Three Wise Men of
Gotham
Three
Wise Men of Gotham
Went to sea in a bowl.
If the bowl had been stronger
My tale had been longer.
THERE lived in the great city of Gotham, over
against
the north gate, a man who possessed a very wise aspect, but very little
else.
He was tall and lean, and had a fine large head, bald and smooth upon
the top,
with a circle of white hair behind the ears. His beard was pure white,
and reached
to his waist; his eyes were small, dark, and so piercing that they
seemed to
read your every thought. His eyebrows were very heavy, and as white as
his beard.
He dressed in a long black mantle with a girdle corded about the
middle, and he
walked slowly and majestically, and talked no more than he was obliged
to.
When
this man passed down the street with his stately tread the people all
removed
their hats and bowed to him with great reverence, saying within
themselves,
“He
is very wise, this great man; he is a second Socrates.”
And
soon this was the only name he was called by, and every one in Gotham
knew him
as “Socrates.” To be sure this man was not really wise. Had they
realized the
truth, not one he met but knew more than Socrates; but his venerable
appearance
certainly betokened great wisdom, and no one appeared to remember that
things
are seldom what they seem.
Socrates
would strut about with bowed head and arms clasped behind him, and
think:
"My!
how wise these people take me to be. Every one admires my beautiful
beard. When
I look into their faces they drop their eyes. I am, in truth, a
wonderful man,
and if I say nothing they will believe I am full of wisdom. Ah, here
comes the schoolmaster;
I shall frown heavily and refuse to notice him, for then he also will
be
deceived and think I am pondering upon matters of great import.”
Really, the
one wise thing about this Socrates was his ability to keep quiet. For,
saying
no word, it was impossible he should betray his ignorance.
Singularly
enough, over by the south gate of Gotham there dwelt another wise man,
of much
the same appearance as Socrates. His white beard was a trifle longer
and he had
lost his left eye, which was covered by a black patch; but in all other
ways
his person betokened as much wisdom as that of the other.
He
did not walk about, being lazy and preferring his ease; but he lived in
a
little cottage with one room, where the people came to consult him in
regard to
all their troubles.
They
had named him Sophocles, and when anything went wrong they would say,
"Let
us go and consult Sophocles, for he is very wise and will tell us what
to do.”
Thus
one man, who had sued his neighbor in the courts, became worried over
the outcome
of the matter and came to consult the wise man.
“Tell
me, O Sophocles!” he said, as he dropped a piece of money upon a plate,
“shall
I win my lawsuit or not?”
Sophocles
appeared to ponder for a moment, and then he looked at his questioner
with his
one eye and replied,
"If
it is not decided against you, you will certainly win your suit.”
And
the man was content, and went away feeling that his money had been well
invested. At another time the mother of a pair of baby twins came to
him in
great trouble.
“O
most wise Sophocles!” she said, “I am in despair! For my little twin
girls are
just alike, and I have lost the ribbon that I placed on one that I
might be
able to tell them apart. Therefore I cannot determine which is Amelia
and which
is Ophelia, and as the priest has christened them by their proper names
it
would be a sin to call them wrongly.”
"Cannot
the priest tell?” asked the wise man.
“No
one can tell,” answered the woman; “neither the priest nor their father
nor
myself, for they are just alike. And they are yet too young to remember
their own
names. Therefore your great wisdom is our only resource.”
"Bring
them to me,” commanded Sophocles. And when they were brought he looked
at them attentively
and said,
“This
is Ophelia and this Amelia. Now tie a red ribbon about Ophelia’s wrist
and put
a blue ribbon on Amelia, and so long as they wear them you will not be
troubled
to tell them apart.”
Everyone
marvelled greatly that Sophocles should know the children better than
their own
mother, but he said to himself,
"Since
no one can prove that I am wrong I am sure to be right;” and thus he
maintained
his reputation for wisdom.
In
a little side street near the center of Gotham lived an old woman named
Deborah
Smith. Her home was a wretched little hut, for she was poor, and
supported
herself and her husband by begging in the streets. Her husband was a
lazy,
short, fat old man, who lay upon a ragged blanket in the hut all day
and refused
to work.
“One
beggar in the family is enough,” he used to grumble, when his wife
upbraided
him, “and I am really too tired to work. So let me alone, my Deborah,
as I am
about to take another nap.”
Nothing
she could say would arouse him to action, and she finally allowed him
to do as
he pleased. But one day she met Socrates walking in the street, and
after
watching him for a time made up her mind he was nothing more than a
fool. Other
people certainly thought him wise, but she was a shrewd old woman, and
could
see well enough that he merely looked wise. The next day she went to
the south
of the city to beg, and there she heard of Sophocles.
When
the people repeated his wise sayings she thought
"Here
is another fool, for any one could tell as much as this man does.”
Still,
she went to see Sophocles, and, dropping a penny upon his plate, she
asked,
“Tell
me, O wise man, how shall I drive my husband to work?”
“By
starving him,” answered Sophocles; “if you refuse to feed him he must
find a
way to feed himself.”
“That
is true,” she thought, as she went away; "but any fool could have' told
me
that. This wise man is a fraud; even my husband is as wise as he.”
Then
she stopped short and slapped her hand against her forehead.
