Far, far away, beyond all sorts of
countries, seas and rivers, there stood a splendid
city where lived King Archidej, who was as good as
he was rich and handsome. His great army was
made up of men ready to obey his slightest wish; he
owned forty times forty cities, and in each city he
had ten palaces with silver doors, golden roofs, and
crystal windows. His council consisted of the
twelve wisest men in the country, whose long beards
flowed down over their breasts, each of whom was as
learned as a whole college. This council always
told the king the exact truth.
Now the king had everything to make
him happy, but he did not enjoy anything because he
could not find a bride to his mind.
One day, as he sat in his palace looking
out to sea, a great ship sailed into the harbour and
several merchants came on shore. Said the king
to himself: ’These people have travelled
far and beheld many lands. I will ask them if
they have seen any princess who is as clever and as
handsome as I am.’
So he ordered the merchants to be
brought before him, and when they came he said:
’You have travelled much and visited many wonders.
I wish to ask you a question, and I beg you to answer
truthfully.
’Have you anywhere seen or heard
of the daughter of an emperor, king, or a prince,
who is as clever and as handsome as I am, and who would
be worthy to be my wife and the queen of my country?’
The merchants considered for some
time. At last the eldest of them said: ’I
have heard that across many seas, in the Island of
Busan, there is a mighty king, whose daughter, the
Princess Helena, is so lovely that she can certainly
not be plainer than your Majesty, and so clever that
the wisest greybeard cannot guess her riddles.’
‘Is the island far off, and which is the way
to it?’
‘It is not near,’ was
the answer. ’The journey would take ten
years, and we do not know the way. And even if
we did, what use would that be? The princess
is no bride for you.’
‘How dare you say so?’ cried the king
angrily.
’Your Majesty must pardon us;
but just think for a moment. Should you send
an envoy to the island he will take ten years to get
there and ten more to return twenty years
in all. Will not the princess have grown old
in that time and have lost all her beauty?’
The king reflected gravely. Then
he thanked the merchants, gave them leave to trade
in his country without paying any duties, and dismissed
them.
After they were gone the king remained
deep in thought. He felt puzzled and anxious;
so he decided to ride into the country to distract
his mind, and sent for his huntsmen and falconers.
The huntsmen blew their horns, the falconers took
their hawks on their wrists, and off they all set
out across country till they came to a green hedge.
On the other side of the hedge stretched a great field
of maize as far as the eye could reach, and the yellow
ears swayed to and fro in the gentle breeze like a
rippling sea of gold.
The king drew rein and admired the
field. ‘Upon my word,’ said he, ’whoever
dug and planted it must be good workmen. If all
the fields in my kingdom were as well cared for as
this, there would be more bread than my people could
eat.’ And he wished to know to whom the
field belonged.
Off rushed all his followers at once
to do his bidding, and found a nice, tidy farmhouse,
in front of which sat seven peasants, lunching on
rye bread and drinking water. They wore red shirts
bound with gold braid, and were so much alike that
one could hardly tell one from another.
The messengers asked: ‘Who
owns this field of golden maize?’ And the seven
brothers answered: ‘The field is ours.’
‘And who are you?’
‘We are King Archidej’s labourers.’
These answers were repeated to the
king, who ordered the brothers to be brought before
him at once. On being asked who they were, the
eldest said, bowing low:
’We, King Archidej, are your
labourers, children of one father and mother, and
we all have the same name, for each of us is called
Simon. Our father taught us to be true to our
king, and to till the ground, and to be kind to our
neighbours. He also taught each of us a different
trade which he thought might be useful to us, and he
bade us not neglect our mother earth, which would
be sure amply to repay our labour.’
The king was pleased with the honest
peasant, and said: ’You have done well,
good people, in planting your field, and now you have
a golden harvest. But I should like each of you
to tell me what special trades your father taught
you.’
‘My trade, O king!’ said
the first Simon, ’is not an easy one. If
you will give me some workmen and materials I will
build you a great white pillar that shall reach far
above the clouds.’
‘Very good,’ replied the
king. ’And you, Simon the second, what is
your trade?’
