A long time ago there lived a King
who had three sons; the eldest was called Szabo, the
second Warza, and the youngest Iwanich.
One beautiful spring morning the King
was walking through his gardens with these three sons,
gazing with admiration at the various fruit-trees,
some of which were a mass of blossom, whilst others
were bowed to the ground laden with rich fruit.
During their wanderings they came unperceived on a
piece of waste land where three splendid trees grew.
The King looked on them for a moment, and then, shaking
his head sadly, he passed on in silence.
The sons, who could not understand
why he did this, asked him the reason of his dejection,
and the King told them as follows:
’These three trees, which I
cannot see without sorrow, were planted by me on this
spot when I was a youth of twenty. A celebrated
magician, who had given the seed to my father, promised
him that they would grow into the three finest trees
the world had ever seen. My father did not live
to see his words come true; but on his death-bed he
bade me transplant them here, and to look after them
with the greatest care, which I accordingly did.
At last, after the lapse of five long years, I noticed
some blossoms on the branches, and a few days later
the most exquisite fruit my eyes had ever seen.
’I gave my head-gardener the
strictest orders to watch the trees carefully, for
the magician had warned my father that if one unripe
fruit were plucked from the tree, all the rest would
become rotten at once. When it was quite ripe
the fruit would become a golden yellow.
’Every day I gazed on the lovely
fruit, which became gradually more and more tempting-looking,
and it was all I could do not to break the magician’s
commands.
’One night I dreamt that the
fruit was perfectly ripe; I ate some of it, and it
was more delicious than anything I had ever tasted
in real life. As soon as I awoke I sent for the
gardener and asked him if the fruit on the three trees
had not ripened in the night to perfection.
’But instead of replying, the
gardener threw himself at my feet and swore that he
was innocent. He said that he had watched by the
trees all night, but in spite of it, and as if by
magic, the beautiful trees had been robbed of all
their fruit.
’Grieved as I was over the theft,
I did not punish the gardener, of whose fidelity I
was well assured, but I determined to pluck off all
the fruit in the following year before it was ripe,
as I had not much belief in the magician’s warning.
’I carried out my intention,
and had all the fruit picked off the tree, but when
I tasted one of the apples it was bitter and unpleasant,
and the next morning the rest of the fruit had all
rotted away.
’After this I had the beautiful
fruit of these trees carefully guarded by my most
faithful servants; but every year, on this very night,
the fruit was plucked and stolen by an invisible hand,
and next morning not a single apple remained on the
trees. For some time past I have given up even
having the trees watched.’
When the King had finished his story,
Szabo, his eldest son, said to him: ’Forgive
me, father, if I say I think you are mistaken.
I am sure there are many men in your kingdom who could
protect these trees from the cunning arts of a thieving
magician; I myself, who as your eldest son claim the
first right to do so, will mount guard over the fruit
this very night.’
The King consented, and as soon as
evening drew on Szabo climbed up on to one of the
trees, determined to protect the fruit even if it cost
him his life. So he kept watch half the night;
but a little after midnight he was overcome by an
irresistible drowsiness, and fell fast asleep.
He did not awake till it was bright daylight, and all
the fruit on the trees had vanished.
The following year Warza, the second
brother, tried his luck, but with the same result.
Then it came to the turn of the third and youngest
son.
Iwanich was not the least discouraged
by the failure of his elder brothers, though they
were both much older and stronger than he was, and
when night came climbed up the tree as they had done.
The moon had risen, and with her soft light lit up
the whole neighbourhood, so that the observant Prince
could distinguish the smallest object distinctly.
At midnight a gentle west wind shook
the tree, and at the same moment a snow-white swan-like
bird sank down gently on his breast. The Prince
hastily seized the bird’s wings in his hands,
when, lo! to his astonishment he found he was holding
in his arms not a bird but the most beautiful girl
he had ever seen.
‘You need not fear Militza,’
said the beautiful girl, looking at the Prince with
friendly eyes. ’An evil magician has not
robbed you of your fruit, but he stole the seed from
my mother, and thereby caused her death. When
she was dying she bade me take the fruit, which you
have no right to possess, from the trees every year
as soon as it was ripe. This I would have done
to-night too, if you had not seized me with such force,
and so broken the spell I was under.’
Iwanich, who had been prepared to
meet a terrible magician and not a lovely girl, fell
desperately in love with her. They spent the rest
of the night in pleasant conversation, and when Militza
wished to go away he begged her not to leave him.
