CRITICS
One nightfall a man travelling
onn horseback towards the sea reached an inn by the roadside. He dismounted
and, confident in man and night like all riders towards the sea, he tied
his horse to a tree beside the door and entered into the inn.
At midnight, when all were asleep, a thief came
and stole the traveller's horse.
In the morning the man awoke, and discovered
that his horse was stolen. And he grieved for his horse, and that a man
had found it in his heart to steal.
Then his fellow lodgers came and stood around
him and began to talk.
And the first man said, "How foolish of you to
tie your horse outside the stable."
And the second said, " Still more foolish, without
even hobbling the horse!"
And the third man said, "It is stupid at best
to travel to the sea on horseback."
And the fourth said, "Only the indolent and the
slow of foot own horses."
Then the traveller was much astonished. At last
he cried, "My friends, because my horse was stolen, you have hastened one
and all to tell me my faults and my shortcomings. But strange, not one
word of reproach have you uttered about the man who stole my horse."