“Why,”
she cried, “I will make a Wise Man of Perry, my husband, and then he
can earn
money without working!”
So
she went to her husband and said,
"Get
up, Perry Smith, and wash yourself; for I am going to make a Wise Man
of you.”
"I
won’t,” he replied.
“You
will,” she declared, “for it is the easiest way to earn money I have
ever
discovered.”
Then
she took a stick and beat him so fiercely that at last he got up, and
agreed to
do as she said.
She
washed his long beard until it was as white as snow, and she shaved his
head to
make him look bald and venerable. Then she brought him a flowing black
robe
with a girdle at the middle; and when he was dressed, lo! he looked
fully as
wise as either Socrates or Sophocles.
“You
must have a new name,” she said, “for no one will ever believe that
Perry Smith
is a Wise Man. So I shall hereafter call you Pericles, the Wisest Man
of
Gotham!” She then led him into the streets, and to all they met she
declared,
“This
is Pericles, the wisest man in the world.”
“What
does he know?” they asked.
"Everything,
and much else,” she replied.
Then
came a carter, and putting a piece of money in the hand of Pericles, he
enquired,
“Pray
tell me of your wisdom what is wrong with my mare?”
“How
should I know?” asked Pericles.
"I
thought you knew everything,” returned the carter, in surprise.
“I
do,” declared Pericles; “but you have not told me what her symptoms
are.”
"She
refuses to eat anything,” said the carter.
“Then
she is not hungry,” returned Pericles; “for neither man nor beast will
refuse
to eat when hungry.”
And
the people who heard him whispered together and said,
“Surely
this is a wise man, for he has told the carter what is wrong with his
mare.”
After
a few days the fame of Pericles’ sayings came to the ears of both
Socrates and
Sophocles, and they resolved to see him, for each feared he would prove
more
wise than they were, knowing themselves to be arrant humbugs. So one
morning
the three wise men met together outside the hut of Pericles, and they
sat themselves
down upon stools, facing each other, while a great crowd of people
gathered
around to hear the words of wisdom that dropped from their lips.
But
for a time all three were silent, and regarded one another anxiously,
for each
feared he might betray himself.
Finally
Sophocles winked his one eye at the others and said, in a grave voice,
“The
earth is flat; for, were it round, as some fools say, all the people
would
slide off the surface.”
Then
the people, who had listened eagerly, clapped their hands together and
murmured,
"Sophocles
is wisest of all. What he says is truth.”
This
provoked Socrates greatly, for he felt his reputation was in danger; so
he said
with a frown,
“The
world is shallow, like a dish; were it flat the water would all run
over the
edges, and we should have no oceans.”
Then
the people applauded more loudly than before, and cried,
“Socrates
is right! he is wisest of all.”
Pericles,
at this, shifted uneasily upon his stool, for he knew he must dispute
the
matter boldly or his fame would depart from him. Therefore he said,
with grave
deliberation,
“You
are wrong, my friends. The world is hollow, like the shell of a
cocoanut, and
we are all inside the shell. The sky above us is the roof, and if you
go out
upon the ocean you will come to a place, no matter in which direction
you go,
where the sky and the water meet. I know this is true, for I have been
to sea.”
The
people cheered loudly at this, and said,
“Long
live Pericles, the wisest of the wise men!”
“I
shall hold I am right,” protested Sophocles, “until Pericles and
Socrates prove
that I am wrong.”
“That
is fair enough,” said the people.
“And
I also shall hold myself to be right until they prove me wrong,”
declared
Socrates, firmly.
"I
know I am right,” said Pericles, “for you cannot prove me wrong.”
“We
can take a boat and sail over the sea,” remarked Socrates, “and when we
come to
the edge we will know the truth. Will you go?”
“Yes,”
answered Sophocles; and Pericles, because he did not dare refuse, said
“Yes”
also.
Then
they went to the shore of the sea, and the people followed them. There
was no
boat to be found anywhere, for the fishers were all away upon the
water; but
there was a big wooden bowl lying upon the shore, which the fishermen
used to
carry their fish to market in.
"This
will do,” said Pericles, who, because he weighed the most, was the
greatest
fool of the three. So the wise men all sat within the bowl, with their
feet
together, and the people pushed them out into the water.
The
tide caught the bowl and floated it out to sea, and before long the
wise men
were beyond sight of land.
They
were all greatly frightened, for the bowl was old and cracked, and the
water
leaked slowly through until their feet were covered. They clung to the
edge
with their hands and looked at one another with white faces. Said
Pericles,
"I
was a fool to come to sea in this bowl.”
“Ah,”
remarked Socrates, “if you are a fool, as you confess, then you cannot
be a
wise man.”
"No,”
answered Pericles, “but I'll soon be a dead man.”
“I
also was a fool,” said Sophocles, who was weeping from his one eye and
trembling
all over, “for if I had stayed upon land I would not have been drowned.”
"Since
you both acknowledge it,” sighed Socrates, “I will confess that I also
am a
fool, and have always been one; but I looked so wise the people
insisted I must
know everything!”
“Yes,
yes,” Sophocles groaned, “the people have murdered us!”
"My
only regret,” said Pericles, “is that my wife is not with me. If only
she were
here” —
He
did not finish what he was saying, for just then the bowl broke in two.
And the
people are still waiting for the three wise men to come back to them.