‘I would gladly stay with you
longer,’ said Militza, ’but a wicked witch
once cut off a lock of my hair when I was asleep, which
has put me in her power, and if morning were still
to find me here she would do me some harm, and you,
too, perhaps.’
Having said these words, she drew
a sparkling diamond ring from her finger, which she
handed to the Prince, saying: ’Keep this
ring in memory of Militza, and think of her sometimes
if you never see her again. But if your love
is really true, come and find me in my own kingdom.
I may not show you the way there, but this ring will
guide you.
’If you have love and courage
enough to undertake this journey, whenever you come
to a cross-road always look at this diamond before
you settle which way you are going to take. If
it sparkles as brightly as ever go straight on, but
if its lustre is dimmed choose another path.’
Then Militza bent over the Prince
and kissed him on his forehead, and before he had
time to say a word she vanished through the branches
of the tree in a little white cloud.
Morning broke, and the Prince, still
full of the wonderful apparition, left his perch and
returned to the palace like one in a dream, without
even knowing if the fruit had been taken or not; for
his whole mind was absorbed by thoughts of Militza
and how he was to find her.
As soon as the head-gardener saw the
Prince going towards the palace he ran to the trees,
and when he saw them laden with ripe fruit he hastened
to tell the King the joyful news. The King was
beside himself for joy, and hurried at once to the
garden and made the gardener pick him some of the
fruit. He tasted it, and found the apple quite
as luscious as it had been in his dream. He went
at once to his son Iwanich, and after embracing him
tenderly and heaping praises on him, he asked him
how he had succeeded in protecting the costly fruit
from the power of the magician.
This question placed Iwanich in a
dilemma. But as he did not want the real story
to be known, he said that about midnight a huge wasp
had flown through the branches, and buzzed incessantly
round him. He had warded it off with his sword,
and at dawn, when he was becoming quite worn out,
the wasp had vanished as suddenly as it had appeared.
The King, who never doubted the truth
of this tale, bade his son go to rest at once and
recover from the fatigues of the night; but he himself
went and ordered many feasts to be held in honour of
the preservation of the wonderful fruit.
The whole capital was in a stir, and
everyone shared in the King’s joy; the Prince
alone took no part in the festivities.
While the King was at a banquet, Iwanich
took some purses of gold, and mounting the quickest
horse in the royal stable, he sped off like the wind
without a single soul being any the wiser.
It was only on the next day that they
missed him; the King was very distressed at his disappearance,
and sent search-parties all over the kingdom to look
for him, but in vain; and after six months they gave
him up as dead, and in another six months they had
forgotten all about him. But in the meantime
the Prince, with the help of his ring, had had a most
successful journey, and no evil had befallen him.
At the end of three months he came
to the entrance of a huge forest, which looked as
if it had never been trodden by human foot before,
and which seemed to stretch out indefinitely.
The Prince was about to enter the wood by a little
path he had discovered, when he heard a voice shouting
to him: ‘Hold, youth! Whither are you
going?’
Iwanich turned round, and saw a tall,
gaunt-looking man, clad in miserable rags, leaning
on a crooked staff and seated at the foot of an oak
tree, which was so much the same colour as himself
that it was little wonder the Prince had ridden past
the tree without noticing him.
‘Where else should I be going,’
he said, ‘than through the wood?’
‘Through the wood?’ said
the old man in amazement. ’It’s easily
seen that you have heard nothing of this forest, that
you rush so blindly to meet your doom. Well,
listen to me before you ride any further; let me tell
you that this wood hides in its depths a countless
number of the fiercest tigers, hyenas, wolves, bears,
and snakes, and all sorts of other monsters.
If I were to cut you and your horse up into tiny morsels
and throw them to the beasts, there wouldn’t
be one bit for each hundred of them. Take my
advice, therefore, and if you wish to save your life
follow some other path.’
The Prince was rather taken aback
by the old man’s words, and considered for a
minute what he should do; then looking at his ring,
and perceiving that it sparkled as brightly as ever,
he called out: ’If this wood held even
more terrible things than it does, I cannot help myself,
for I must go through it.’
Here he spurred his horse and rode
on; but the old beggar screamed so loudly after him
that the Prince turned round and rode back to the oak
tree.
‘I am really sorry for you,’
said the beggar, ’but if you are quite determined
to brave the dangers of the forest, let me at least
give you a piece of advice which will help you against
these monsters.’
