THERE was to be a great battle between
all the creatures of the earth and the birds of the
air. News of it went abroad, and the son of the
king of Tethertown said that when the battle was fought
he would be there to see it, and would bring back
word who was to be king. But in spite of that,
he was almost too late, and every fight had been fought
save the last, which was between a snake and a great
black raven. Both struck hard, but in the end
the snake proved the stronger, and would have twisted
himself round the neck of the raven till he died had
not the king’s son drawn his sword, and cut
off the head of the snake at a single blow. And
when the raven beheld that his enemy was dead, he was
grateful, and said:
’For thy kindness to me this
day, I will show thee a sight. So come up now
on the root of my two wings.’ The king’s
son did as he was bid, and before the raven stopped
flying, they had passed over seven bens and seven
glens and seven mountain moors.
‘Do you see that house yonder?’
said the raven at last. ’Go straight to
it, for a sister of mine dwells there, and she will
make you right welcome. And if she asks, “Wert
thou at the battle of the birds?” answer that
thou wert, and if she asks, “Didst thou see my
likeness?” answer that thou sawest it, but be
sure thou meetest me in the morning at this place.’
The king’s son followed what
the raven told him and that night he had meat of each
meat, and drink of each drink, warm water for his feet,
and a soft bed to lie in.
Thus it happened the next day, and
the next, but on the fourth morning, instead of meeting
the raven, in his place the king’s son found
waiting for him the handsomest youth that ever was
seen, with a bundle in his hand.
by H. J. Ford 1910]
‘Is there a raven hereabouts?’
asked the king’s son, and the youth answered:
’I am that raven, and I was
delivered by thee from the spells that bound me, and
in reward thou wilt get this bundle. Go back by
the road thou camest, and lie as before, a night in
each house, but be careful not to unloose the bundle
till thou art in the place wherein thou wouldst most
wish to dwell.’
Then the king’s son set out,
and thus it happened as it had happened before, till
he entered a thick wood near his father’s house.
He had walked a long way, and suddenly the bundle
seemed to grow heavier; first he put it down under
a tree, and next he thought he would look at it.
The string was easy to untie, and
the king’s son soon unfastened the bundle.
What was it he saw there? Why, a great castle
with an orchard all about it, and in the orchard fruit
and flowers and birds of every kind. It was all
ready for him to dwell in, but instead of being in
the midst of the forest, he did wish he had
left the bundle unloosed till he had reached the green
valley close to his father’s palace. Well,
it was no use wishing, and with a sigh he glanced
up, and beheld a huge giant coming towards him.
‘Bad is the place where thou
hast built thy house, king’s son,’ said
the giant.
‘True; it is not here that I
wish it to be,’ answered the king’s son.
‘What reward wilt thou give
me if I put it back in the bundle?’ asked the
giant.
‘What reward dost thou ask?’ answered
the king’s son.
‘The first boy thou hast when he is seven years
old,’ said the giant.
‘If I have a boy thou shalt
get him,’ answered the king’s son, and
as he spoke the castle and the orchard were tied up
in the bundle again.
‘Now take thy road, and I will
take mine,’ said the giant. ’And if
thou forgettest thy promise, I will remember
it.’
Light of heart the king’s son
went on his road, till he came to the green valley
near his father’s palace. Slowly he unloosed
the bundle, fearing lest he should find nothing but
a heap of stones or rags. But no! all was as
it had been before, and as he opened the castle door
there stood within the most beautiful maiden that ever
was seen.
‘Enter, king’s son,’
said she, ’all is ready, and we will be married
at once,’ and so they were.
The maiden proved a good wife, and
the king’s son, now himself a king, was so happy
that he forgot all about the giant. Seven years
and a day had gone by, when one morning, while standing
on the ramparts, he beheld the giant striding towards
the castle. Then he remembered his promise, and
remembered, too, that he had told the queen nothing
about it. Now he must tell her, and perhaps she
might help him in his trouble.
The queen listened in silence to his
tale, and after he had finished, she only said:
‘Leave thou the matter between
me and the giant,’ and as she spoke, the giant
entered the hall and stood before them.
