them; see that you do not meddle with them, or it will be the
 worse for you.”
 
And she said, “ Oh no, Fred, certainly I won’t.”
 
Now, one day when Fred was away, there came some
 pedlars to the village, with earthen pots and basins to sell, and
 they asked the young wife if she had nothing to give in
 exchange for them.
 
“O my good men,” said Kate, “I have no money to buy
 anything with, but if you had any use for yellow counters, I
 might do some business with you.”
 
“ Yellow counters! why not? we might as well see them,”
 said they.
 
“Then go into the stable and dig under the cows’
 manger, and you will find them; but I dare not go near the
 place.”
 
So those rogues went and dug, and found the gold accord¬
 ingly. And they seized it quickly, and ran off with it, leaving
 the pots and pans behind them in the house. Kate thought
 she must make some use of her new possessions, so, as she
 had no need of them in the kitchen, she spread them out on
 the ground, and then stuck them, one after another, for orna¬
 ment, on the fence which ran round the house. When Fred
 came home and saw the new decorations, he said, “ Kate, what
 have you been doing ? ”
 
“TI bought them every one, Fred, with those yellow
 counters that were buried under the manger, and I did not go
 
 
“O wife!” cried Fred, “what have you done? they were
 not counters, but pure gold, and all our capital; you should
  
not have done so.”
 
“Well, Fred, I did not know; you should have told me
 that before,” answered Kate.
 
Then Kate stood still a little while to consider, and at last
 she said, "Listen, Fred, we may be able to get the gold back
 again. Let us run after the thieves.”
 
“Very well,” said Fred, “we will try; only let us take
 some bread and cheese with us, that we may have something
 
 
to eat on the way.”
 ‘All right,” she answered. So they set out, and as Fred
  
was a better walker than Kate, she was soon left behind.