Gample The Fool (part one)

146 0 0
                                    

I am Gimpel the fool. I

don't think myself a fool. On the

contrary. But that's what folks

call me. They gave me the name

while I was still in school. I had

seven names in all: imbecile,

donkey, flax-head, dope, glump,

ninny, and fool. The last name

stuck. What did my foolishness

consist of? I was easy to take in.

They said, "Gimpel, you know

the rabbi's wife has been

brought to childbed?" So I

skipped school. Well, it turned

out to be a lie. How was I

supposed to know? She hadn't

had a big belly. But I never

looked at her belly. Was that

really so foolish? The gang

laughed and hee-hawed,

stomped and danced and

chanted a good-night prayer.

And instead of the raisins they

give when a woman's lying in,

they stuffed my hand full of goat

turds. I was no weakling. If I

slapped someone he'd see all

the way to Cracow. But I'm really

not a slugger by nature. I think

to myself: Let it pass. So they

take advantage of me.

I was coming home from

school and heard a dog barking.

I'm not afraid of dogs, but of

course I never want to start up

with them. One of them may be

mad, and if he bites there's not a

Tartar in the world who can help

you. So I made tracks. Then I

looked around and saw the

whole market place wild with

laughter. It was no dog at all but

Wolf-Leib the Thief. How was I

supposed to know it was he? It

sounded like a howling bitch.

When the pranksters and

leg-pullers found that I was easy

to fool, every one of them tried

his luck with me. "Gimpel the

Czar is coming to Frampol;

Gimpel, the moon fell down in

Turbeen; Gimpel, little Hodel

Furpiece found a treasure

behind the bathhouse." And I

like a golem believed everyone.

In the first place, everything is

possible, as it is written in the

Gample The Fool (part one)Where stories live. Discover now