‘Bring out your son,’
cried he to the king, ’as you promised me seven
years and a day since.’
The king glanced at his wife, who nodded, so he answered:
‘Let his mother first put him
in order,’ and the queen left the hall, and
took the cook’s son and dressed him in the prince’s
clothes, and led him up to the giant, who held his
hand, and together they went out along the road.
They had not walked far when the giant stopped and
stretched out a stick to the boy.
‘If your father had that stick,
what would he do with it?’ asked he.
’If my father had that stick,
he would beat the dogs and cats that steal the king’s
meat,’ replied the boy.
‘Thou art the cook’s son!’
cried the giant. ‘Go home to thy mother;’
and turning his back he strode straight to the castle.
’If you seek to trick me this
time, the highest stone will soon be the lowest,’
said he, and the king and queen trembled, but they
could not bear to give up their boy.
‘The butler’s son is the
same age as ours,’ whispered the queen; ’he
will not know the difference,’ and she took the
child and dressed him in the prince’s clothes,
and the giant led him away along the road. Before
they had gone far he stopped, and held out a stick.
‘If thy father had that rod,
what would he do with it?’ asked the giant.
‘He would beat the dogs and
cats that break the king’s glasses,’ answered
the boy.
‘Thou art the son of the butler!’
cried the giant. ’Go home to thy mother;’
and turning round he strode back angrily to the castle.
‘Bring out thy son at once,’
roared he, ’or the stone that is highest will
be lowest,’ and this time the real prince was
brought.
But though his parents wept bitterly
and fancied the child was suffering all kinds of dreadful
things, the giant treated him like his own son, though
he never allowed him to see his daughters. The
boy grew to be a big boy, and one day the giant told
him that he would have to amuse himself alone for
many hours, as he had a journey to make. So the
boy wandered by the river, and down to the sea, and
at last he wandered to the top of the castle, where
he had never been before. There he paused, for
the sound of music broke upon his ears, and opening
a door near him, he beheld a girl sitting by the window,
holding a harp.
‘Haste and begone, I see the
giant close at hand,’ she whispered hurriedly,
’but when he is asleep, return hither, for I
would speak with thee.’ And the prince
did as he was bid, and when midnight struck he crept
back to the top of the castle.
‘To-morrow,’ said the
girl, who was the giant’s daughter, ’to-morrow
thou wilt get the choice of my two sisters to marry,
but thou must answer that thou wilt not take either,
but only me. This will anger him greatly, for
he wishes to betroth me to the son of the king of the
Green City, whom I like not at all.’
Then they parted, and on the morrow,
as the girl had said, the giant called his three daughters
to him, and likewise the young prince, to whom he
spoke.
’Now, O son of the king of Tethertown,
the time has come for us to part. Choose one
of my two elder daughters to wife, and thou shalt take
her to your father’s house the day after the
wedding.’
‘Give me the youngest instead,’
replied the youth, and the giant’s face darkened
as he heard him.
‘Three things must thou do first,’ said
he.
‘Say on, I will do them,’
replied the prince, and the giant left the house,
and bade him follow to the byre, where the cows were
kept.
‘For a hundred years no man
has swept this byre,’ said the giant, ’but
if by nightfall, when I reach home, thou hast not cleaned
it so that a golden apple can roll through it from
end to end, thy blood shall pay for it.’
All day long the youth toiled, but
he might as well have tried to empty the ocean.
At length, when he was so tired he could hardly move,
the giant’s youngest daughter stood in the doorway.
‘Lay down thy weariness,’
said she, and the king’s son, thinking he could
only die once, sank on the floor at her bidding, and
fell sound asleep. When he woke the girl had
disappeared, and the byre was so clean that a golden
apple could roll from end to end of it. He jumped
up in surprise, and at that moment in came the giant.
‘Hast thou cleaned the byre, king’s son?’
asked he.
‘I have cleaned it,’ answered he.
’Well, since thou wert so active
to-day, to-morrow thou wilt thatch this byre with
a feather from every different bird, or else thy blood
shall pay for it,’ and he went out.
