Once upon a time, in the very middle
of the middle of a large kingdom, there was a town,
and in the town a palace, and in the palace a king.
This king had one son whom his father thought was wiser
and cleverer than any son ever was before, and indeed
his father had spared no pains to make him so.
He had been very careful in choosing his tutors and
governors when he was a boy, and when he became a youth
he sent him to travel, so that he might see the ways
of other people, and find that they were often as
good as his own.
It was now a year since the prince
had returned home, for his father felt that it was
time that his son should learn how to rule the kingdom
which would one day be his. But during his long
absence the prince seemed to have changed his character
altogether. From being a merry and light-hearted
boy, he had grown into a gloomy and thoughtful man.
The king knew of nothing that could have produced
such an alteration. He vexed himself about it
from morning till night, till at length an explanation
occurred to him the young man was in love!
Now the prince never talked about
his feelings for the matter of that he
scarcely talked at all; and the father knew that if
he was to come to the bottom of the prince’s
dismal face, he would have to begin. So one day,
after dinner, he took his son by the arm and led him
into another room, hung entirely with the pictures
of beautiful maidens, each one more lovely than the
other.
‘My dear boy,’ he said,
’you are very sad; perhaps after all your wanderings
it is dull for you here all alone with me. It
would be much better if you would marry, and I have
collected here the portraits of the most beautiful
women in the world of a rank equal to your own.
Choose which among them you would like for a wife,
and I will send an embassy to her father to ask for
her hand.’
‘Alas! your Majesty,’
answered the prince, ’it is not love or marriage
that makes me so gloomy; but the thought, which haunts
me day and night, that all men, even kings, must die.
Never shall I be happy again till I have found a kingdom
where death is unknown. And I have determined
to give myself no rest till I have discovered the
Land of Immortality.
The old king heard him with dismay;
things were worse than he thought. He tried to
reason with his son, and told him that during all these
years he had been looking forward to his return, in
order to resign his throne and its cares, which pressed
so heavily upon him. But it was in vain that
he talked; the prince would listen to nothing, and
the following morning buckled on his sword and set
forth on his journey.
He had been travelling for many days,
and had left his fatherland behind him, when close
to the road he came upon a huge tree, and on its topmost
bough an eagle was sitting shaking the branches with
all his might. This seemed so strange and so
unlike an eagle, that the prince stood still with
surprise, and the bird saw him and flew to the ground.
The moment its feet touched the ground he changed
into a king.
‘Why do you look so astonished?’ he asked.
‘I was wondering why you shook
the boughs so fiercely,’ answered the prince.
’I am condemned to do this,
for neither I nor any of my kindred can die till I
have rooted up this great tree,’ replied the
king of the eagles. ’But it is now evening,
and I need work no more to-day. Come to my house
with me, and be my guest for the night.’
The prince accepted gratefully the
eagle’s invitation, for he was tired and hungry.
They were received at the palace by the king’s
beautiful daughter, who gave orders that dinner should
be laid for them at once. While they were eating,
the eagle questioned his guest about his travels,
and if he was wandering for pleasure’s sake,
or with any special aim. Then the prince told
him everything, and how he could never turn back till
he had discovered the Land of Immortality.
‘Dear brother,’ said the
eagle, ’you have discovered it already, and it
rejoices my heart to think that you will stay with
us. Have you not just heard me say that death
has no power either over myself or any of my kindred
till that great tree is rooted up? It will take
me six hundred years’ hard work to do that;
so marry my daughter and let us all live happily together
here. After all, six hundred years is an eternity!’
‘Ah, dear king,’ replied
the young man, ’your offer is very tempting!
But at the end of six hundred years we should have
to die, so we should be no better off! No, I
must go on till I find the country where there is
no death at all.’
Then the princess spoke, and tried
to persuade the guest to change his mind, but he sorrowfully
shook his head. At length, seeing that his resolution
was firmly fixed, she took from a cabinet a little
box which contained her picture, and gave it to him
saying:
’As you will not stay with us,
prince, accept this box, which will sometimes recall
us to your memory. If you are tired of travelling
before you come to the Land of Immortality, open this
box and look at my picture, and you will be borne
along either on earth or in the air, quick as thought,
or swift as the whirlwind.’
