkey brayed, the hound barked, the
cat mewed, and the cock crowed; then they burst through the
window into the room, so that the glass clattered! At this
horrible din, the robbers sprang up, thinking no otherwise than
that a ghost had come in, and fled in a great fright out into
the forest. The four companions now sat down at the table, well
content with what was left, and ate as it they were going to
fast for a month.
As soon as the four minstrels has done, they put out the light,
and each sought for himself a sleeping-place according to his
nature and to what suited him. The donkey laid himself down upon
some straw in the yard, the hound behind the door, the cat upon
the hearth near the warm ashes, and the cock perched himself
upon a beam of the roof; and being tired with their long walk,
they soon went to sleep.
When it was past midnight, and the robbers saw from afar that
the light was no longer burning in their house, and all appeared
quiet, the captain said, “We ought not to have let ourselves be
frightened out of our wits;” and ordered one of them to go and
examine the house.
The messenger finding all still, went into the kitchen to light
a candle, and, taking the glistening fiery eyes of the cat for
live coals, he held a lucifer-match to them to light it. But the
cat did not understand the joke, and flew in his face, spitting
and scratching. He was dreadfully frightened, and ran to the
back-door, but the dog, who lay there, sprang up and bit his
leg; as he ran across the yard by the straw-heap, the donkey
gave him a smart kick with its hind foot. The cock, too, who had
been awakened by the noise, and had become lively, cried down
from the beam, “Cock-a-doodle-doo!”
Then the robber ran back as fast as he could to his captain, and
said, “Ah, there is a horrible witch sitting in the house, who
spat on me and scratched my face with her long claws; and by the
door stands a man with a knife, who stabbed me in the leg; and
in the yard there lies a black monster, who beat me with a
wooden club; and above, upon the roof, sits the judge, who
called out, ‘Bring the rogue here to me! so I got away as well
as I could.”
After this the robbers did not trust themselves in the house
again; but it suited the four musicians of Bremen so well that
they did not care to leave it any more. And the mouth of him who
last told this story is still warm.