Before the sun was up, the youth took
his bow and his quiver and set off to kill the birds.
Off to the moor he went, but never a bird was to be
seen that day. At last he got so tired with running
to and fro that he gave up heart.
‘There is but one death I can
die,’ thought he. Then at midday came the
giant’s daughter.
‘Thou art tired, king’s son?’ said
she.
‘I am,’ answered he; ’all
these hours have I wandered, and there fell but these
two blackbirds, both of one colour.’
‘Lay down thy weariness on the
grass,’ said she, and he did as she bade him,
and fell fast asleep.
When he woke the girl had disappeared,
and he got up, and returned to the byre. As he
drew near, he rubbed his eyes hard, thinking he was
dreaming, for there it was, beautifully thatched, just
as the giant had wished. At the door of the house
he met the giant.
‘Hast thou thatched the byre, king’s son?’
‘I have thatched it.’
’Well, since thou hast been
so active to-day, I have something else for thee!
Beside the loch thou seest over yonder there grows
a fir tree. On the top of the fir tree is a magpie’s
nest, and in the nest are five eggs. Thou wilt
bring me those eggs for breakfast, and if one is cracked
or broken, thy blood shall pay for it.’
Before it was light next day, the
king’s son jumped out of bed and ran down to
the loch. The tree was not hard to find, for the
rising sun shone red on the trunk, which was five
hundred feet from the ground to its first branch.
Time after time he walked round it, trying to find
some knots, however small, where he could put his feet,
but the bark was quite smooth, and he soon saw that
if he was to reach the top at all, it must be by climbing
up with his knees like a sailor. But then he was
a king’s son and not a sailor, which made all
the difference.
However, it was no use standing there
staring at the fir, at least he must try to do his
best, and try he did till his hands and knees were
sore, for as soon as he had struggled up a few feet,
he slid back again. Once he climbed a little
higher than before, and hope rose in his heart, then
down he came with such force that his hands and knees
smarted worse than ever.
‘This is no time for stopping,’
said the voice of the giant’s daughter, as he
leant against the trunk to recover his breath.
‘Alas! I am no sooner up than down,’
answered he.
‘Try once more,’ said
she, and she laid a finger against the tree and bade
him put his foot on it. Then she placed another
finger a little higher up, and so on till he reached
the top, where the magpie had built her nest.
‘Make haste now with the nest,’
she cried, ’for my father’s breath is
burning my back,’ and down he scrambled as fast
as he could, but the girl’s little finger had
caught in a branch at the top, and she was obliged
to leave it there. But she was too busy to pay
heed to this, for the sun was getting high over the
hills.
‘Listen to me,’ she said.
’This night my two sisters and I will be dressed
in the same garments, and you will not know me.
But when my father says ‘Go to thy wife, king’s
son,’ come to the one whose right hand has no
little finger.’
So he went and gave the eggs to the
giant, who nodded his head.
‘Make ready for thy marriage,’
cried he, ’for the wedding shall take place
this very night, and I will summon thy bride to greet
thee.’ Then his three daughters were sent
for, and they all entered dressed in green silk of
the same fashion, and with golden circlets round their
heads. The king’s son looked from one to
another. Which was the youngest? Suddenly
his eyes fell on the hand of the middle one, and there
was no little finger.
‘Thou hast aimed well this time
too,’ said the giant, as the king’s son
laid his hand on her shoulder, ‘but perhaps we
may meet some other way;’ and though he pretended
to laugh, the bride saw a gleam in his eye which warned
her of danger.
The wedding took place that very night,
and the hall was filled with giants and gentlemen,
and they danced till the house shook from top to bottom.
At last everyone grew tired, and the guests went away,
and the king’s son and his bride were left alone.