The prince thanked her for her gift,
which he placed in his tunic, and sorrowfully bade
the eagle and his daughter farewell.
Never was any present in the world
as useful as that little box, and many times did he
bless the kind thought of the princess. One evening
it had carried him to the top of a high mountain,
where he saw a man with a bald head, busily engaged
in digging up spadefuls of earth and throwing them
in a basket. When the basket was full he took
it away and returned with an empty one, which he likewise
filled. The prince stood and watched him for
a little, till the bald-headed man looked up and said
to him: ‘Dear brother, what surprises you
so much?’
‘I was wondering why you were
filling the basket,’ replied the prince.
‘Oh!’ replied the man,
’I am condemned to do this, for neither I nor
any of my family can die till I have dug away the
whole of this mountain and made it level with the
plain. But, come, it is almost dark, and I shall
work no longer.’ And he plucked a leaf from
a tree close by, and from a rough digger he was changed
into a stately bald-headed king. ’Come home
with me,’ he added; ’you must be tired
and hungry, and my daughter will have supper ready
for us.’ The prince accepted gladly, and
they went back to the palace, where the bald-headed
king’s daughter, who was still more beautiful
than the other princess, welcomed them at the door
and led the way into a large hall and to a table covered
with silver dishes. While they were eating, the
bald-headed king asked the prince how he had happened
to wander so far, and the young man told him all about
it, and how he was seeking the Land of Immortality.
‘You have found it already,’ answered
the king, ’for, as I said, neither I nor my family
can die till I have levelled this great mountain;
and that will take full eight hundred years longer.
Stay here with us and marry my daughter. Eight
hundred years is surely long enough to live.’
‘Oh, certainly,’ answered
the prince; ’but, all the same, I would rather
go and seek the land where there is no death at all.’
So next morning he bade them farewell,
though the princess begged him to stay with all her
might; and when she found that she could not persuade
him she gave him as a remembrance a gold ring.
This ring was still more useful than the box, because
when one wished oneself at any place one was there
directly, without even the trouble of flying to it
through the air. The prince put it on his finger,
and thanking her heartily, went his way.
He walked on for some distance, and
then he recollected the ring and thought he would
try if the princess had spoken truly as to its powers.
‘I wish I was at the end of the world,’
he said, shutting his eyes, and when he opened them
he was standing in a street full of marble palaces.
The men who passed him were tall and strong, and their
clothes were magnificent. He stopped some of
them and asked in all the twenty-seven languages he
knew what was the name of the city, but no one answered
him. Then his heart sank within him; what should
he do in this strange place if nobody could understand
anything? he said. Suddenly his eyes fell upon
a man dressed after the fashion of his native country,
and he ran up to him and spoke to him in his own tongue.
’What city is this, my friend?’ he inquired.
‘It is the capital city of the
Blue Kingdom,’ replied the man, ’but the
king himself is dead, and his daughter is now the ruler.’
With this news the prince was satisfied,
and begged his countryman to show him the way to the
young queen’s palace. The man led him through
several streets into a large square, one side of which
was occupied by a splendid building that seemed borne
up on slender pillars of soft green marble. In
front was a flight of steps, and on these the queen
was sitting wrapped in a veil of shining silver mist,
listening to the complaints of her people and dealing
out justice. When the prince came up she saw
directly that he was no ordinary man, and telling her
chamberlain to dismiss the rest of her petitioners
for that day, she signed to the prince to follow her
into the palace. Luckily she had been taught
his language as a child, so they had no difficulty
in talking together.
The prince told all his story and
how he was journeying in search of the Land of Immortality.
When he had finished, the princess, who had listened
attentively, rose, and taking his arm, led him to the
door of another room, the floor of which was made
entirely of needles, stuck so close together that
there was not room for a single needle more.
‘Prince,’ she said, turning
to him, ’you see these needles? Well, know
that neither I nor any of my family can die till I
have worn out these needles in sewing. It will
take at least a thousand years for that. Stay
here, and share my throne; a thousand years is long
enough to live!’
