The young boy's intelligence is made use of in many different ways in order to fool the rich man. When the rich man asked the child where his parents were, he replied "Well, sir, my father has gone to cut living trees and to plant dead ones and my mother is at the market-place selling the wind and buying the moon" (104). The young boy did not inform the rich man where his parents exactly were, therefore, he did not lie about where his parents were either. The boy left the rich man in thoughts because he did not understand what the boy was talking about. The boy demonstrates his strongest attribute by deceiving the rich man by making him blurt out that "the fly was not on my nose; he was on the housepole" (106). When he mentioned that in court, it clarified that he had made a promise to the young boy. The peasant couple does not pay off any debt to any further extent because the boy ended up deceiving the old man into saying that he made a promise. He illustrates his astuteness by accepting the promise because he knew he could figure something out at the right time "A fly is a good enough witness for me" (105). If there was no promise accepted, the peasant couple would still have to pay off their debt to the old man. His intelligence was utilized in many ways like confusing the rich man, tricking him into admitting that he made a promise, and accepting the promise from him.
The rich man was fooled by the child several times, which leads to solving his dilemma of paying off a debt. The intelligence of the boy saves the whole family, financially by scamming the old man in many