‘If we stay here till dawn my
father will kill thee,’ she whispered, ‘but
thou art my husband and I will save thee, as I did
before,’ and she cut an apple into nine pieces,
and put two pieces at the head of the bed, and two
pieces at the foot, and two pieces at the door of the
kitchen, and two at the big door, and one outside the
house. And when this was done, and she heard
the giant snoring, she and the king’s son crept
out softly and stole across to the stable, where she
led out the blue-grey mare and jumped on its back,
and her husband mounted before her. Not long
after, the giant awoke.
‘Are you asleep?’ asked he.
‘Not yet,’ answered the
apple at the head of the bed, and the giant turned
over, and soon was snoring as loudly as before.
By and bye he called again.
‘Are you asleep?’
‘Not yet,’ said the apple
at the foot of the bed, and the giant was satisfied.
After a while, he called a third time, ‘Are you
asleep?’
‘Not yet,’ replied the
apple in the kitchen, but when, in a few minutes,
he put the question for the fourth time and received
an answer from the apple outside the house door, he
guessed what had happened, and ran to the room to
look for himself.
The bed was cold and empty!
‘My father’s breath is
burning my back,’ cried the girl, ’put
thy hand into the ear of the mare, and whatever thou
findest there, throw it behind thee.’ And
in the mare’s ear there was a twig of sloe tree,
and as he threw it behind him there sprung up twenty
miles of thornwood so thick that scarce a weasel could
go through it. And the giant, who was striding
headlong forwards, got caught in it, and it pulled
his hair and beard.
‘This is one of my daughter’s
tricks,’ he said to himself, ’but if I
had my big axe and my wood-knife, I would not be long
making a way through this,’ and off he went
home and brought back the axe and the wood-knife.
It took him but a short time to cut
a road through the blackthorn, and then he laid the
axe and the knife under a tree.
‘I will leave them there till
I return,’ he murmured to himself, but a hoodie
crow, which was sitting on a branch above, heard him.
‘If thou leavest them,’
said the hoodie, ‘we will steal them.’
‘You will,’ answered the
giant, ‘and I must take them home.’
So he took them home, and started afresh on his journey.
‘My father’s breath is
burning my back,’ cried the girl at midday.
’Put thy finger in the mare’s ear and
throw behind thee whatever thou findest in it,’
and the king’s son found a splinter of grey stone,
and threw it behind him, and in a twinkling twenty
miles of solid rock lay between them and the giant.
‘My daughter’s tricks
are the hardest things that ever met me,’ said
the giant, ’but if I had my lever and my crowbar,
I would not be long in making my way through this
rock also,’ but as he had not got them,
he had to go home and fetch them. Then it took
him but a short time to hew his way through the rock.
‘I will leave the tools here,’
he murmured aloud when he had finished.
‘If thou leavest them, we will
steal them,’ said a hoodie who was perched on
a stone above him, and the giant answered:
‘Steal them if thou wilt; there is no time to
go back.’
‘My father’s breath is
burning my back,’ cried the girl; ’look
in the mare’s ear, king’s son, or we are
lost,’ and he looked, and found a tiny bladder
full of water, which he threw behind him, and it became
a great loch. And the giant, who was striding
on so fast, could not stop himself, and he walked
right into the middle and was drowned.
The blue-grey mare galloped on like
the wind, and the next day the king’s son came
in sight of his father’s house.
‘Get down and go in,’
said the bride, ’and tell them that thou hast
married me. But take heed that neither man nor
beast kiss thee, for then thou wilt cease to remember
me at all.’
‘I will do thy bidding,’
answered he, and left her at the gate. All who
met him bade him welcome, and he charged his father
and mother not to kiss him, but as he greeted them
his old greyhound leapt on his neck, and kissed him
on the mouth. And after that he did not remember
the giant’s daughter.
All that day she sat on a well which
was near the gate, waiting, waiting, but the king’s
son never came. In the darkness she climbed up
into an oak tree that shadowed the well, and there
she lay all night, waiting, waiting.
On the morrow, at midday, the wife
of a shoemaker who dwelt near the well went to draw
water for her husband to drink, and she saw the shadow
of the girl in the tree, and thought it was her own
shadow.
‘How handsome I am, to be sure,’
said she, gazing into the well, and as she stooped
to behold herself better, the jug struck against the
stones and broke in pieces, and she was forced to
return to her husband without the water, and this
angered him.
