Greed
INSPIRATIONAL, 22 Jun 2015
Dietrich Fischer – TRANSCEND Media Service
An antique dealer used to visit farms in his area to try to find valuable old furniture, and buy it cheap. One day, he discovered in an old barn a commode from the early 20th century, covered with a thick layer of dust, hidden under many worthless pieces of trash. It was a very rare model, sought by collectors, maybe worth nearly a million dollars. But to pay as little as possible, he told the farmer that the commode was of little value, at most usable as firewood, and negotiated a very cheap price. The next day, he came back with his pickup truck to retrieve the commode. To his horror, the farmer had cut it up into small pieces of firewood and neatly bundled them, to do the dealer a favor.
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Dietrich Fischer, born in 1941 in Münsingen, Switzerland, got a Licentiate in Mathematics from the University of Bern 1968 and his Ph.D. in Computer Science from New York University 1976. 1986-88 he was a MacArthur Fellow in International Peace and Security at Princeton University. He has taught mathematics, computer science, economics and peace studies at various universities and been a consultant to the United Nations.
Excerpted from Dietrich Fischer’s Stories to Inspire You – TRANSCEND University Press-TUP.
This article originally appeared on Transcend Media Service (TMS) on 22 Jun 2015.
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This story was by Roald Dahl, and had a title like “The Parson’s Pleasure” in a book of short stories. Great.