’Mine, your Majesty, needs no
great cleverness. When my brother has built the
pillar I can mount it, and from the top, far above
the clouds, I can see what is happening: in every
country under the sun.’
‘Good,’ said the king; ‘and Simon
the third?’
’My work is very simple, sire.
You have many ships built by learned men, with all
sorts of new and clever improvements. If you wish
it I will build you quite a simple boat one,
two, three, and it’s done! But my plain
little home-made ship is not grand enough for a king.
Where other ships take a year, mine makes the voyage
in a day, and where they would require ten years mine
will do the distance in a week.’
‘Good,’ said the king
again; ‘and what has Simon the fourth learnt?’
’My trade, O king, is really
of no importance. Should my brother build you
a ship, then let me embark in it. If we should
be pursued by an enemy I can seize our boat by the
prow and sink it to the bottom of the sea. When
the enemy has sailed off, I can draw it up to the top
again.’
‘That is very clever of you,’
answered the king; ’and what does Simon the
fifth do?’
’My work, your Majesty, is mere
smith’s work. Order me to build a smithy
and I will make you a cross-bow, but from which neither
the eagle in the sky nor the wild beast in the forest
is safe. The bolt hits whatever the eye sees.’
‘That sounds very useful,’
said the king. ’And now, Simon the sixth,
tell me your trade.’
’Sire, it is so simple I am
almost ashamed to mention it. If my brother hits
any creature I catch it quicker than any dog can.
If it falls into the water I pick it up out of the
greatest depths, and if it is in a dark forest I can
find it even at midnight.’
The king was much pleased with the
trades and talk of the six brothers, and said:
’Thank you, good people; your father did well
to teach you all these things. Now follow me
to the town, as I want to see what you can do.
I need such people as you about me; but when harvest
time comes I will send you home with royal presents.’
The brothers bowed and said:
‘As the king wills.’ Suddenly the
king remembered that he had not questioned the seventh
Simon, so he turned to him and said: ‘Why
are you silent? What is your handicraft?’
And the seventh Simon answered:
’I have no handicraft, O king; I have learnt
nothing. I could not manage it. And if I
do know how to do anything it is not what might properly
be called a real trade it is rather a sort
of performance; but it is one which no one not
the king himself must watch me doing, and
I doubt whether this performance of mine would please
your Majesty.’
‘Come, come,’ cried the
king; ’I will have no excuses, what is this
trade?’
’First, sire, give me your royal
word that you will not kill me when I have told you.
Then you shall hear.’
‘So be it, then; I give you my royal word.’
Then the seventh Simon stepped back
a little, cleared his throat, and said: ’My
trade, King Archidej, is of such a kind that the man
who follows it in your kingdom generally loses his
life and has no hopes of pardon. There is only
one thing I can do really well, and that is to
steal, and to hide the smallest scrap of anything I
have stolen. Not the deepest vault, even if its
lock were enchanted, could prevent my stealing anything
out of it that I wished to have.’
When the king heard this he fell into
a passion. ’I will not pardon you, you
rascal,’ he cried; ’I will shut you up
in my deepest dungeon on bread and water till you
have forgotten such a trade. Indeed, it would
be better to put you to death at once, and I’ve
a good mind to do so.’
’Don’t kill me, O king!
I am really not as bad as you think. Why, had
I chosen, I could have robbed the royal treasury,
have bribed your judges to let me off, and built a
white marble palace with what was left. But though
I know how to steal I don’t do it. You yourself
asked me my trade. If you kill me you will break
your royal word.’
‘Very well,’ said the
king, ’I will not kill you. I pardon you.
But from this hour you shall be shut up in a dark
dungeon. Here, guards! away with him to the prison.
But you six Simons follow me and be assured of my
royal favour.’
So the six Simons followed the king.
The seventh Simon was seized by the guards, who put
him in chains and threw him in prison with only bread
and water for food. Next day the king gave the
first Simon carpenters, masons, smiths and labourers,
with great stores of iron, mortar, and the like, and
Simon began to build. And he built his great white
pillar far, far up into the clouds, as high as the
nearest stars; but the other stars were higher still.
