The Story-teller Part 8
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[Footnote 5: A peddler.]
A soldier just home from the wars, and glad enough to be there, had the song from the chapman; and in turn he taught it to a sailor who took it to sea with him.
The sailor was going to the far countries, but if all went well with his s.h.i.+p, and with him, he would be at home in time to see the hawthorn bloom in his mother's yard another year and another spring.
[Ill.u.s.tration: SHE LEANED ON THE FENCE THAT DIVIDED THE TWO.]
He kept the song in his heart for a year and a day, and then, because nothing had gone amiss and he was homeward bound, he sang it, too:
"The hawthorn's white, the sun is bright, And blue the cloudless sky; And not a bird that sings in spring Is happier than I, than I, Is happier than I."
On the sailor's s.h.i.+p there was a minstrel bound for the king's court to sing on May Day; and the minstrel learned the song from the sailor.
He was a young minstrel and very proud to sing at the king's festival, so when it was his turn and he stood before the throne he could think of no better song to sing than:
"The hawthorn's white, the sun is bright, And blue the cloudless sky; And not a bird that sings in spring Is happier than I, than I, Is happier than I."
Now the king had been so busy about the affairs of his kingdom deciding this question and that, sending messengers here and there, and listening to one and another, as all kings must do, that he had forgotten the song which he had made. But when he heard the minstrel it all came back to him; and then he was puzzled.
"Good minstrel," said he, "ten golden guineas I will give you for your song, and to the ten will add ten more if you will tell me where you learned it."
"An easy matter that," said the minstrel. "The sailor who rides in yon white s.h.i.+p in your harbor taught it to me."
"The soldier who even now stands guard at your majesty's gate gave me the song," said the sailor when he was asked.
"I had it from the chapman who travels on the king's highway," said the soldier.
"I heard the little goose-girl sing it," said the chapman when they found him.
"'Tis Robin Ploughboy's song," laughed the goose-girl. "Go ask him about it."
"The king sang it first and I next," said the ploughboy.
Then the king knew that he had made a good song that everybody with a happy heart might sing; and because he was glad of this, he stood at his window and sang again:
[Ill.u.s.tration: Music]
THE SONG THAT TRAVELED
Words, MAUD LINDSAY
Music, ELSIE A. MERRIMAN
_Allegretto_
The hawthorn's white, the sun is bright, And blue the cloud-less
sky; . And not a bird that sings in spring Is
hap-pi-er than I, than I, Is hap-pi-er than I. . .
THE QUEST FOR THE NIGHTINGALE[6]
Oh, who would go to fairyland?
The moon is s.h.i.+ning bright, oh, And who would go to fairyland Upon a summer's night, oh!
Across a field of fragrant fern All sparkling with the dew, oh!
Come trip it light to fairyland And I will go with you, oh!
To fairyland, to fairyland, Who seeks may find the way, oh, And we shall see the fairies dance Before the break of day, oh!
[Footnote 6: I am indebted to one William Shakespeare, whose intimate acquaintance with fairyland none can dispute, for the name "Pease-Blossom"; to Joseph Rodman Drake for the idea of my story; and to some of the folk tales which suggested to me one or two of Pease-Blossom's adventures.]
In the deepest dell of the Enchanted Wood, where the moss grew the greenest and the violets bloomed the sweetest, the fairies lived.
It was they who kept the brooks and the springs free from dirt or clog, and tended the wild flowers and watched over the young trees.
And they were friends with all the harmless birds and beasts from wood's end to wood's end.
But for those creatures that work harm to others, and for the goblins who delight in mischief they had no love, and every day and every night a watch was set to drive them from the fairy dell.
Each fay in turn kept guard and all went well till one evening when Pease-Blossom, the best-loved fairy in the dell, fell asleep at his post and the goblins stole away the nightingale that sang each night at the queen's court.
Great was the sorrow in fairyland when this was known.
"I will fly to catch them before they have had time to hide her away,"
cried a fay whose name was Quick-As-Lightning.
"I will go, too," said little Twinkle-Toes.
"And I, three," said Spice-of-Life; "and my good thorn sword with me, which will make four against them."
But the fairy queen would not consent to this.
"Pease-Blossom in his trust did fail; And he must seek the nightingale,"
she said; and no sooner had she spoken than the little fay bade his companions good-bye and hastened out upon his quest alone.
The goblins had left no trace behind them and Pease-Blossom wandered hither and thither over dewy fells and fields asking of every piping cricket and brown winged bat he met: "Pa.s.sed the goblins this way?"
No one could aid him, and he was ready to drop from weariness and sorrow when the moon came over the hill and called:
"Whither away, Pease-Blossom? Whither away?"
"In quest of the nightingale that the goblins have stolen; but where they have taken her I cannot find," answered the little fay sadly.
Then said the moon: "Many a nightingale there is in the wide world, both free and caged, and how may I know yours from any other? But this I can tell you: through a window in the castle of the Great Giant, which stands upon a high hill beside the Silver Sea, I spy a nightingale in a golden cage which was not there when I shone through that same window yester eve; and moreover, at the World's End, which is beyond the Giant's castle, I see a band of goblins counting money."
The Story-teller Part 8
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The Story-teller Part 8 summary
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