Once upon a time there was an old
man who lived in a little hut in the middle of a forest.
His wife was dead, and he had only one son, whom he
loved dearly. Near their hut was a group of birch
trees, in which some black-game had made their nests,
and the youth had often begged his father’s
permission to shoot the birds, but the old man always
strictly forbade him to do anything of the kind.
One day, however, when the father
had gone to a little distance to collect some sticks
for the fire, the boy fetched his bow, and shot at
a bird that was just flying towards its nest.
But he had not taken proper aim, and the bird was
only wounded, and fluttered along the ground.
The boy ran to catch it, but though he ran very fast,
and the bird seemed to flutter along very slowly,
he never could quite come up with it; it was always
just a little in advance. But so absorbed was
he in the chase that he did not notice for some time
that he was now deep in the forest, in a place where
he had never been before. Then he felt it would
be foolish to go any further, and he turned to find
his way home.
He thought it would be easy enough
to follow the path along which he had come, but somehow
it was always branching off in unexpected directions.
He looked about for a house where he might stop and
ask his way, but there was not a sign of one anywhere,
and he was afraid to stand still, for it was cold,
and there were many stories of wolves being seen in
that part of the forest. Night fell, and he was
beginning to start at every sound, when suddenly a
magician came running towards him, with a pack of
wolves snapping at his heels. Then all the boy’s
courage returned to him. He took his bow, and
aiming an arrow at the largest wolf, shot him through
the heart, and a few more arrows soon put the rest
to flight. The magician was full of gratitude
to his deliverer, and promised him a reward for his
help if the youth would go back with him to his house.
’Indeed there is nothing that
would be more welcome to me than a night’s lodging,’
answered the boy; ’I have been wandering all
day in the forest, and did not know how to get home
again.
‘Come with me, you must be hungry
as well as tired,’ said the magician, and led
the way to his house, where the guest flung himself
on a bed, and went fast asleep. But his host
returned to the forest to get some food, for the larder
was empty.
While he was absent the housekeeper
went to the boy’s room and tried to wake him.
She stamped on the floor, and shook him and called
to him, telling him that he was in great danger, and
must take flight at once. But nothing would rouse
him, and if he did ever open his eyes he shut them
again directly.
Soon after, the magician came back
from the forest, and told the housekeeper to bring
them something to eat. The meal was quickly ready,
and the magician called to the boy to come down and
eat it, but he could not be wakened, and they had
to sit down to supper without him. By-and-by
the magician went out into the wood again for some
more hunting, and on his return he tried afresh to
waken the youth. But finding it quite impossible,
he went back for the third time to the forest.
While he was absent the boy woke up
and dressed himself. Then he came downstairs
and began to talk to the housekeeper. The girl
had heard how he had saved her master’s life,
so she said nothing more about his running away, but
instead told him that if the magician offered him the
choice of a reward, he was to ask for the horse which
stood in the third stall of the stable.
By-and-by the old man came back and
they all sat down to dinner. When they had finished
the magician said: ’Now, my son, tell me
what you will have as the reward of your courage?’
‘Give me the horse that stands
in the third stall of your stable,’ answered
the youth. ’For I have a long way to go
before I get home, and my feet will not carry me so
far.’
‘Ah! my son,’ replied
the magician, ’it is the best horse in my stable
that you want! Will not anything else please you
as well?’
But the youth declared that it was
the horse, and the horse only, that he desired, and
in the end the old man gave way. And besides the
horse, the magician gave him a zither, a fiddle, and
a flute, saying: ’If you are in danger,
touch the zither; and if no one comes to your aid,
then play on the fiddle; but if that brings no help,
blow on the flute.’
The youth thanked the magician, and
fastening his treasures about him mounted the horse
and rode off. He had already gone some miles when,
to his great surprise, the horse spoke, and said:
’It is no use your returning home just now,
your father will only beat you. Let us visit a
few towns first, and something lucky will be sure to
happen to us.’
This advice pleased the boy, for he
felt himself almost a man by this time, and thought
it was high time he saw the world. When they entered
the capital of the country everyone stopped to admire
the beauty of the horse. Even the king heard
of it, and came to see the splendid creature with
his own eyes. Indeed, he wanted directly to buy
it, and told the youth he would give any price he
liked. The young man hesitated for a moment,
but before he could speak, the horse contrived to whisper
to him:
’Do not sell me, but ask the
king to take me to his stable, and feed me there;
then his other horses will become just as beautiful
as I.’
The king was delighted when he was
told what the horse had said, and took the animal
at once to the stables, and placed it in his own particular
stall. Sure enough, the horse had scarcely eaten
a mouthful of corn out of the manger, when the rest
of the horses seemed to have undergone a transformation.
Some of them were old favourites which the king had
ridden in many wars, and they bore the signs of age
and of service. But now they arched their heads,
and pawed the ground with their slender legs as they
had been wont to do in days long gone by. The
king’s heart beat with delight, but the old groom
who had had the care of them stood crossly by, and
eyed the owner of this wonderful creature with hate
and envy. Not a day passed without his bringing
some story against the youth to his master, but the
king understood all about the matter and paid no attention.