Then the second Simon climbed up the
pillar and saw and heard all that was going on through
the whole world. When he came down he had all
sorts of wonderful things to tell. How one king
was marching in battle against another, and which
was likely to be the victor. How, in another place,
great rejoicings were going on, while in a third people
were dying of famine. In fact there was not the
smallest event going on over the earth that was hidden
from him.
Next the third Simon began. He
stretched out his arms, once, twice, thrice, and the
wonder-ship was ready. At a sign from the king
it was launched, and floated proudly and safely like
a bird on the waves. Instead of ropes it had
wires for rigging, and musicians played on them with
fiddle bows and made lovely music. As the ship
swam about, the fourth Simon seized the prow with
his strong hand, and in a moment it was gone sunk
to the bottom of the sea. An hour passed, and
then the ship floated again, drawn up by Simon’s
left hand, while in his right he brought a gigantic
fish from the depth of the ocean for the royal table.
Whilst this was going on the fifth
Simon had built his forge and hammered out his iron,
and when the king returned from the harbour the magic
cross-bow was made.
His Majesty went out into an open
field at once, looked up into the sky and saw, far,
far away, an eagle flying up towards the sun and looking
like a little speck.
‘Now,’ said the king,
‘if you can shoot that bird I will reward you.’
Simon only smiled; he lifted his cross-bow,
took aim, fired, and the eagle fell. As it was
falling the sixth Simon ran with a dish, caught the
bird before it fell to earth and brought it to the
king.
‘Many thanks, my brave lads,’
said the king; ’I see that each of you is indeed
a master of his trade. You shall be richly rewarded.
But now rest and have your dinner.’
The six Simons bowed and went to dinner.
But they had hardly begun before a messenger came
to say that the king wanted to see them. They
obeyed at once and found him surrounded by all his
court and men of state.
‘Listen, my good fellows,’
cried the king, as soon as he saw them. ’Hear
what my wise counsellors have thought of. As you,
Simon the second, can see the whole world from the
top of the great pillar, I want you to climb up and
to see and hear. For I am told that, far away,
across many seas, is the great kingdom of the Island
of Busan, and that the daughter of the king is the
beautiful Princess Helena.’
Off ran the second Simon and clambered
quickly up the pillar. He gazed around, listened
on all sides, and then slid down to report to the king.
’Sire, I have obeyed your orders.
Far away I saw the Island of Busan. The king
is a mighty monarch, but full of pride, harsh and cruel.
He sits on his throne and declares that no prince
or king on earth is good enough for his lovely daughter,
that he will give her to none, and that if any king
asks for her hand he will declare war against him and
destroy his kingdom.’
‘Has the king of Busan a great
army?’ asked King Archidej; ’is his country
far off?’
‘As far as I could judge,’
replied Simon, ’it would take you nearly ten
years in fair weather to sail there. But if the
weather were stormy we might say twelve. I saw
the army being reviewed. It is not so very large a
hundred thousand men at arms and a hundred thousand
knights. Besides these, he has a strong bodyguard
and a good many cross-bowmen. Altogether you
may say another hundred thousand, and there is a picked
body of heroes who reserve themselves for great occasions
requiring particular courage.’
The king sat for some time lost in
thought. At last he said to the nobles and courtiers
standing round: ’I am determined to marry
the Princess Helena, but how shall I do it?’
The nobles, courtiers and counsellors
said nothing, but tried to hide behind each other.
Then the third Simon said:
’Pardon me, your Majesty, if
I offer my advice. You wish to go to the Island
of Busan? What can be easier? In my ship
you will get there in a week instead of in ten years.
But ask your council to advise you what to do when
you arrive in one word, whether you will
win the princess peacefully or by war?’
But the wise men were as silent as ever.
The king frowned, and was about to
say something sharp, when the Court Fool pushed his
way to the front and said: ’Dear me, what
are all you clever people so puzzled about? The
matter is quite clear. As it seems it will not
take long to reach the island why not send the seventh
Simon? He will steal the fair maiden fast enough,
and then the king, her father, may consider how he
is going to bring his army over here it
will take him ten years to do it! –no
less! What do you think of my plan?’
’What do I think? Why,
that your idea is capital, and you shall be rewarded
for it. Come, guards, hurry as fast as you can
and bring the seventh Simon before me.’
