Once upon a time there lived a poor
widow who had one little boy. At first sight
you would not have thought that he was different from
a thousand other little boys; but then you noticed
that by his side hung the scabbard of a sword, and
as the boy grew bigger the scabbard grew bigger too.
The sword which belonged to the scabbard was found
by the little boy sticking out of the ground in the
garden, and every day he pulled it up to see if it
would go into the scabbard. But though it was
plainly becoming longer and longer, it was some time
before the two would fit.
However, there came a day at last
when it slipped in quite easily. The child was
so delighted that he could hardly believe his eyes,
so he tried it seven times, and each time it slipped
in more easily than before. But pleased though
the boy was, he determined not to tell anyone about
it, particularly not his mother, who never could keep
anything from her neighbours.
Still, in spite of his resolutions,
he could not hide altogether that something had happened,
and when he went in to breakfast his mother asked
him what was the matter.
‘Oh, mother, I had such a nice
dream last night,’ said he; ’but I can’t
tell it to anybody.’
‘You can tell it to me,’
she answered. ’It must have been a nice
dream, or you wouldn’t look so happy.’
‘No, mother; I can’t tell
it to anybody,’ returned the boy, ’till
it comes true.’
‘I want to know what it was,
and know it I will,’ cried she, ’and I
will beat you till you tell me.’
But it was no use, neither words nor
blows would get the secret out of the boy; and when
her arm was quite tired and she had to leave off, the
child, sore and aching, ran into the garden and knelt
weeping beside his little sword. It was working
round and round in its hole all by itself, and if
anyone except the boy had tried to catch hold of it,
he would have been badly cut. But the moment
he stretched out his hand it stopped and slid quietly
into the scabbard.
For a long time the child sat sobbing,
and the noise was heard by the king as he was driving
by. ‘Go and see who it is that is crying
so,’ said he to one of his servants, and the
man went. In a few minutes he returned saying:
’Your Majesty, it is a little boy who is kneeling
there sobbing because his mother has beaten him.’
‘Bring him to me at once,’
commanded the monarch, ’and tell him that it
is the king who sends for him, and that he has never
cried in all his life and cannot bear anyone else
to do so.’ On receiving this message the
boy dried his tears and went with the servant to the
royal carriage. ‘Will you be my son?’
asked the king.
‘Yes, if my mother will let
me,’ answered the boy. And the king bade
the servant go back to the mother and say that if
she would give her boy to him, he should live in the
palace and marry his prettiest daughter as soon as
he was a man.
The widow’s anger now turned
into joy, and she came running to the splendid coach
and kissed the king’s hand. ’I hope
you will be more obedient to his Majesty than you
were to me,’ she said; and the boy shrank away
half-frightened. But when she had gone back to
her cottage, he asked the king if he might fetch something
that he had left in the garden, and when he was given
permission, he pulled up his little sword, which he
slid into the scabbard.
Then he climbed into the coach and was driven away.
After they had gone some distance
the king said: ’Why were you crying so
bitterly in the garden just now?’
‘Because my mother had been beating me,’
replied the boy.
‘And what did she do that for?’ asked
the king again.
‘Because I would not tell her my dream.’
‘And why wouldn’t you tell it to her?’
‘Because I will never tell it
to anyone till it comes true,’ answered the
boy.
‘And won’t you tell it to me either?’
asked the king in surprise.
‘No, not even to you, your Majesty,’ replied
he.
‘Oh, I am sure you will when
we get home,’ said the king smiling, and he
talked to him about other things till they came to
the palace.
‘I have brought you such a nice
present,’ he said to his daughters, and as the
boy was very pretty they were delighted to have him
and gave him all their best toys.
‘You must not spoil him,’
observed the king one day, when he had been watching
them playing together. He has a secret which he
won’t tell to anyone.’
‘He will tell me,’ answered
the eldest princess; but the boy only shook his head.
‘He will tell me,’ said the second girl.
‘Not I,’ replied the boy.
‘He will tell me,’ cried the youngest,
who was the prettiest too.
‘I will tell nobody till it
comes true,’ said the boy, as he had said before;
‘and I will beat anybody who asks me.’
The king was very sorry when he heard
this, for he loved the boy dearly; but he thought
it would never do to keep anyone near him who would
not do as he was bid. So he commanded his servants
to take him away and not to let him enter the palace
again until he had come to his right senses.
The sword clanked loudly as the boy
was led away, but the child said nothing, though he
was very unhappy at being treated so badly when he
had done nothing. However, the servants were very
kind to him, and their children brought him fruit
and all sorts of nice things, and he soon grew merry
again, and lived amongst them for many years till his
seventeenth birthday.
