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The Laughable Stories Collected by Mar Gregory John

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114 THE LAUGHABLE STORIES OF BAR-HEBR/EUS.<br />

''Now unless water had been better than oil, they would<br />

"not have compared it therewith." And when the<br />

traveller heard these words he said, "Verily there hath<br />

"never been in our time a more clever miser than<br />

"thou."<br />

CCCCXL. A certain miser used to rise up during<br />

V the night whilst his children were asleep, and if he<br />

saw any of them lying upon his right side he turned<br />

him over upon his left, saying, ''[I do this] that the<br />

"food in them may not be too quickly digested, so<br />

"that they may not wake up in the early hours of the<br />

"morning and ask for something to eat before anything<br />

"is ready for them."<br />

CCCCXLI. A certain miser observed that his son<br />

was wont to take bread and to place it on the window<br />

near which he went out, after which he ate it; and he<br />

asked him why he did so. His son said to him, "I<br />

"can inhale the smell of the baking which cometh out<br />

"from the windows, therefore I set the bread there that<br />

"the steam of the smoking meat may pass through it;<br />

"and then I eat it." <strong>The</strong>n his father smote him and<br />

said to him, "O son that murmurest, henceforward<br />

"thou shalt be in the habit of eating bread only."<br />

CCCCXLII. A certain miserly woman was wrangling<br />

with a man who was selling flour to her, and she said,<br />

"I have taken from thee a riila^ of flour, and only<br />

"ninety bread-cakes can be made therefrom." <strong>The</strong><br />

man said to her, "O woman, whose womanly character<br />

"hath fled, if thou art wont to make every bread-cake<br />

"of the size of a mill-stone, wherein have I offended?"<br />

CCCCXLIII. Another man saw the daughter of a<br />

' <strong>The</strong> Arabic ji^, a weight of about a pound.

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