Once upon a time the things in this
story happened, and if they had not happened then
the story would never have been told. But that
was the time when wolves and lambs lay peacefully
together in one stall, and shepherds dined on grassy
banks with kings and queens.
Once upon a time, then, my dear good
children, there lived a man. Now this man was
really a hundred years old, if not fully twenty years
more. And his wife was very old too how
old I do not know; but some said she was as old as
the goddess Venus herself. They had been very
happy all these years, but they would have been happier
still if they had had any children; but old though
they were they had never made up their minds to do
without them, and often they would sit over the fire
and talk of how they would have brought up their children
if only some had come to their house.
One day the old man seemed sadder
and more thoughtful than was common with him, and
at last he said to his wife: ‘Listen to
me, old woman!’
‘What do you want?’ asked she.
’Get me some money out of the
chest, for I am going a long journey all
through the world to see if I cannot find
a child, for my heart aches to think that after I
am dead my house will fall into the hands of a stranger.
And this let me tell you: that if I never find
a child I shall not come home again.’
Then the old man took a bag and filled
it with food and money, and throwing it over his shoulders,
bade his wife farewell.
For long he wandered, and wandered,
and wandered, but no child did he see; and one morning
his wanderings led him to a forest which was so thick
with trees that no light could pass through the branches.
The old man stopped when he saw this dreadful place,
and at first was afraid to go in; but he remembered
that, after all, as the proverb says: ’It
is the unexpected that happens,’ and perhaps
in the midst of this black spot he might find the
child he was seeking. So summoning up all his
courage he plunged boldly in.
How long he might have been walking
there he never could have told you, when at last he
reached the mouth of a cave where the darkness seemed
a hundred times darker than the wood itself.
Again he paused, but he felt as if something was driving
him to enter, and with a beating heart he stepped
in.
For some minutes the silence and darkness
so appalled him that he stood where he was, not daring
to advance one step. Then he made a great effort
and went on a few paces, and suddenly, far before him,
he saw the glimmer of a light. This put new heart
into him, and he directed his steps straight towards
the faint rays, till he could see, sitting by it,
an old hermit, with a long white beard.
The hermit either did not hear the
approach of his visitor, or pretended not to do so,
for he took no notice, and continued to read his book.
After waiting patiently for a little while, the old
man fell on his knees, and said: ‘Good
morning, holy father!’ But he might as well have
spoken to the rock. ‘Good morning, holy
father,’ he said again, a little louder than
before, and this time the hermit made a sign to him
to come nearer. ‘My son,’ whispered
he, in a voice that echoed through the cavern, ’what
brings you to this dark and dismal place? Hundreds
of years have passed since my eyes have rested on
the face of a man, and I did not think to look on
one again.’.
‘My misery has brought me here,’
replied the old man; ’I have no child, and all
our lives my wife and I have longed for one. So
I left my home, and went out into the world, hoping
that somewhere I might find what I was seeking.’
Then the hermit picked up an apple
from the ground, and gave it to him, saying:
’Eat half of this apple, and give the rest to
your wife, and cease wandering through the world.’
The old man stooped and kissed the
feet of the hermit for sheer joy, and left the cave.
He made his way through the forest as fast as the
darkness would let him, and at length arrived in flowery
fields, which dazzled him with their brightness.
Suddenly he was seized with a desperate thirst, and
a burning in his throat. He looked for a stream
but none was to be seen, and his tongue grew more parched
every moment. At length his eyes fell on the
apple, which all this while he had been holding in
his hand, and in his thirst he forgot what the hermit
had told him, and instead of eating merely his own
half, he ate up the old woman’s also; after
that he went to sleep.
When he woke up he saw something strange
lying on a bank a little way off, amidst long trails
of pink roses. The old man got up, rubbed his
eyes, and went to see what it was, when, to his surprise
and joy, it proved to be a little girl about two years
old, with a skin as pink and white as the roses above
her. He took her gently in his arms, but she
did not seem at all frightened, and only jumped and
crowed with delight; and the old man wrapped his cloak
round her, and set off for home as fast as his legs
would carry him.
When they were close to the cottage
where they lived he laid the child in a pail that
was standing near the door, and ran into the house,
crying: ’Come quickly, wife, quickly, for
I have brought you a daughter, with hair of gold and
eyes like stars!’
At this wonderful news the old woman
flew downstairs, almost tumbling down ill her eagerness
to see the treasure; but when her husband led her
to the pail it was perfectly empty! The old man
was nearly beside himself with horror, while his wife
sat down and sobbed with grief and disappointment.
There was not a spot round about which they did not
search, thinking that somehow the child might have
got out of the pail and hidden itself for fun; but
the little girl was not there, and there was no sign
of her.
‘Where can she be?’ moaned
the old man, in despair. ’Oh, why did I
ever leave her, even for a moment? Have the fairies
taken her, or has some wild beast carried her off?’
