Somewhere or other, but I don’t
know where, there lived a king who owned two remarkably
fine fields of rape, but every night two of the rape
heaps were burnt down in one of the fields. The
king was extremely angry at this, and sent out soldiers
to catch whoever had set fire to the ricks; but it
was all of no use not a soul could they
see. Then he offered nine hundred crowns to anyone
who caught the evil-doer, and at the same time ordered
that whoever did not keep proper watch over the fields
should be killed; but though there were a great many
people, none seemed able to protect the fields.
The king had already put ninety-nine
people to death, when a little swineherd came to him
who had two dogs; one was called ‘Psst,’
and the other ‘Hush’; and the boy told
the king that he would watch over the ricks.
When it grew dark he climbed up on
the top of the fourth rick, from where he could see
the whole field. About eleven o’clock he
thought he saw someone going to a rick and putting
a light to it. ‘Just you wait,’ thought
he, and called out to his dogs: ‘Hi!
Psst, Hush, catch him!’ But Psst and Hush had
not waited for orders, and in five minutes the man
was caught.
Next morning he was brought bound
before the king, who was so pleased with the boy that
he gave him a thousand crowns at once. The prisoner
was all covered with hair, almost like an animal; and
altogether he was so curious to look at that the king
locked him up in a strong room and sent out letters
of invitation to all the other kings and princes asking
them to come and see this wonder.
That was all very well; but the king
had a little boy of ten years old who went to look
at the hairy man also, and the man begged so hard to
be set free that the boy took pity on him. He
stole the key of the strong room from his mother and
opened the door. Then he took the key back, but
the hairy man escaped and went off into the world.
Then the kings and princes began to
arrive one after another, and all were most anxious
to see the hairy man; but he was gone! The king
nearly burst with rage and with the shame he felt.
He questioned his wife sharply, and told her that
if she could not find and bring back the hairy man
he would put her in a hut made of rushes and burn her
there. The queen declared she had had nothing
to do with the matter; if her son had happened to
take the key it had not been with her knowledge.
So they fetched the little prince
and asked him all sorts of questions, and at last
he owned that he had let the hairy man out. The
king ordered his servants to take the boy into the
forest and to kill him there, and to bring back part
of his liver and lungs.
There was grief all over the palace
when the king’s command was known, for he was
a great favourite. But there was no help for it,
and they took the boy out into the forest. But
the man was sorry for him, and shot a dog and carried
pieces of his lungs and liver to the king, who was
satisfied, and did not trouble himself any more.
The prince wandered about in the forest
and lived as best he could for five years. One
day he came upon a poor little cottage in which was
an old man. They began to talk, and the prince
told his story and sad fate. Then they recognised
each other, for the old fellow was no other than the
hairy man whom the prince had set free, and who had
lived ever since in the forest.
The prince stayed here for two years;
then he wished to go further. The old man begged
him hard to stay, but he would not, so his hairy friend
gave him a golden apple out of which came a horse with
a golden mane, and a golden staff with which to guide
the horse. The old man also gave him a silver
apple out of which came the most beautiful hussars
and a silver staff; and a copper apple from which
he could draw as many foot soldiers as ever he wished,
and a copper staff. He made the prince swear
solemnly to take the greatest care of these presents,
and then he let him go.
The boy wandered on and on till he
came to a large town. Here he took service in
the king’s palace, and as no one troubled themselves
about him he lived quietly on.
One day news was brought to the king
that he must go out to war. He was horribly frightened
for he had a very small army, but he had to go all
the same.
When they had all left, the prince
said to the housekeeper:
’Give me leave to go to the
next village I owe a small bill there, and
I want to go and pay it’; and as there was nothing
to be done in the palace the housekeeper gave him
leave.
When he got beyond the town he took
out his golden apple, and when the horse sprang out
he swung himself into the saddle. Then he took
the silver and the copper apples, and with all these
fine soldiers he joined the king’s army.
The king saw them approach with fear
in his heart, for he did not know if it might not
be an enemy; but the prince rode up, and bowed low
before him. ‘I bring your Majesty reinforcements,’
said he.
The king was delighted, and all dread
of his enemy at once disappeared. The princesses
were there too, and they were very friendly with the
prince and begged him to get into their carriage so
as to talk to them. But he declined, and remained
on horseback, as he did not know at what moment the
battle might begin; and whilst they were all talking
together the youngest princess, who was also the loveliest,
took off her ring, and her sister tore her handkerchief
in two pieces, and they gave these gifts to the prince.
Suddenly the enemy came in sight.
The king asked whether his army or the prince’s
should lead the way; but the prince set off first and
with his hussars he fought so bravely that only two
of the enemy were left alive, and these two were only
spared to act as messengers.
