Scissors [Europa's Fairy Book]
Once upon a time, though it was not in my
time nor in your time nor in anybody else's time, there lived a cobbler named
Tom and his wife named Joan. And they lived fairly happily together, except
that whatever Tom did Joan did the opposite, and whatever Joan thought Tom
thought quite contrary-wise. When Tom wanted beef for dinner Joan liked pork,
and if Joan wanted to have chicken Tom would like to have duck. And so it went
on all the time.
Now it happened that one day Joan was
cleaning up the kitchen and, turning suddenly, she knocked two or three pots
and pans together and broke them all. So Tom, who was working in the front room, came and asked Joan, "What's all this?
What have you been doing?" Now Joan had got the pair of scissors in her
hand, and sooner than tell him what had really happened she said, "I cut
these pots and pans into pieces with my scissors."
"What," said Tom, "cut
pottery with your scissors, you nonsensical woman; you can't do it!"
"I tell you I did with my
scissors!"
"You couldn't."
"I did."
"You couldn't."
"I did."
"Couldn't."
"Did."
"Couldn't."
"Did."
"Couldn't."
"Did."
At last Tom got so angry that he seized
Joan by the shoulders and shoved her out of the house and said, "If you
don't tell me how you broke those pots and pans I'll throw you into the
river." But Joan kept on saying, "It was with the scissors"; and
Tom got so enraged that at last he took her to the bank of the river and said,
"Now for the last time, will you tell me the truth; how did you break
those pots and pans?"
"With the scissors."
And with that he threw her into the
river, and she sank once, and she sank twice, and just
before she was about to sink for the third time she put her hand up into the
air, out of the water, and made a motion with her first and middle finger as if
she were moving the scissors. So Tom saw it was no use to try to persuade her
to do anything but what she wanted. So he rushed up the stream and met a
neighbour who said, "Tom, Tom, what are you running for?"
"Oh, I want to find Joan; she fell
into the river just in front of our house, and I am afraid she is going to be
drowned."
"But," said the neighbour,
"you're running up stream."
"Well," said Tom, "Joan
always went contrary-wise whatever happened." And so he never found her in
time to save her.