And they began their search all over again; but neither
fairies nor wild beasts did they meet with, and with
sore hearts they gave it up at last and turned sadly
into the hut.
And what had become of the baby?
Well, finding herself left alone in a strange place
she began to cry with fright, and an eagle hovering
near, heard her, and went to see what the sound came
from. When he beheld the fat pink and white creature
he thought of his hungry little ones at home, and
swooping down he caught her up in his claws and was
soon flying with her over the tops of the trees.
In a few minutes he reached the one in which he had
built his nest, and laying little Wildrose (for so
the old man had called her) among his downy young eaglets,
he flew away. The eaglets naturally were rather
surprised at this strange animal, so suddenly popped
down in their midst, but instead of beginning to eat
her, as their father expected, they nestled up close
to her and spread out their tiny wings to shield her
from the sun.
Now, in the depths of the forest where
the eagle had built his nest, there ran a stream whose
waters were poisonous, and on the banks of this stream
dwelt a horrible lindworm with seven heads. The
lindworm had often watched the eagle flying about
the top of the tree, carrying food to his young ones
and, accordingly, he watched carefully for the moment
when the eaglets began to try their wings and to fly
away from the nest. Of course, if the eagle himself
was there to protect them even the lindworm, big and
strong as he was, knew that he could do nothing; but
when he was absent, any little eaglets who ventured
too near the ground would be sure to disappear down
the monster’s throat. Their brothers, who
had been left behind as too young and weak to see the
world, knew nothing of all this, but supposed their
turn would soon come to see the world also. And
in a few days their eyes, too, opened and their wings
flapped impatiently, and they longed to fly away above
the waving tree-tops to mountain and the bright sun
beyond. But that very midnight the lindworm,
who was hungry and could not wait for his supper, came
out of the brook with a rushing noise, and made straight
for the tree. Two eyes of flame came creeping
nearer, nearer, and two fiery tongues were stretching
themselves out closer, closer, to the little birds
who were trembling and shuddering in the farthest
corner of the nest. But just as the tongues had
almost reached them, the lindworm gave a fearful cry,
and turned and fell backwards. Then came the sound
of battle from the ground below, and the tree shook,
though there was no wind, and roars and snarls mixed
together, till the eaglets felt more frightened than
ever, and thought their last hour had come. Only
Wildrose was undisturbed, and slept sweetly through
it all.
In the morning the eagle returned
and saw traces of a fight below the tree, and here
and there a handful of yellow mane lying about, and
here and there a hard scaly substance; when he saw
that he rejoiced greatly, and hastened to the nest.
‘Who has slain the lindworm?’
he asked of his children; there were so many that
he did not at first miss the two which the lindworm
had eaten. But the eaglets answered that they
could not tell, only that they had been in danger
of their lives, and at the last moment they had been
delivered. Then the sunbeam had struggled through
the thick branches and caught Wildrose’s golden
hair as she lay curled up in the corner, and the eagle
wondered, as he looked, whether the little girl had
brought him luck, and it was her magic which had killed
his enemy.
‘Children,’ he said, ’I
brought her here for your dinner, and you have not
touched her; what is the meaning of this?’ But
the eaglets did not answer, and Wildrose opened her
eyes, and seemed seven times lovelier than before.
From that day Wildrose lived like
a little princess. The eagle flew about the wood
and collected the softest, greenest moss he could find
to make her a bed, and then he picked with his beak
all the brightest and prettiest flowers in the fields
or on the mountains to decorate it. So cleverly
did he manage it that there was not a fairy in the
whole of the forest who would not have been pleased
to sleep there, rocked to and fro by the breeze on
the treetops. And when the little ones were able
to fly from their nest he taught them where to look
for the fruits and berries which she loved.
So the time passed by, and with each
year Wildrose grew taller and more beautiful, and
she lived happily in her nest and never wanted to go
out of it, only standing at the edge in the sunset,
and looking upon the beautiful world. For company
she had all the birds in the forest, who came and
talked to her, and for playthings the strange flowers
which they brought her from far, and the butterflies
which danced with her. And so the days slipped
away, and she was fourteen years old.
One morning the emperor’s son
went out to hunt, and he had not ridden far, before
a deer started from under a grove of trees, and ran
before him. The prince instantly gave chase, and
where the stag led he followed, till at length he
found himself in the depths of the forest, where no
man before had trod.
The trees were so thick and the wood
so dark, that he paused for a moment and listened,
straining his ears to catch some sound to break a
silence which almost frightened him. But nothing
came, not even the baying of a hound or the note of
a horn. He stood still, and wondered if he should
go on, when, on looking up, a stream of light seemed
to flow from the top of a tall tree. In its rays
he could see the nest with the young eaglets, who
were watching him over the side. The prince fitted
an arrow into his bow and took his aim, but, before
he could let fly, another ray of light dazzled him;
so brilliant was it, that his bow dropped, and he
covered his face with his hands. When at last
he ventured to peep, Wildrose, with her golden hair
flowing round her, was looking at him. This was
the first time she had seen a man.
