The Fairy Ring Part 6
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"Well," said the troll, "if you can bring me back the fair damsel which my nearest neighbor has taken from me I will spare you."
"Whereabouts does he live, then?" asked the Prince.
"Oh, he lives three hundred miles at the back of that big blue mountain against the horizon yonder," said the troll.
The Prince promised he would fetch the damsel, and was allowed to go, and so he escaped with his life.
But when he came out you may imagine how angry the fox was.
"Now you've got yourself into trouble again," said he; "if you had listened to me we could have been on our way home long ago. I almost think I will not go with you any further."
But the Prince begged and prayed and promised he would never do anything else but what the fox told him, if he would only remain with him. At last the fox gave in, and they became firm friends again; so they set off once more and came at last to where the fair damsel was.
"Well," said the fox, "I have your promise, but I dare not let you in to the troll, after all; this time I must go myself." So he went in, and after a while he came out with the damsel, and so they went back the same way they had come.
When they got to the troll who had the horse they took both the horse and the brightest bridle; and when they got to the troll who had the linden tree and the bird, they took both the tree and the bird and started off with them.
When they had got a bit on the way they came to a field of rye, and the fox then said:
"I hear a thundering noise; you had better go on ahead; I will remain here awhile," he said. He then plaited himself a gown of rye straw, in which he looked like a preacher. All at once the three trolls came rus.h.i.+ng along, hoping to overtake the Prince.
"Have you seen anyone pa.s.sing here with a fair damsel, a horse with a golden bridle, a golden bird, and a gilded linden tree?" they shouted to the fox as he stood there preaching.
"Well, I've heard from my grandmother's grandmother that something of the kind pa.s.sed this way, but that was in the good old times, when my grandmother's grandmother baked halfpenny cakes and gave back the halfpenny."
Then all the trolls burst out laughing: "Ha, ha, ha!" they laughed and held on to one another.
"If we have slept so long we may as well turn our noses homeward, and go to sleep again," they said, and so they went back the way they came.
The fox then set off after the Prince, but when they came to the city where the inn and his brothers were, he said:
"I dare not go through the town on account of the dogs; I must go my own way just above here, but you must take good care your brothers do not get hold of you."
But when the Prince came into the city he thought it would be too bad if he did not look in upon his brothers and have a word with them, and so he tarried there for a while.
When the brothers saw him they came out and took the damsel, and the horse, and the bird, and the linden tree, and everything from him, and they put him in a barrel, and threw him into the sea; and so they set off home to the King's palace, with the damsel, and the horse, and the bird, and the linden tree, and everything. But the damsel would not speak, and she became pale and wretched to look upon; the horse got so thin and miserable that it could hardly hang together; the bird became silent and shone no more, and the linden tree withered.
In the meantime the fox was sneaking about outside the city where the inn and the merriment were, and was waiting for the Prince and the damsel, and wondering why they did not return.
He went hither and thither, waiting and watching for them, and at last he came down to the sh.o.r.e, and when he saw the barrel, which was lying out at sea drifting, he shouted: "Why are you drifting about there, you empty barrel?"
"Oh, it is I," said the Prince in the barrel.
The fox then swam out to sea as fast as he could, got hold of the barrel, and towed it to land; then he began to gnaw the hoops, and when he had got some off the barrel, he said to the Prince: "Stamp and kick."
The Prince stamped and kicked till all the staves flew about, and out he jumped from the barrel.
So they went together to the King's palace, and when they got there the damsel regained her beauty and began to talk, the horse became so fat and sleek that every hair glistened; the light shone from the bird and it began to sing; the linden tree began to blossom and its leaves to sparkle, and the damsel said, "He is the one who has saved us."
They planted the linden tree in the garden, and the youngest prince was to marry the princess, for such the damsel really was; but the two eldest brothers were put each in a barrel and rolled down a high mountain.
Then they began to prepare for the wedding, but the fox first asked the Prince to put him on the block and cut his head off, and although the Prince both prayed and cried, there was no help for it; he would have to do it. But as he cut the head off, the fox turned into a handsome prince, and he was the brother of the princess, whom they had rescued from the troll.
So the wedding came off and everything was so grand and splendid, that the news of the festivities reached all the way here.
