Grimm’s Fairy Tales
He took aim, and down fell the bird into a quickset hedge.
‘Go, you rogue,’ he said to the Jew, ‘and pick up the bird.’
‘Leave out the “rogue,” young man. I will get the bird sure enough, as you have killed it for me,’ said the Jew.
He lay down on the ground and began to creep into the hedge.
When he had got well among the thorns, a spirit of mischief seized the Servant, and he began to play his fiddle with all
The Jew was forced to spring up and begin to dance.
‘Merciful Heavens!’ cried the Jew. ‘Leave off that fiddling! I don’t want to dance, my good fellow.’
But the Servant paid no attention to him, but thought: ‘You have fleeced plenty of people in your time, my man, and184