The king was overjoyed and so were
his daughters at this brilliant victory. As they
drove home they begged the prince to join them, but
he would not come, and galloped off with his hussars.
When he got near the town he packed
his soldiers and his fine horse all carefully into
the apple again, and then strolled into the town.
On his return to the palace he was well scolded by
the housekeeper for staying away so long.
Well, the whole matter might have
ended there; but it so happened that the younger princess
had fallen in love with the prince, as he had with
her. And as he had no jewels with him, he gave
her the copper apple and staff.
One day, as the princesses were talking
with their father, the younger one asked him whether
it might not have been their servant who had helped
him so much. The king was quite angry at the idea;
but, to satisfy her, he ordered the servant’s
room to be searched. And there, to everyone’s
surprise, they found the golden ring and the half of
the handkerchief. When these were brought to
the king he sent for the prince at once and asked
if it had been he who had come to their rescue.
‘Yes, your Majesty, it was I,’ answered
the prince.
‘But where did you get your army?’
‘If you wish to see it, I can show it you outside
the city walls.’
And so he did; but first he asked
for the copper apple from the younger princess, and
when all the soldiers were drawn up there were such
numbers that there was barely room for them.
The king gave him his daughter and
kingdom as a reward for his aid, and when he heard
that the prince was himself a king’s son his
joy knew no bounds. The prince packed all his
soldiers carefully up once more, and they went back
into the town.
Not long after there was a grand wedding;
perhaps they may all be alive still, but I don’t
know.
To Your Good Health!
Long, long ago there lived a king
who was such a mighty monarch that whenever he sneezed
every one in the whole country had to say ’To
your good health!’ Every one said it except
the shepherd with the staring eyes, and he would not
say it.
The king heard of this and was very
angry, and sent for the shepherd to appear before
him.
The shepherd came and stood before
the throne, where the king sat looking very grand
and powerful. But however grand or powerful he
might be the shepherd did not feel a bit afraid of
him.
‘Say at once, “To my good health!"’
cried the king.
‘To my good health!’ replied the shepherd.
‘To mine to mine, you rascal, you
vagabond!’ stormed the king.
‘To mine, to mine, your Majesty,’ was
the answer.
‘But to mine to my
own,’ roared the king, and beat on his breast
in a rage.
‘Well, yes; to mine, of course,
to my own,’ cried the shepherd, and gently tapped
his breast.
The king was beside himself with fury
and did not know what to do, when the Lord Chamberlain
interfered:
’Say at once say
this very moment: “To your health, your
Majesty”; for if you don’t say it you’ll
lose your life, whispered he.
‘No, I won’t say it till
I get the princess for my wife,’ was the shepherd’s
answer. Now the princess was sitting on a little
throne beside the king, her father, and she looked
as sweet and lovely as a little golden dove.
When she heard what the shepherd said she could not
help laughing, for there is no denying the fact that
this young shepherd with the staring eyes pleased
her very much; indeed he pleased her better than any
king’s son she had yet seen.
But the king was not as pleasant as
his daughter, and he gave orders to throw the shepherd
into the white bear’s pit.
The guards led him away and thrust
him into the pit with the white bear, who had had
nothing to eat for two days and was very hungry.
The door of the pit was hardly closed when the bear
rushed at the shepherd; but when it saw his eyes it
was so frightened that it was ready to eat itself.
It shrank away into a corner and gazed at him from
there, and, in spite of being so famished, did not
dare to touch him, but sucked its own paws from sheer
hunger. The shepherd felt that if he once removed
his eyes off the beast he was a dead man, and in order
to keep himself awake he made songs and sang them,
and so the night went by.
Next morning the Lord Chamberlain
came to see the shepherd’s bones, and was amazed
to find him alive and well. He led him to the
king, who fell into a furious passion, and said:
’Well, you have learned what it is to be very
near death, and now will you say “To my good
health"?’
But the shepherd answered: ’I
am not afraid of ten deaths! I will only say
it if I may have the princess for my wife.’
‘Then go to your death,’
cried the king; and ordered him to be thrown into
the den with the wild boars. The wild boars had
not been fed for a week, and when the shepherd was
thrust into their don they rushed at him to tear him
to pieces. But the shepherd took a little flute
out of the sleeve of his jacket and began to play
a merry tune, on which the wild boars first of all
shrank shyly away, and then got up on their hind legs
and danced gaily. The shepherd would have given
anything to be able to laugh, they looked so funny;
but he dared not stop playing, for he knew well enough
that the moment he stopped they would fall upon him
and tear him to pieces. His eyes were of no use
to him here, for he could not have stared ten wild
boars in the face at once; so he kept on playing,
and the wild boars danced very slowly, as if in a minuet,
then by degrees he played faster and faster till they
could hardly twist and turn quickly enough, and ended
by all falling over each other in a heap, quite exhausted
and out of breath.