‘Tell me how I can reach you?’
cried he; but Wildrose smiled and shook her head,
and sat down quietly.
The prince saw that it was no use,
and turned and made his way out of the forest.
But he might as well have stayed there, for any good
he was to his father, so full was his heart of longing
for Wildrose. Twice he returned to the forest
in the hopes of finding her, but this time fortune
failed him, and he went home as sad as ever.
At length the emperor, who could not
think what had caused this change, sent for his son
and asked him what was the matter. Then the prince
confessed that the image of Wildrose filled his soul,
and that he would never be happy without her.
At first the emperor felt rather distressed.
He doubted whether a girl from a tree top would make
a good empress; but he loved his son so much that
he promised to do all he could to find her. So
the next morning heralds were sent forth throughout
the whole land to inquire if anyone knew where a maiden
could be found who lived in a forest on the top of
a tree, and to promise great riches and a place at
court to any person who should find her. But nobody
knew. All the girls in the kingdom had their
homes on the ground, and laughed at the notion of
being brought up in a tree. ’A nice kind
of empress she would make,’ they said, as the
emperor had done, tossing their heads with disdain;
for, having read many books, they guessed what she
was wanted for.
The heralds were almost in despair,
when an old woman stepped out of the crowd and came
and spoke to them. She was not only very old,
but she was very ugly, with a hump on her back and
a bald head, and when the heralds saw her they broke
into rude laughter. ’I can show you the
maiden who lives in the tree-top,’ she said,
but they only laughed the more loudly.
‘Get away, old witch!’
they cried, ‘you will bring us bad luck’;
but the old woman stood firm, and declared that she
alone knew where to find the maiden.
‘Go with her,’ said the
eldest of the heralds at last. ’The emperor’s
orders are clear, that whoever knew anything of the
maiden was to come at once to court. Put her
in the coach and take her with us.’
So in this fashion the old woman was brought to court.
‘You have declared that you
can bring hither the maiden from the wood?’
said the emperor, who was seated on his throne.
‘Yes, your Majesty, and I will keep my word,’
said she.
‘Then bring her at once,’ said the emperor.
‘Give me first a kettle and
a tripod,’ asked the old w omen, and the emperor
ordered them to be brought instantly. The old
woman picked them up, and tucking them under her arm
went on her way, keeping at a little distance behind
the royal huntsmen, who in their turn followed the
prince.
Oh, what a noise that old woman made
as she walked along! She chattered to herself
so fast and clattered her kettle so loudly that you
would have thought that a whole campful of gipsies
must be coming round the next corner. But when
they reached the forest, she bade them all wait outside,
and entered the dark wood by herself.
She stopped underneath the tree where
the maiden dwelt and, gathering some dry sticks, kindled
a fire. Next, she placed the tripod over it,
and the kettle on top. But something was the matter
with the kettle. As fast as the old woman put
it where it was to stand, that kettle was sure to
roll off, falling to the ground with a crash.
It really seemed bewitched, and no
one knows what might have happened if Wildrose, who
had been all the time peeping out of her nest, had
not lost patience at the old woman’s stupidity,
and cried out: ’The tripod won’t
stand on that hill, you must move it!’
‘But where am I to move it to,
my child?’ asked the old woman, looking up to
the nest, and at the same moment trying to steady the
kettle with one hand and the tripod with the other.
‘Didn’t I tell you that
it was no good doing that,’ said Wildrose, more
impatiently than before. ’Make a fire near
a tree and hang the kettle from one of the branches.’
The old woman took the kettle and
hung it on a little twig, which broke at once, and
the kettle fell to the ground.
‘If you would only show me how
to do it, perhaps I should understand,’ said
she.
Quick as thought, the maiden slid
down the smooth trunk of the tree, and stood beside
the stupid old woman, to teach her how things ought
to be done. But in an instant the old woman had
caught up the girl and swung her over her shoulders,
and was running as fast as she could go to the edge
of the forest, where she had left the prince.
When he saw them coming he rushed eagerly to meet
them, and he took the maiden in his arms and kissed
her tenderly before them all. Then a golden dress
was put on her, and pearls were twined in her hair,
and she took her seat in the emperor’s carriage
which was drawn by six of the whitest horses in the
world, and they carried her, without stopping to draw
breath, to the gates of the palace. And in three
days the wedding was celebrated, and the wedding feast
was held, and everyone who saw the bride declared that
if anybody wanted a perfect wife they must go to seek
her on top of a tree.
[ Adapted from file Roumanian.]