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{77a} a _bestemmiatore_, or blasphemer, for he cursed bitterly when he gained but little, being truly a _marocchio_, much attached to money. Even in dying he still swore. And Marocchio had sold himself to the devil, and hidden his money under a stone in the arch of the bridge. Yet though he had very poor relations and friends, he confided nothing to them, and left _niente a nessuno_, 'nothing to nobody.' Whence it came that after his death he had no rest or peace, because his treasure remained undiscovered. "Yet where the money lay concealed there was seen every night the form of a goat which cast forth flames, and running along before those who passed by, suddenly sunk into the ground, disappearing in a great flash of fire. "And when the _renaioli_ or sand-diggers, {77b} thinking it was a real goat, would catch it by the hair, it cast forth fire, so that many of them died of fright. And it often overthrew their boats and made all the mischief possible. "Then certain people thinking that all this indicated a hidden treasure, sought to find it, but in vain; till at last one who was _piu furbo_, or shrewder than the rest, observed that one day, when the wind was worse than usual, raising skirts and carrying away caps and hats, there was a goat in all the hurly-burly, and that this animal vanished at a certain spot. 'There I ween,' he said, 'lies money hid!' And knowing that midnight is the proper time or occasion (_cagione di nascosto tesoro_) for buried hoards, he came at the hour, and finding the habitual goat (_il solito chaprone_), he addressed him thus: "'If thou art a blessed soul, then go thy way in peace, and God be with thee. But if thou sufferest from buried treasure, then teach me how I, without any fear, may take thy store, then thou mayst go in peace! And if thou art in torment for a treasure, show me the spot, and I will take it home, and then thou'lt be at peace and grieve no more.' "Then the goat jumped on the spot where the money was hidden and sank as usual out of sight in fire. "So the next day the young man went there and dug till he discovered the gold, and the spirit of Marocchio was relieved. But to this hour the goat is seen now and then walking in his old haunt, where he sinks into the ground at the same place." * * * * * The legend of a goat haunting a bridge is probably derived from the custom of sacrificing an animal to new buildings or
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