‘Certainly,’ answered
he; ’still, at the end of the thousand years
I should have to die! No, I must find the land
where there is no death.’
The queen did all she could to persuade
him to stay, but as her words proved useless, at length
she gave it up. Then she said to him: ’As
you will not stay, take this little golden rod as
a remembrance of me. It has the power to become
anything you wish it to be, when you are in need.’
So the prince thanked her, and putting
the rod in his pocket, went his way.
Scarcely had he left the town behind
him when he came to a broad river which no man might
pass, for he was standing at the end of the world,
and this was the river which flowed round it.
Not knowing what to do next, he walked a little distance
up the bank, and there, over his head, a beautiful
city was floating in the air. He longed to get
to it, but how? neither road nor bridge was anywhere
to be seen, yet the city drew him upwards, and he
felt that here at last was the country which he sought.
Suddenly he remembered the golden rod which the mist-veiled
queen had given him. With a beating heart he flung
it to the ground, wishing with all his might that
it should turn into a bridge, and fearing that, after
all, this might prove beyond its power. But no,
instead of the rod, there stood a golden ladder, leading
straight up to the city of the air. He was about
to enter the golden gates, when there sprang at him
a wondrous beast, whose like he had never seen.
’Out sword from the sheath,’ cried the
prince, springing back with a cry. And the sword
leapt from the scabbard and cut off some of the monster’s
heads, but others grew again directly, so that the
prince, pale with terror, stood where he was, calling
for help, and put his sword back in the sheath again.
The queen of the city heard the noise
and looked from her window to see what was happening.
Summoning one of her servants, she bade him go and
rescue the stranger, and bring him to her. The
prince thankfully obeyed her orders, and entered her
presence.
The moment she looked at him, the
queen also felt that he was no ordinary man, and she
welcomed him graciously, and asked him what had brought
him to the city. In answer the prince told all
his story, and how he had travelled long and far in
search of the Land of Immortality.
‘You have found it,’ said
she, ’for I am queen over life and over death.
Here you can dwell among the immortals.’
A thousand years had passed since
the prince first entered the city, but they had flown
so fast that the time seemed no more than six months.
There had not been one instant of the thousand years
that the prince was not happy till one night when
he dreamed of his father and mother. Then the
longing for his home came upon him with a rush, and
in the morning he told the Queen of the Immortals
that he must go and see his father and mother once
more. The queen stared at him with amazement,
and cried: ’Why, prince, are you out of
your senses? It is more than eight hundred years
since your father and mother died! There will
not even be their dust remaining.’
‘I must go all the same,’ said he.
‘Well, do not be in a hurry,’
continued the queen, understanding that he would not
be prevented. ’Wait till I make some preparations
for your journey.’ So she unlocked her
great treasure chest, and took out two beautiful flasks,
one of gold and one of silver, which she hung round
his neck. Then she showed him a little trap-door
in one corner of the room, and said: ’Fill
the silver flask with this water, which is below the
trap-door. It is enchanted, and whoever you sprinkle
with the water will become a dead man at once, even
if he had lived a thousand years. The golden
flask you must fill with the water here,’ she
added, pointing to a well in another corner.
’It springs from the rock of eternity; you have
only to sprinkle a few drops on a body and it will
come to life again, if it had been a thousand years
dead.’
The prince thanked the queen for her
gifts, and, bidding her farewell, went on his journey.
He soon arrived in the town where
the mist-veiled queen reigned in her palace, but the
whole city had changed, and he could scarcely find
his way through the streets. In the palace itself
all was still, and he wandered through the rooms without
meeting anyone to stop him. At last he entered
the queen’s own chamber, and there she lay, with
her embroidery still in her hands, fast asleep.
He pulled at her dress, but she did not waken.
Then a dreadful idea came over him, and he ran to
the chamber where the needles had been kept, but it
was quite empty. The queen had broken the last
over the work she held in her hand, and with it the
spell was broken too, and she lay dead.
Quick as thought the prince pulled
out the golden flask, and sprinkled some drops of
the water over the queen. In a moment she moved
gently, and raising her head, opened her eyes.
’Oh, my dear friend, I am so
glad you wakened me; I must have slept a long while!’