Meanwhile the two eldest princesses
had become women, and had married two powerful kings
who ruled over great countries across the sea.
The youngest one was old enough to be married too,
but she was very particular, and turned up her nose
at all the young princes who had sought her hand.
One day she was sitting in the palace
feeling rather dull and lonely, and suddenly she began
to wonder what the servants were doing, and whether
it was not more amusing down in their quarters.
The king was at his council and the queen was ill
in bed, so there was no one to stop the princess,
and she hastily ran across the gardens to the houses
where the servants lived. Outside she noticed
a youth who was handsomer than any prince she had
ever seen, and in a moment she knew him to be the
little boy she had once played with.
‘Tell me your secret and I will
marry you,’ she said to him; but the boy only
gave her the beating he had promised her long ago,
when she asked him the same question. The girl
was very angry, besides being hurt, and ran home to
complain to her father.
‘If he had a thousand souls,
I would kill them all,’ swore the king.
That very day a gallows was built
outside the town, and all the people crowded round
to see the execution of the young man who had dared
to beat the king’s daughter. The prisoner,
with his hands tied behind his back, was brought out
by the hangman, and amidst dead silence his sentence
was being read by the judge when suddenly the sword
clanked against his side. Instantly a great noise
was heard and a golden coach rumbled over the stones,
with a white flag waving out of the window. It
stopped underneath the gallows, and from it stepped
the king of the Magyars, who begged that the life
of the boy might be spared.
’Sir, he has beaten my daughter,
who only asked him to tell her his secret. I
cannot pardon that,’ answered the princess’s
father.
’Give him to me, I’m sure
he will tell me the secret; or, if not, I have a daughter
who is like the Morning Star, and he is sure to tell
it to her.’
The sword clanked for the third time,
and the king said angrily: ’Well, if you
want him so much you can have him; only never let me
see his face again.’ And he made a sign
to the hangman. The bandage was removed from
the young man’s eyes, and the cords from his
wrists, and he took his seat in the golden coach beside
the king of the Magyars. Then the coachman whipped
up his horses, and they set out for Buda.
The king talked very pleasantly for
a few miles, and when he thought that his new companion
was quite at ease with him, he asked him what was
the secret which had brought him into such trouble.
’That I cannot tell you,’ answered the
youth, ‘until it comes true.’
‘You will tell my daughter,’ said the
king, smiling.
‘I will tell nobody,’
replied the youth, and as he spoke the sword clanked
loudly. The king said no more, but trusted to
his daughter’s beauty to get the secret from
him.
The journey to Buda was long, and
it was several days before they arrived there.
The beautiful princess happened to be picking roses
in the garden, when her father’s coach drove
up.
‘Oh, what a handsome youth!
Have you brought him from fairyland?’ cried
she, when they all stood upon the marble steps in front
of the castle.
‘I have brought him from the
gallows,’ answered the king; rather vexed at
his daughter’s words, as never before had she
consented to speak to any man.
‘I don’t care where you
brought him from,’ said the spoilt girl.
’I will marry him and nobody else, and we will
live together till we die.’
‘You will tell another tale,’
replied the king, ’when you ask him his secret.
After all he is no better than a servant.’
‘That is nothing to me,’
said the princess, ’for I love him. He will
tell his secret to me, and will find a place in the
middle of my heart.’
But the king shook his head, and gave
orders that the lad was to be lodged in the summer-house.
One day, about a week later, the princess
put on her finest dress, and went to pay him a visit.
She looked so beautiful that, at the sight of her,
the book dropped from his hand, and he stood up speechless.
’Tell me,’ she said, coaxingly, ’what
is this wonderful secret? Just whisper it in
my ear, and I will give you a kiss.’
‘My angel,’ he answered,
’be wise, and ask no questions, if you wish to
get safely back to your father’s palace; I have
kept my secret all these years, and do not mean to
tell it now.’
However, the girl would not listen,
and went on pressing him, till at last he slapped
her face so hard that her nose bled. She shrieked
with pain and rage, and ran screaming back to the
palace, where her father was waiting to hear if she
had succeeded. ’I will starve you to death,
you son of a dragon,’ cried he, when he saw her
dress streaming with blood; and he ordered all the
masons and bricklayers in the town to come before
him.
‘Build me a tower as fast as
you can,’ he said, ’and see that there
is room for a stool and a small table, and for nothing
else. The men set to work, and in two hours the
tower was built, and they proceeded to the palace
to inform the king that his commands were fulfilled.