’Take this bagful of bread-crumbs
and this live hare. I will make you a present
of them both, as I am anxious to save your life; but
you must leave your horse behind you, for it would
stumble over the fallen trees or get entangled in
the briers and thorns. When you have gone about
a hundred yards into the wood the wild beasts will
surround you. Then you must instantly seize your
bag, and scatter the bread-crumbs among them.
They will rush to eat them up greedily, and when you
have scattered the last crumb you must lose no time
in throwing the hare to them; as soon as the hare
feels itself on the ground it will run away as quickly
as possible, and the wild beasts will turn to pursue
it. In this way you will be able to get through
the wood unhurt.’
Iwanich thanked the old man for his
counsel, dismounted from his horse, and, taking the
bag and the hare in his arms, he entered the forest.
He had hardly lost sight of his gaunt grey friend when
he heard growls and snarls in the thicket close to
him, and before he had time to think he found himself
surrounded by the most dreadful-looking creatures.
On one side he saw the glittering eye of a cruel tiger,
on the other the gleaming teeth of a great she-wolf;
here a huge bear growled fiercely, and there a horrible
snake coiled itself in the grass at his feet.
But Iwanich did not forget the old
man’s advice, and quickly put his hand into
the bag and took out as many bread-crumbs as he could
hold in his hand at a time. He threw them to
the beasts, but soon the bag grew lighter and lighter,
and the Prince began to feel a little frightened.
And now the last crumb was gone, and the hungry beasts
thronged round him, greedy for fresh prey. Then
he seized the hare and threw it to them.
No sooner did the little creature
feel itself on the ground than it lay back its ears
and flew through the wood like an arrow from a bow,
closely pursued by the wild beasts, and the Prince
was left alone. He looked at his ring, and when
he saw that it sparkled as brightly as ever he went
straight on through the forest.
He hadn’t gone very far when
he saw a most extraordinary looking man coming towards
him. He was not more than three feet high, his
legs were quite crooked, and all his body was covered
with prickles like a hedgehog. Two lions walked
with him, fastened to his side by the two ends of
his long beard.
He stopped the Prince and asked him
in a harsh voice: ’Are you the man who
has just fed my body-guard?’
Iwanich was so startled that he could
hardly reply, but the little man continued: ’I
am most grateful to you for your kindness; what can
I give you as a reward?’
‘All I ask,’ replied Iwanich,
’is, that I should be allowed to go through
this wood in safety.’
‘Most certainly,’ answered
the little man; ’and for greater security I
will give you one of my lions as a protector.
But when you leave this wood and come near a palace
which does not belong to my domain, let the lion go,
in order that he may not fall into the hands of an
enemy and be killed.’
With these words he loosened the lion
from his beard and bade the beast guard the youth
carefully.
With this new protector Iwanich wandered
on through the forest, and though he came upon a great
many more wolves, hyenas, leopards, and other wild
beasts, they always kept at a respectful distance when
they saw what sort of an escort the Prince had with
him.
Iwanich hurried through the wood as
quickly as his legs would carry him, but, nevertheless,
hour after hour, went by and not a trace of a green
field or a human habitation met his eyes. At length,
towards evening, the mass of trees grew more transparent,
and through the interlaced branches a wide plain was
visible.
At the exit of the wood the lion stood
still, and the Prince took leave of him, having first
thanked him warmly for his kind protection. It
had become quite dark, and Iwanich was forced to wait
for daylight before continuing his journey.
He made himself a bed of grass and
leaves, lit a fire of dry branches, and slept soundly
till the next morning.
Then he got up and walked towards
a beautiful white palace which he saw gleaming in
the distance. In about an hour he reached the
building, and opening the door he walked in.
After wandering through many marble
halls, he came to a huge staircase made of porphyry,
leading down to a lovely garden.
The Prince burst into a shout of joy
when he suddenly perceived Militza in the centre of
a group of girls who were weaving wreaths of flowers
with which to deck their mistress.
As soon as Militza saw the Prince
she ran up to him and embraced him tenderly; and after
he had told her all his adventures, they went into
the palace, where a sumptuous meal awaited them.
Then the Princess called her court together, and introduced
Iwanich to them as her future husband.
Preparations were at once made for
the wedding, which was held soon after with great
pomp and magnificence.
Three months of great happiness followed,
when Militza received one day an invitation to visit
her mother’s sister.