‘You would have slept till eternity,’
answered the prince, ’if I had not been here
to waken you.’
At these words the queen remembered
about the needles. She knew now that she had
been dead, and that the prince had restored her to
life. She gave him thanks from her heart for
what he had done, and vowed she would repay him if
she ever got a chance.
The prince took his leave, and set
out for the country of the bald-headed king.
As he drew near the place he saw that the whole mountain
had been dug away, and that the king was lying dead
on the ground, his spade and bucket beside him.
But as soon as the water from the golden flask touched
him he yawned and stretched himself, and slowly rose
to his feet. ‘Oh, my dear friend, I am so
glad to see you,’ cried he, ‘I must have
slept a long while!’
’You would have slept till eternity
if I had not been here to waken you,’ answered
the prince. And the king remembered the mountain,
and the spell, and vowed to repay the service if he
ever had a chance.
Further along the road which led to
his old home the prince found the great tree torn
up by its roots, and the king of the eagles sitting
dead on the ground, with his wings outspread as if
for flight. A flutter ran through the feathers
as the drops of water fell on them, and the eagle
lifted his beak from the ground and said: ’Oh,
how long I must have slept! How can I thank you
for having awakened me, my dear, good friend!’
’You would have slept till eternity
if I had not been here to waken you’; answered
the prince. Then the king remembered about the
tree, and knew that he had been dead, and promised,
if ever he had the chance, to repay what the prince
had done for him.
At last he reached the capital of
his father’s kingdom, but on reaching the place
where the royal palace had stood, instead of the marble
galleries where he used to play, there lay a great
sulphur lake, its blue flames darting into the air.
How was he to find his father and mother, and bring
them back to life, if they were lying at the bottom
of that horrible water? He turned away sadly and
wandered back into the streets, hardly knowing where
he was going; when a voice behind him cried:
’Stop, prince, I have caught you at last!
It is a thousand years since I first began to seek
you.’ And there beside him stood the old,
white-bearded, figure of Death. Swiftly he drew
the ring from his finger, and the king of the eagles,
the bald-headed king, and the mist-veiled queen, hastened
to his rescue. In an instant they had seized
upon Death and held him tight, till the prince should
have time to reach the Land of Immortality. But
they did not know how quickly Death could fly, and
the prince had only one foot across the border, when
he felt the other grasped from behind, and the voice
of Death calling: ’Halt! now you are mine.’
The Queen of the Immortals was watching
from her window, and cried to Death that he had no
power in her kingdom, and that he must seek his prey
elsewhere.
‘Quite true,’ answered
Death; ’but his foot is in my kingdom, and that
belongs to me!’
‘At any rate half of him is
mine,’ replied the Queen, ’and what good
can the other half do you? Half a man is no use,
either to you or to me! But this once I will
allow you to cross into my kingdom, and we will decide
by a wager whose he is.’
And so it was settled. Death
stepped across the narrow line that surrounds the
Land of Immortality, and the queen proposed the wager
which was to decide the prince’s fate. ’I
will throw him up into the sky,’ she said, ’right
to the back of the morning star, and if he falls down
into this city, then he is mine. But if he should
fall outside the walls, he shall belong to you.’
In the middle of the city was a great
open square, and here the queen wished the wager to
take place. When all was ready, she put her foot
under the foot of the prince and swung him into the
air. Up, up, he went, high amongst the stars,
and no man’s eyes could follow him. Had
she thrown him up straight? the queen wondered anxiously,
for, if not, he would fall outside the walls, and
she would lose him for ever. The moments seemed
long while she and Death stood gazing up into the air,
waiting to know whose prize the prince would be.
Suddenly they both caught sight of a tiny speck no
bigger than a wasp, right up in the blue. Was
he coming straight? No! Yes! But as
he was nearing the city, a light wind sprang up, and
swayed him in the direction of the wall. Another
second and he would have fallen half over it, when
the queen sprang forward, seized him in her arms,
and flung him into the castle. Then she commanded
her servants to cast Death out of the city, which
they did, with such hard blows that he never dared
to show his face again in the Land of Immortality.
[From Ungarischen Volksmurchen.]