On the way they met the princess, who began to talk
to one of the masons, and when the rest were out of
hearing she asked if he could manage to make a hole
in the tower, which nobody could see, large enough
for a bottle of wine and some food to pass through.
‘To be sure I can,’ said
the mason, turning back, and in a few minutes the
hole was bored.
At sunset a large crowd assembled
to watch the youth being led to the tower, and after
his misdeeds had been proclaimed he was solemnly walled
up. But every morning the princess passed him
in food through the hole, and every third day the
king sent his secretary to climb up a ladder and look
down through a little window to see if he was dead.
But the secretary always brought back the report that
he was fat and rosy.
‘There is some magic about this,’ said
the king.
This state of affairs lasted some
time, till one day a messenger arrived from the Sultan
bearing a letter for the king, and also three canes.
’My master bids me say,’ said the messenger,
bowing low, ’that if you cannot tell him which
of these three canes grows nearest the root, which
in the middle, and which at the top, he will declare
war against you.
The king was very much frightened
when he heard this, and though he took the canes and
examined them closely, he could see no difference between
them. He looked so sad that his daughter noticed
it, and inquired the reason.
‘Alas! my daughter,’ he
answered, ’how can I help being sad? The
Sultan has sent me three canes, and says that if I
cannot tell him which of them grows near the root,
which in the middle, and which at the top, he will
make war upon me. And you know that his army is
far greater than mine.’
‘Oh, do not despair, my father,’
said she. ’We shall be sure to find out
the answer’; and she ran away to the tower, and
told the young man what had occurred.
‘Go to bed as usual,’
replied he, ’and when you wake, tell your father
that you have dreamed that the canes must be placed
in warm water. After a little while one will
sink to the bottom; that is the one that grows nearest
the root. The one which neither sinks nor comes
to the surface is the cane that is cut from the middle;
and the one that floats is from the top.’
So, the next morning, the princess
told her father of her dream, and by her advice he
cut notches in each of the canes when he took them
out of the water, so that he might make no mistake
when he handed them back to the messenger. The
Sultan could not imagine how he had found out, but
he did not declare war.
The following year the Sultan again
wanted to pick a quarrel with the king of the Magyars,
so he sent another messenger to him with three foals,
begging him to say which of the animals was born in
the morning, which at noon, and which in the evening.
If an answer was not ready in three days, war would
be declared at once. The king’s heart sank
when he read the letter. He could not expect
his daughter to be lucky enough to dream rightly a
second time, and as a plague had been raging through
the country, and had carried off many of his soldiers,
his army was even weaker than before. At this
thought his face became so gloomy that his daughter
noticed it, and inquired what was the matter.
‘I have had another letter from
the Sultan,’ replied the king, ’and he
says that if I cannot tell him which of three foals
was born in the morning, which at noon, and which
in the evening, he will declare war at once.’
‘Oh, don’t be cast down,’
said she, ‘something is sure to happen’;
and she ran down to the tower to consult the youth.
’Go home, idol of my heart,
and when night comes, pretend to scream out in your
sleep, so that your father hears you. Then tell
him that you have dreamt that he was just being carried
off by the Turks because he could not answer the question
about the foals, when the lad whom he had shut up
in the tower ran up and told them which was foaled
in the morning, which at noon, and which in the evening.’
So the princess did exactly as the
youth had bidden her; and no sooner had she spoken
than the king ordered the tower to be pulled down,
and the prisoner brought before him.
‘I did not think that you could
have lived so long without food,’ said he, ’and
as you have had plenty of time to repent your wicked
conduct, I will grant you pardon, on condition that
you help me in a sore strait. Read this letter
from the Sultan; you will see that if I fail to answer
his question about the foals, a dreadful war will be
the result.’
The youth took the letter and read
it through. ‘Yes, I can help you,’
replied he; ’but first you must bring me three
troughs, all exactly alike. Into one you must
put oats, into another wheat, and into the third barley.
The foal which eats the oats is that which was foaled
in the morning; the foal which eats the wheat is that
which was foaled at noon; and the foal which eats
the barley is that which was foaled at night.’
The king followed the youth’s directions, and,
marking the foals, sent them back to Turkey, and there
was no war that year.
Now the Sultan was very angry that
both his plots to get possession of Hungary had been
such total failures, and he sent for his aunt, who
was a witch, to consult her as to what he should do
next.
