There was a man who owned a
donkey, which had carried his sacks to the mill industriously for
many years, but whose strength had come to an end, so that the poor
beast grew more and more unfit for work. The master determined to
stop his food, but the donkey, discovering that there was no good
intended to him, ran away and took the road to Bremen: "There,"
thought he, "I can turn Town Musician."
When he had gone a little way, he found a hound lying on the road
and panting, like one who was tired with running. "Hollo! what are
you panting so for, worthy Seize 'em?" asked the donkey.
"Oh!" said the dog, "just because I am old, and get weaker every
day, and cannot go out hunting, my master wanted to kill me, so I
have taken leave of him; but how shall I gain my living now?"
"I'll tell you what," said the donkey, "I am going to Bremen to be
Town Musician; come with me and take to music too. I will play the
lute, and you shall beat the drum."
The dog liked the idea, and they travelled on. It was not long
before they saw a cat sitting by the road, making a face like three
rainy days.
"Now then, what has gone wrong with you old Whiskers?" said the
donkey.
"Who can be merry when his neck is in danger?" answered the cat.
"Because I am advanced in years, and my teeth are blunt, and I like
sitting before the fire and purring better than chasing the mice
about, my mistress wanted to drown me. I have managed to escape, but
good advice is scarce; tell me where I shall go to?"
"Come with us two to Bremen; you understand serenading; you also can
become a Town Musician."
The cat thought it a capital idea, and went with them. Soon after
the three runaways came to a farmyard, and there sat a cock on the
gate, crowing with might and main.
"You crow loud enough to deafen one," said the donkey; "what is the
matter with you?"
"I prophesied fair weather," said the cock, "because it is our good
mistress's washing-day, and she wants to dry the clothes; but
because to-morrow is Sunday, and company is coming, the mistress has
no pity on me, and has told the cook to put me into the soup
to-morrow, and I must have my head cut off to-night: so now I am
crowing with all my might as long as I can."
"O you old Redhead," said the donkey, "you had better come with us;
we are going to Bremen, where you will certainly find something
better than having your head cut off; you have a good voice, and if
we all make music together, it will be something striking."
The cock liked the proposal, and they went on, all four together.
But they could not reach the city of Bremen in one day, and they
came in the evening to a wood, where they agreed to spend the night.
The donkey and the dog laid themselves down under a great tree, but
the cat and the cock went higher—the cock flying up to the topmost
branch, where he was safest. Before he went to sleep he looked round
towards all the four points of the compass, and he thought he saw a
spark shining in the distance. He called to his companions that
there must be a house not far off; for he could see a light. The
donkey said: "Then we must rise and go to it, for the lodgings here
are very bad;" and the dog said, "Yes; a few bones with a little
flesh on them would do me good." So they took the road in the
direction where the light was, and soon saw it shine brighter; and
it got larger and larger till they came to a brilliantly-illumined
robber's house. The donkey, being the biggest, got up at the window
and looked in.
"What do you see, Greybeard?" said the cock.
"What do I see?" answered the donkey: "a table covered with
beautiful food and drink, and robbers are sitting round it and
enjoying themselves."
"That would do nicely for us," said the cock.
"Yes, indeed, if we were only there," replied the donkey.
The animals then consulted together how they should manage to drive
out the robbers, till at last they settled on a plan. Tie donkey was
to place himself with his forefeet on the window-sill, the dog to
climb on the donkey's back, and the cat on the dog's, and, at last,
the cock was to fly up and perch himself on the cat's head. When
that was done, at a signal they began their music all together: the
donkey brayed, the dog barked, the cat mewed, and the cock crowed;
then, with one great smash, they dashed through the window into the
room, so that the glass clattered down. The robbers jumped up at
this dreadful noise, thinking that nothing less than a ghost was
coming in, and ran away into the wood in a great fright. The four
companions then sat down at the table, quite content with what was
left there, and ate as if they were expecting to fast for a month to
come.
When the four musicians had finished, they put out the light, and
each one looked out for a suitable and comfortable sleeping-place.
The donkey lay down on the dunghill, the dog behind the door, the
cat on the hearth near the warm ashes, and the cock set himself on
the hen-roost; and, as they were all tired with their long journey,
they soon went to sleep. Soon after midnight, as the robbers in the
distance could see that no more lights were burning in the house,
and as all seemed quiet, the captain said, "We ought not to have let
ourselves be scared so easily," and sent one of them to examine the
house. The messenger found everything quiet, went into the kitchen
to light a candle, and, thinking the cat's shining fiery eyes were
live coals, he held a match to them to light it. But the cat did not
understand the joke, flew in his face, spat at him, and scratched.
He was dreadfully frightened, ran away, and was going out of the
back door; when the dog, who was lying there, jumped up and bit him
in the leg. As he ran through the yard, past the dunghill, the
donkey gave him a good kick with his hind-foot; and the cock being
awakened, and made quite lively by the noise, called out from the
hen-roost "Cock-a-doodle-doo!"
The robber ran as hard as he could, back to the captain, and said:
"Oh, dear! in the house sits a horrid old witch, who blew at me, and
scratched my face with her long fingers; and by the door stands a
man with a knife, who stabbed me in the leg; and in the yard lies a
black monster, who hit me with a club; and up on the roof there sits
the judge, who called out, 'Bring the rascal up here'—so I made the
best of my way off."
From that time the robbers never trusted themselves again in the
house; but the four musicians liked it so well that they could not
make up their minds to leave it, and spent there the remainder of
their days, as the last person who told the story is ready to avouch
for a fact.