Not many minutes later, Simon the
seventh stood before the king, who explained to him
what he wished done, and also that to steal for the
benefit of his king and country was by no means a wrong
thing, though it was very wrong to steal for his own
advantage.
The youngest Simon, who looked very
pale and hungry, only nodded his head.
‘Come,’ said the king,
’tell me truly. Do you think you could steal
the Princess Helena?’
’Why should I not steal her,
sire? The thing is easy enough. Let my brother’s
ship be laden with rich stuffs, brocades, Persian carpets,
pearls and jewels. Send me in the ship. Give
me my four middle brothers as companions, and keep
the two others as hostages.’
When the king heard these words his
heart became filled with longing, and he ordered all
to be done as Simon wished. Every one ran about
to do his bidding; and in next to no time the wonder-ship
was laden and ready to start.
The five Simons took leave of the
king, went on board, and had no sooner set sail than
they were almost out of sight. The ship cut through
the waters like a falcon through the air, and just
a week after starting sighted the Island of Busan.
The coast appeared to be strongly guarded, and from
afar the watchman on a high tower called out:
’Halt and anchor! Who are you? Where
do you come from, and what do you want?’
The seventh Simon answered from the
ship: ’We are peaceful people. We
come from the country of the great and good King Archidej,
and we bring foreign wares rich brocades,
carpets, and costly jewels, which we wish to show
to your king and the princess. We desire to trade to
sell, to buy, and to exchange.’
The brothers launched a small boat,
took some of their valuable goods with them, rowed
to shore and went up to the palace. The princess
sat in a rose-red room, and when she saw the brothers
coming near she called her nurse and other women,
and told them to inquire who and what these people
were, and what they wanted.
The seventh Simon answered the nurse:
’We come from the country of the wise and good
King Archidej,’ said he, ’and we have brought
all sorts of goods for sale. We trust the king
of this country may condescend to welcome us, and
to let his servants take charge of our wares.
If he considers them worthy to adorn his followers
we shall be content.’
This speech was repeated to the princess,
who ordered the brothers to be brought to the red-room
at once. They bowed respectfully to her and displayed
some splendid velvets and brocades, and opened cases
of pearls and precious stones. Such beautiful
things had never been seen in the island, and the
nurse and waiting women stood bewildered by all the
magnificence. They whispered together that they
had never beheld anything like it. The princess
too saw and wondered, and her eyes could not weary
of looking at the lovely things, or her fingers of
stroking the rich soft stuffs, and of holding up the
sparkling jewels to the light.
‘Fairest of princesses,’
said Simon. ’Be pleased to order your waiting-maids
to accept the silks and velvets, and let your women
trim their head-dresses with the jewels; these are
no special treasures. But permit me to say that
they are as nothing to the many coloured tapestries,
the gorgeous stones and ropes of pearls in our ship.
We did not like to bring more with us, not knowing
what your royal taste might be; but if it seems good
to you to honour our ship with a visit, you might
condescend to choose such things as were pleasing in
your eyes.’
This polite speech pleased the princess
very much. She went to the king and said:
’Dear father, some merchants have arrived with
the most splendid wares. Pray allow me to go
to their ship and choose out what I like.’
The king thought and thought, frowned
hard and rubbed his ear. At last he gave consent,
and ordered out his royal yacht, with 100 cross-bows,
100 knights, and 1,000 soldiers, to escort the Princess
Helena.
Off sailed the yacht with the princess
and her escort. The brothers Simon came on board
to conduct the princess to their ship, and, led by
the brothers and followed by her nurse and other women,
she crossed the crystal plank from one vessel to another.
The seventh Simon spread out his goods,
and had so many curious and interesting tales to tell
about them, that the princess forgot everything else
in looking and listening, so that she did not know
that the fourth Simon had seized the prow of the ship,
and that all of a sudden it had vanished from sight,
and was racing along in the depths of the sea.
The crew of the royal yacht shouted
aloud, the knights stood still with terror, the soldiers
were struck dumb and hung their heads. There was
nothing to be done but to sail back and tell the king
of his loss.