‘It is not the king who has
answered your questions,’ observed the aunt,
when he had told his story. ’He is far too
stupid ever to have done that! The person who
has found out the puzzle is the son of a poor woman,
who, if he lives, will become King of Hungary.
Therefore, if you want the crown yourself, you must
get him here and kill him.’
After this conversation another letter
was written to the Court of Hungary, saying that if
the youth, now in the palace, was not sent to Turkey
within three days, a large army would cross the border.
The king’s heart was sorrowful as he read, for
he was grateful to the lad for what he had done to
help him; but the boy only laughed, and bade the king
fear nothing, but to search the town instantly for
two youths just like each other, and he would paint
himself a mask that was just like them. And the
sword at his side clanked loudly.
After a long search twin brothers
were found, so exactly resembling each other that
even their own mother could not tell the difference.
The youth painted a mask that was the precise copy
of them, and when he had put it on, no one would have
known one boy from the other. They set out at
once for the Sultan’s palace, and when they reached
it, they were taken straight into his presence.
He made a sign for them to come near; they all bowed
low in greeting. He asked them about their journey;
they answered his questions all together, and in the
same words. If one sat down to supper, the others
sat down at the same instant. When one got up,
the others got up too, as if there had been only one
body between them. The Sultan could not detect
any difference between them, and he told his aunt
that he would not be so cruel as to kill all three.
‘Well, you will see a difference
to-morrow,’ replied the witch, ’for one
will have a cut on his sleeve. That is the youth
you must kill.’ And one hour before midnight,
when witches are invisible, she glided into the room
where all three lads were sleeping in the same bed.
She took out a pair of scissors and cut a small piece
out of the boy’s coat-sleeve which was hanging
on the wall, and then crept silently from the room.
But in the morning the youth saw the slit, and he marked
the sleeves of his two companions in the same way,
and all three went down to breakfast with the Sultan.
The old witch was standing in the window and pretended
not to see them; but all witches have eyes in the backs
of their heads, and she knew at once that not one
sleeve but three were cut, and they were all as alike
as before. After breakfast, the Sultan, who was
getting tired of the whole affair and wanted to be
alone to invent some other plan, told them they might
return home. So, bowing low with one accord,
they went.
The princess welcomed the boy back
joyfully, but the poor youth was not allowed to rest
long in peace, for one day a fresh letter arrived from
the Sultan, saying that he had discovered that the
young man was a very dangerous person, and that he
must be sent to Turkey at once, and alone. The
girl burst into tears when the boy told her what was
in the letter which her father had bade her to carry
to him. ’Do not weep, love of my heart,’
said the boy, ’all will be well. I will
start at sunrise to-morrow.’
So next morning at sunrise the youth
set forth, and in a few days he reached the Sultan’s
palace. The old witch was waiting for him at the
gate, and whispered as he passed: ’This
is the last time you will ever enter it.’
But the sword clanked, and the lad did not even look
at her. As he crossed the threshold fifteen armed
Turks barred his way, with the Sultan at their head.
Instantly the sword darted forth and cut off the heads
of everyone but the Sultan, and then went quietly back
to its scabbard. The witch, who was looking on,
saw that as long as the youth had possession of the
sword, all her schemes would be in vain, and tried
to steal the sword in the night, but it only jumped
out of its scabbard and sliced off her nose, which
was of iron. And in the morning, when the Sultan
brought a great army to capture the lad and deprive
him of his sword, they were all cut to pieces, while
he remained without a scratch.
Meanwhile the princess was in despair
because the days slipped by, and the young man did
not return, and she never rested until her father let
her lead some troops against the Sultan. She rode
proudly before them, dressed in uniform; but they
had not left the town more than a mile behind them,
when they met the lad and his little sword. When
he told them what he had done they shouted for joy,
and carried him back in triumph to the palace; and
the king declared that as the youth had shown himself
worthy to become his son-in-law, he should marry the
princess and succeed to the throne at once, as he
himself was getting old, and the cares of government
were too much for him. But the young man said
he must first go and see his mother, and the king
sent him in state, with a troop of soldiers as his
bodyguard.
The old woman was quite frightened
at seeing such an array draw up before her little
house, and still more surprised when a handsome young
man, whom she did not know, dismounted and kissed her
hand, saying: ’Now, dear mother, you shall
hear my secret at last! I dreamed that I should
become King of Hungary, and my dream has come true.
When I was a child, and you begged me to tell you,
I had to keep silence, or the Magyar king would have
killed me. And if you had not beaten me nothing
would have happened that has happened, and I should
not now be King of Hungary.’
[From the Folk Tales of the Magyars.]