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 them hatched out by tomorrow and to bring me the chicks.”

When the shepherd reached home and gave Manka the burgomaster’s message, Manka laughed and said: “Take a handful of millet and go right back to the burgomaster. Say to him: ‘My daughter sends you this millet. She says that if you plant it, grow it, and have it harvested by tomorrow, she’ll bring you the ten chicks and you can feed them the ripe grain.’”

When the burgomaster heard this, he laughed heartily.

“That’s a clever girl of yours,” he told the shepherd. “If she’s as comely as she is clever, I think I’d like to marry her. Tell her to come to see me, but she must come neither by day nor by night, neither riding nor walking, neither dressed nor undressed.”

When Manka received this message she waited until the next dawn when night was gone and day not yet arrived. Then she wrapped herself in a fishnet and, throwing one leg over a goat’s back and keeping one foot on the ground, she went to the burgomaster’s house.

Now I ask you: did she go dressed? No, she wasn’t dressed. A fishnet isn’t clothing. Did she go undressed? Of course not, for wasn’t she covered