How he wept and stormed! ‘Oh,
light of my eyes,’ he sobbed; ’I am indeed
punished for my pride. I thought no one good enough
to be your husband, and now you are lost in the depths
of the sea, and have left me alone! As for all
of you who saw this thing away with you!
Let them be put in irons and lock them up in prison,
whilst I think how I can best put them to death!’
Whilst the King of Busan was raging
and lamenting in this fashion, Simon’s ship
was swimming like any fish under the sea, and when
the island was well out of sight he brought it up
to the surface again. At that moment the princess
recollected herself. ‘Nurse,’ said
she, ’we have been gazing at these wonders only
too long. I hope my father won’t be vexed
at our delay.’
She tore herself away and stepped
on deck. Neither the yacht nor the island was
in sight! Helena wrung her hands and beat her
breast. Then she changed herself into a white
swan and flew off. But the fifth Simon seized
his bow and shot the swan, and the sixth Simon did
not let it fall into the water but caught it in the
ship, and the swan turned into a silver fish, but
Simon lost no time and caught the fish, when, quick
as thought, the fish turned into a black mouse and
ran about the ship. It darted towards a hole,
but before it could reach it Simon sprang upon it
more swiftly than any cat, and then the little mouse
turned once more into the beautiful Princess Helena.
Early one morning King Archidej sat
thoughtfully at his window gazing out to sea.
His heart was sad and he would neither eat nor drink.
His thoughts were full of the Princess Helena, who
was as lovely as a dream. Is that a white gull
he sees flying towards the shore, or is it a sail?
No, it is no gull, it is the wonder-ship flying along
with billowing sails. Its flags wave, the fiddlers
play on the wire rigging, the anchor is thrown out
and the crystal plank laid from the ship to the pier.
The lovely Helena steps across the plank. She
shines like the sun, and the stars of heaven seem
to sparkle in her eyes.
Up sprang King Archidej in haste:
‘Hurry, hurry,’ he cried. ’Let
us hasten to meet her! Let the bugles sound and
the joy bells be rung!’
And the whole Court swarmed with courtiers
and servants. Golden carpets were laid down and
the great gates thrown open to welcome the princess.
King Archidej went out himself, took
her by the hand and led her into the royal apartments.
‘Madam,’ said he, ’the
fame of your beauty had reached me, but I had not
dared to expect such loveliness. Still I will
not keep you here against your will. If you wish
it, the wonder-ship shall take you back to your father
and your own country; but if you will consent to stay
here, then reign over me and my country as our queen.’
What more is there to tell? It
is not hard to guess that the princess listened to
the king’s wooing, and their betrothal took place
with great pomp and rejoicings.
The brothers Simon were sent again
to the Island of Busan with a letter to the king from
his daughter to invite him to their wedding. And
the wonder-ship arrived at the Island of Busan just
as all the knights and soldiers who had escorted the
princess were being led out to execution.
Then the seventh Simon cried out from
the ship: ’Stop! stop! I bring a letter
from the Princess Helena!’
The King of Busan read the letter
over and over again, and ordered the knights and soldiers
to be set free. He entertained King Archidej’s
ambassadors hospitably, and sent his blessing to his
daughter, but he could not be brought to attend the
wedding.
When the wonder-ship got home King
Archidej and Princess Helena were enchanted with the
news it brought.
The king sent for the seven Simons.
’A thousand thanks to you, my brave fellows,’
he cried. ’Take what gold, silver, and precious
stones you will out of my treasury. Tell me if
there is anything else you wish for and I will give
it you, my good friends. Do you wish to be made
nobles, or to govern towns? Only speak.’
Then the eldest Simon bowed and said:
’We are plain folk, your Majesty, and understand
simple things best. What figures should we cut
as nobles or governors? Nor do we desire gold.
We have our fields which give us food, and as much
money as we need. If you wish to reward us then
grant that our land may be free of taxes, and of your
goodness pardon the seventh Simon. He is not
the first who has been a thief by trade and he will
certainly not be the last.’
‘So be it,’ said the king;
’your land shall be free of all taxes, and Simon
the seventh is pardoned.’
Then the king gave each brother a
goblet of wine and invited them to the wedding feast.
And what a feast that was!
[From Ungarischen Mahrchen.]