Then the shepherd ventured to laugh
at last; and he laughed so long and so loud that when
the Lord Chamberlain came early in the morning, expecting
to find only his bones, the tears were still running
down his cheeks from laughter.
As soon as the king was dressed the
shepherd was again brought before him; but he was
more angry than ever to think the wild boars had not
torn the man to bits, and he said: ’Well,
you have learned what it feels to be near ten deaths,
now say “To my good health!"’
But the shepherd broke in with, ’I
do not fear a hundred deaths, and I will only say
it if I may have the princess for my wife.’
‘Then go to a hundred deaths!’
roared the king, and ordered the shepherd to be thrown
down the deep vault of scythes.
The guards dragged him away to a dark
dungeon, in the middle of which was a deep well with
sharp scythes all round it. At the bottom of the
well was a little light by which one could see if anyone
was thrown in whether he had fallen to the bottom.
When the shepherd was dragged to the
dungeons he begged the guards to leave him alone a
little while that he might look down into the pit of
scythes; perhaps he might after all make up his mind
to say ’To your good health’ to the king.
So the guards left him alone and he stuck up his long
stick near the well, hung his cloak round the stick
and put his hat on the top. He also hung his
knapsack up inside the cloak so that it might seem
to have some body within it. When this was done
he called out to the guards and said that he had considered
the matter but after all he could not make up his
mind to say what the king wished. The guards
came in, threw the hat and cloak, knapsack and stick
all down the well together, watched to see how they
put out the light at the bottom and came away, thinking
that now there really was an end of the shepherd.
But he had hidden in a dark corner and was laughing
to himself all the time.
Quite early next morning came the
Lord Chamberlain, carrying a lamp and he nearly fell
backwards with surprise when he saw the shepherd alive
and well. He brought him to the king, whose fury
was greater than ever, but who cried:
’Well, now you have been near
a hundred deaths; will you say: “To your
good health"?’
But the shepherd only gave the same answer:
‘I won’t say it till the princess is my
wife.’
‘Perhaps after all you may do
it for less,’ said the king, who saw that there
was no chance of making away with the shepherd; and
he ordered the state coach to be got ready, then he
made the shepherd get in with him and sit beside him,
and ordered the coachman to drive to the silver wood.
When they reached it he said: ’Do you see
this silver wood? Well, if you will say, “To
your good health,” I will give it to you.’
The shepherd turned hot and cold by turns, but he
still persisted:
‘I will not say it till the princess is my wife.’
The king was much vexed; he drove
further on till they came to a splendid castle, all
of gold, and then he said:
’Do you see this golden castle?
Well, I will give you that too, the silver wood and
the golden castle, if only you will say that one thing
to me: “To your good health."’
The shepherd gaped and wondered and
was quite dazzled, but he still said:
‘No; I will not say it till
I have the princess for my wife.’
This time the king was overwhelmed
with grief, and gave orders to drive on to the diamond
pond, and there he tried once more.
’Do you see this diamond pond?
I will give you that too, the silver wood and the
golden castle and the diamond pond. You shall
have them all all if you will
but say: “To your good health!"’
The shepherd had to shut his staring
eyes tight not to be dazzled with the brilliant pond,
but still he said:
‘No, no; I will not say it till
I have the princess for my wife.’
Then the king saw that all his efforts
were useless, and that he might as well give in, so
he said:
’Well, well, it’s all
the same to me I will give you my daughter
to wife; but, then, you really and truly must say
to me: “To your good health."’
’Of course I’ll say it;
why should I not say it? It stands to reason
that I shall say it then.’
At this the king was more delighted
than anyone could have believed. He made it known
all through the country that there were to be great
rejoicings, as the princess was going to be married.
And everyone rejoiced to think that the princess,
who had refused so many royal suitors, should have
ended by falling in love with the staring-eyed shepherd.
There was such a wedding as had never
been seen. Everyone ate and drank and danced.
Even the sick were feasted, and quite tiny new-born
children had presents given them.
But the greatest merry-making was
in the king’s palace; there the best bands played
and the best food was cooked; a crowd of people sat
down to table, and all was fun and merry-making.
And when the groomsman, according
to custom, brought in the great boar’s head
on a big dish and placed it before the king so that
he might carve it and give everyone a share, the savoury
smell was so strong that the king began to sneeze
with all his might.
‘To your very good health,’
cried the shepherd before anyone else, and the king
was so delighted that he did not regret having given
him his daughter.
In time, when the old king died, the
shepherd succeeded him. He made a very good king
and never expected his people to wish him well against
their wills; but, all the same, everyone did wish him
well, for they all loved him.
[From Russische Mahrchen.]