At last the groom declared that the young man had
boasted that he could find the king’s war horse
which had strayed into the forest several years ago,
and had not been heard of since. Now the king
had never ceased to mourn for his horse, so this time
he listened to the tale which the groom had invented,
and sent for the youth. ‘Find me my horse
in three days,’ said he, ’or it will be
the worse for you.’
The youth was thunderstruck at this
command, but he only bowed, and went off at once to
the stable.
‘Do not worry yourself,’
answered his own horse. ’Ask the king to
give you a hundred oxen, and to let them be killed
and cut into small pieces. Then we will start
on our journey, and ride till we reach a certain river.
There a horse will come up to you, but take no notice
of him. Soon another will appear, and this also
you must leave alone, but when the third horse shows
itself, throw my bridle over it.’
Everything happened just as the horse
had said, and the third horse was safely bridled.
Then the other horse spoke again: ’The magician’s
raven will try to eat us as we ride away, but throw
it some of the oxen’s flesh, and then I will
gallop like the wind, and carry you safe out of the
dragon’s clutches.’
So the young man did as he was told,
and brought the horse back to the king.
The old stableman was very jealous,
when he heard of it, and wondered what he could do
to injure the youth in the eyes of his royal master.
At last he hit upon a plan, and told the king that
the young man had boasted that he could bring home
the king’s wife, who had vanished many months
before, without leaving a trace behind her. Then
the king bade the young man come into his presence,
and desired him to fetch the queen home again, as
he had boasted he could do. And if he failed,
his head would pay the penalty.
The poor youth’s heart stood
still as he listened. Find the queen? But
how was he to do that, when nobody in the palace had
been able to do so! Slowly he walked to the stable,
and laying his head on his horse’s shoulder,
he said: ’The king has ordered me to bring
his wife home again, and how can I do that when she
disappeared so long ago, and no one can tell me anything
about her?’
‘Cheer up!’ answered the
horse, ’we will manage to find her. You
have only got to ride me back to the same river that
we went to yesterday, and I will plunge into it and
take my proper shape again. For I am the king’s
wife, who was turned into a horse by the magician from
whom you saved me.’
Joyfully the young man sprang into
the saddle and rode away to the banks of the river.
Then he threw himself off, and waited while the horse
plunged in. The moment it dipped its head into
the water its black skin vanished, and the most beautiful
woman in the world was floating on the water.
She came smiling towards the youth, and held out her
hand, and he took it and led her back to the palace.
Great was the king’s surprise and happiness
when he beheld his lost wife stand before him, and
in gratitude to her rescuer he loaded him with gifts.
You would have thought that after
this the poor youth would have been left in peace;
but no, his enemy the stableman hated him as much as
ever, and laid a new plot for his undoing. This
time he presented himself before the king and told
him that the youth was so puffed up with what he had
done that he had declared he would seize the king’s
throne for himself.
At this news the king waxed so furious
that he ordered a gallows to be erected at once, and
the young man to be hanged without a trial. He
was not even allowed to speak in his own defence,
but on the very steps of the gallows he sent a message
to the king and begged, as a last favour, that he
might play a tune on his zither. Leave was given
him, and taking the instrument from under his cloak
he touched the strings. Scarcely had the first
notes sounded than the hangman and his helper began
to dance, and the louder grew the music the higher
they capered, till at last they cried for mercy.
But the youth paid no heed, and the tunes rang out
more merrily than before, and by the time the sun
set they both sank on the ground exhausted, and declared
that the hanging must be put off till to-morrow.
The story of the zither soon spread
through the town, and on the following morning the
king and his whole court and a large crowd of people
were gathered at the foot of the gallows to see the
youth hanged. Once more he asked a favour permission
to play on his fiddle, and this the king was graciously
pleased to grant. But with the first notes, the
leg of every man in the crowd was lifted high, and
they danced to the sound of the music the whole day
till darkness fell, and there was no light to hang
the musician by.
The third day came, and the youth
asked leave to play on his flute. ’No,
no,’ said the king, ’you made me dance
all day yesterday, and if I do it again it will certainly
be my death. You shall play no more tunes.
Quick! the rope round his neck.’
At these words the young man looked
so sorrowful that the courtiers said to the king:
’He is very young to die. Let him play a
tune if it will make him happy.’ So, very
unwillingly, the king gave him leave; but first he
had himself bound to a big fir tree, for fear that
he should be made to dance.
When he was made fast, the young man
began to blow softly on his flute, and bound though
he was, the king’s body moved to the sound, up
and down the fir tree till his clothes were in tatters,
and the skin nearly rubbed off his back. But
the youth had no pity, and went on blowing, till suddenly
the old magician appeared and asked: ’What
danger are you in, my son, that you have sent for
me?’
‘They want to hang me,’
answered the young man; ’the gallows are all
ready and the hangman is only waiting for me to stop
playing.’
‘Oh, I will put that right,’
said the magician; and taking the gallows, he tore
it up and flung it into the air, and no one knows where
it came down. ‘Who has ordered you to be
hanged?’ asked he.
The young man pointed to the king,
who was still bound to the fir; and without wasting
words the magician took hold of the tree also, and
with a mighty heave both fir and man went spinning
through the air, and vanished in the clouds after
the gallows.
Then the youth was declared to be
free, and the people elected him for their king; and
the stable helper drowned himself from envy, for, after
all, if it had not been for him the young man would
have remained poor all the days of his life.
[From Finnische Mahrchen.]