_The Doll in the Gra.s.s_
ONCE upon a time there was a King who had twelve sons. When they were grown up he told them they must go out into the world and find themselves wives, who must all be able to spin and weave and make a s.h.i.+rt in one day, else he would not have them for daughters-in-law. He gave each of his sons a horse and a new suit of armor, and so they set out in the world to look for wives.
When they had traveled a bit on the way they said they would not take As.h.i.+epattle with them, for he was good for nothing. As.h.i.+epattle must stop behind; there was no help for it. He did not know what he should do or which way he should turn; he became so sad that he got off the horse and sat down on the gra.s.s and began to cry.
When he had sat a while, one of the tussocks among the gra.s.s began to move, and out of it came a small white figure; as it came nearer As.h.i.+epattle saw that it was a beautiful little girl, but she was so tiny, so very, very tiny.
She went up to him and asked him if he would come below and pay a visit to the doll in the gra.s.s.
Yes, that he would; and so he did. When he came down below, the doll in the gra.s.s was sitting in a chair, dressed very finely and looking still more beautiful. She asked As.h.i.+epattle where he was going and what was his errand.
He told her they were twelve brothers, and that the King had given them each a horse and a suit of armor, and told them to go out in the world and find themselves wives, but they must all be able to spin and weave and make a s.h.i.+rt in a day.
[Ill.u.s.tration: "SHE SAID SHE WOULD SIT AND DRIVE IN A SILVER SPOON"]
"If you can do that and will become my wife, I will not travel any farther," said As.h.i.+epattle to the doll in the gra.s.s.
Yes, that she would, and she set to work at once to get the s.h.i.+rt spun, woven, and made; but it was so tiny, so very, very tiny, no bigger than--so!
As.h.i.+epattle then returned home, taking the s.h.i.+rt with him; but when he brought it out he felt very shy because it was so small. But the King said he could have her for all that, and you can imagine how happy and joyful As.h.i.+epattle became.
The road did not seem long to him as he set out to fetch his little sweetheart. When he came to the doll in the gra.s.s he wanted her to sit with him on his horse; but no, that she wouldn't; she said she would sit and drive in a silver spoon, and she had two small white horses which would draw her. So they set out, he on his horse and she in the silver spoon; and the horses which drew her were two small white mice.
As.h.i.+epattle always kept to one side of the road, for he was so afraid he should ride over her; she was so very, very tiny.
When they had traveled a bit on the way they came to a large lake; there As.h.i.+epattle's horse took fright and s.h.i.+ed over to the other side of the road, and upset the spoon, so that the doll in the gra.s.s fell into the water. As.h.i.+epattle became very sad, for he did not know how he should get her out again; but after a while a merman brought her up. But now she had become just as big as any other grown-up being and was much more beautiful than she was before. So he placed her in front of him on the horse and rode home.
When As.h.i.+epattle got there all his brothers had also returned, each with a sweetheart; but they were so ugly and ill-favored and bad-tempered that they had come to blows with their sweethearts on their way home. On their heads they had hats which were painted with tar and soot, and this had run from their hats down their faces, so that they were still uglier and more ill-favored to behold.
When the brothers saw As.h.i.+epattle's sweetheart they all became envious of him, but the King was so pleased with As.h.i.+epattle and his sweetheart that he drove all the others away, and so As.h.i.+epattle was married to the doll in the gra.s.s; and afterwards they lived happy and comfortable for a long, long while; and if they are not dead, they must be still alive.
_The Princess on the Gla.s.s Hill_
ONCE upon a time there was a man who had a meadow which lay on the side of a mountain, and in the meadow there was a barn in which he stored hay. But there had not been much hay in the barn for the last two years, for every St. John's eve, when the gra.s.s was in the height of its vigor, it was all eaten clean up, just as if a whole flock of sheep had gnawed it down to the ground during the night. This happened once and it happened twice, but then the man got tired of losing his crop, and said to his sons--he had three of them, and the third was called Cinderlad--that one of them must go and sleep in the barn on St. John's night, for it was absurd to let the gra.s.s be eaten up again, blade and stalk, as it had been the last two years, and the one who went to watch must keep a sharp lookout, the man said.
The Fairy Ring Part 6
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The Fairy Ring Part 6 summary
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