‘Thou hast turned crazy,’
said he in wrath. ’Go thou, my daughter,
and fetch me a drink,’ and the girl went, and
the same thing befell her as had befallen her mother.
‘Where is the water?’
asked the shoemaker, when she came back, and as she
held nothing save the handle of the jug he went to
the well himself. He too saw the reflection of
the woman in the tree, but looked up to discover whence
it came, and there above him sat the most beautiful
woman in the world.
‘Come down,’ he said,
‘for a while thou canst stay in my house,’
and glad enough the girl was to come.
Now the king of the country was about
to marry, and the young men about the court thronged
the shoemaker’s shop to buy fine shoes to wear
at the wedding.
‘Thou hast a pretty daughter,’
said they when they beheld the girl sitting at work.
‘Pretty she is,’ answered
the shoemaker, ‘but no daughter of mine.’
‘I would give a hundred pounds to marry her,’
said one.
‘And I,’ ‘And I,’ cried the
others.
‘That is no business of mine,’
answered the shoemaker, and the young men bade him
ask her if she would choose one of them for a husband,
and to tell them on the morrow. Then the shoemaker
asked her, and the girl said that she would marry
the one who would bring his purse with him. So
the shoemaker hurried to the youth who had first spoken,
and he came back, and after giving the shoemaker a
hundred pounds for his news, he sought the girl, who
was waiting for him.
‘Is it thou?’ inquired
she. ’I am thirsty, give me a drink from
the well that is out yonder.’ And he poured
out the water, but he could not move from the place
where he was; and there he stayed till many hours had
passed by.
‘Take away that foolish boy,’
cried the girl to the shoemaker at last, ‘I
am tired of him,’ and then suddenly he was able
to walk, and betook himself to his home, but he did
not tell the others what had happened to him.
Next day there arrived one of the
other young men, and in the evening, when the shoemaker
had gone out and they were alone, she said to him,
‘See if the latch is on the door.’
The young man hastened to do her bidding, but as soon
as he touched the latch, his fingers stuck to it,
and there he had to stay for many hours, till the shoemaker
came back, and the girl let him go. Hanging his
head, he went home, but he told no one what had befallen
him.
Then was the turn of the third man,
and his foot remained fastened to the floor,
till the girl unloosed it. And thankfully he ran
off, and was not seen looking behind him.
‘Take the purse of gold,’
said the girl to the shoemaker, ’I have no need
of it, and it will better thee.’ And the
shoemaker took it and told the girl he must carry
the shoes for the wedding up to the castle.
‘I would fain get a sight of
the king’s son before he marries,’ sighed
she.
‘Come with me, then,’
answered he; ’the servants are all my friends,
and they will let you stand in the passage down which
the king’s son will pass, and all the company
too.’
Up they went to the castle, and when
the young men saw the girl standing there, they led
her into the hall where the banquet was laid out and
poured her out some wine. She was just raising
the glass to drink when a flame went up out of it,
and out of the flame sprang two pigeons, one of gold
and one of silver. They flew round and round the
head of the girl, when three grains of barley fell
on the floor, and the silver pigeon dived down, and
swallowed them.
’If thou hadst remembered how
I cleaned the byre, thou wouldst have given me my
share,’ cooed the golden pigeon, and as he spoke
three more grains fell, and the silver pigeon ate
them as before.
’If thou hadst remembered how
I thatched the byre, thou wouldst have given me my
share,’ cooed the golden pigeon again; and as
he spoke three more grains fell, and for the third
time they were eaten by the silver pigeon.
’If thou hadst remembered how
I got the magpie’s nest, thou wouldst have given
me my share,’ cooed the golden pigeon.
Then the king’s son understood
that they had come to remind him of what he had forgotten,
and his lost memory came back, and he knew his wife,
and kissed her. But as the preparations had been
made, it seemed a pity to waste them, so they were
married a second time, and sat down to the wedding
feast.
From ‘Tales of the West
Highlands.’