With one more legend about this favorite saint, I will conclude this section of the present chapter. In some of its incidents it closely resembles the story of “The Smith and the Demon,” which was quoted in the [first chapter].
The Priest with the Greedy Eyes.[454]
In the parish of St. Nicholas there lived a Pope. This Pope’s eyes were thoroughly pope-like.[455] He served Nicholas several years, and went on serving until such time as there remained to him nothing either for board or lodging. Then our Pope collected all the church keys, looked at the picture of Nicholas, thumped him, out of spite, over the shoulders with the keys, and went forth from his parish as his eyes led him. And as he walked along the road he suddenly lighted upon an unknown man.
“Hail, good man!” said the stranger to the Pope. “Whence do you come and whither are you going? Take me with you as a companion.”
Well, they went on together. They walked and walked for several versts, then they grew tired. It was time to seek repose. Now the Pope had a few biscuits in his cassock, and the companion he had picked up had a couple of small loaves.[456]
“Let’s eat your loaves first,” says the Pope, “and afterwards we’ll take to the biscuits, too.”
“Agreed!” replies the stranger. “We’ll eat my loaves, and keep your biscuits for afterwards.”
Well, they ate away at the loaves; each of them ate his fill, but the loaves got no smaller. The Pope grew envious: “Come,” thinks he, “I’ll steal them from him!” After the meal the old man lay down to take a nap, but the Pope kept scheming how to steal the loaves from him. The old man went to sleep. The Pope drew the loaves out of his pocket and began quietly nibbling them at his seat. The old man awoke and felt for his loaves; they were gone!
“Where are my loaves?” he exclaimed; “who has eaten them? was it you, Pope?”
“No, not I, on my word!” replied the Pope.