Although the Princess was very unhappy
at leaving her husband, she did not like to refuse
the invitation, and, promising to return in seven
days at the latest, she took a tender farewell of the
Prince, and said: ’Before I go I will hand
you over all the keys of the castle. Go everywhere
and do anything you like; only one thing I beg and
beseech you, do not open the little iron door in the
north tower, which is closed with seven locks and
seven bolts; for if you do, we shall both suffer for
it.’
Iwanich promised what she asked, and
Militza departed, repeating her promise to return
in seven days.
When the Prince found himself alone
he began to be tormented by pangs of curiosity as
to what the room in the tower contained. For two
days he resisted the temptation to go and look, but
on the third he could stand it no longer, and taking
a torch in his hand he hurried to the tower, and unfastened
one lock after the other of the little iron door until
it burst open.
What an unexpected sight met his gaze!
The Prince perceived a small room black with smoke,
lit up feebly by a fire from which issued long blue
flames. Over the fire hung a huge cauldron full
of boiling pitch, and fastened into the cauldron by
iron chains stood a wretched man screaming with agony.
Iwanich was much horrified at the
sight before him, and asked the man what terrible
crime he had committed to be punished in this dreadful
fashion.
‘I will tell you everything,’
said the man in the cauldron; ’but first relieve
my torments a little, I implore you.’
‘And how can I do that?’ asked the Prince.
‘With a little water,’
replied the man; ’only sprinkle a few drops
over me and I shall feel better.’
The Prince, moved by pity, without
thinking what he was doing, ran to the courtyard of
the castle, and filled a jug with water, which he
poured over the man in the cauldron.
In a moment a most fearful crash was
heard, as if all the pillars of the palace were giving
way, and the palace itself, with towers and doors,
windows and the cauldron, whirled round the bewildered
Prince’s head. This continued for a few
minutes, and then everything vanished into thin air,
and Iwanich found himself suddenly alone upon a desolate
heath covered with rocks and stones.
The Prince, who now realised what
his heedlessness had done, cursed too late his spirit
of curiosity. In his despair he wandered on over
the heath, never looking where he put his feet, and
full of sorrowful thoughts. At last he saw a
light in the distance, which came from a miserable-looking
little hut.
The owner of it was none other than
the kind-hearted gaunt grey beggar who had given the
Prince the bag of bread-crumbs and the hare. Without
recognising Iwanich, he opened the door when he knocked
and gave him shelter for the night.
On the following morning the Prince
asked his host if he could get him any work to do,
as he was quite unknown in the neighbourhood, and had
not enough money to take him home.
‘My son,’ replied the
old man, ’all this country round here is uninhabited;
I myself have to wander to distant villages for my
living, and even then I do not very often find enough
to satisfy my hunger. But if you would like to
take service with the old witch Corva, go straight
up the little stream which flows below my hut for
about three hours, and you will come to a sand-hill
on the left-hand side; that is where she lives.’
Iwanich thanked the gaunt grey beggar
for his information, and went on his way.
After walking for about three hours
the Prince came upon a dreary-looking grey stone wall;
this was the back of the building and did not attract
him; but when he came upon the front of the house he
found it even less inviting, for the old witch had
surrounded her dwelling with a fence of spikes, on
every one of which a man’s skull was stuck.
In this horrible enclosure stood a small black house,
which had only two grated windows, all covered with
cobwebs, and a battered iron door.
The Prince knocked, and a rasping
woman’s voice told him to enter.
Iwanich opened the door, and found
himself in a smoke-begrimed kitchen, in the presence
of a hideous old woman who was warming her skinny
hands at a fire. The Prince offered to become
her servant, and the old hag told him she was badly
in want of one, and he seemed to be just the person
to suit her.
When Iwanich asked what his work,
and how much his wages would be, the witch bade him
follow her, and led the way through a narrow damp
passage into a vault, which served as a stable.
Here he perceived two pitch-black horses in a stall.
‘You see before you,’
said the old woman, ’a mare and her foal; you
have nothing to do but to lead them out to the fields
every day, and to see that neither of them runs away
from you. If you look after them both for a whole
year I will give you anything you like to ask; but
if, on the other hand, you let either of the animals
escape you, your last hour is come, and your head
shall be stuck on the last spike of my fence.
The other spikes, as you see, are already adorned,
and the skulls are all those of different servants
I have had who have failed to do what I demanded.’
Iwanich, who thought he could not
be much worse off than he was already, agreed to the
witch’s proposal.
At daybreak next morning he drove
his horses to the field, and brought them back in
the evening without their ever having attempted to
break away from him. The witch stood at her door
and received him kindly, and set a good meal before
him.
So it continued for some time, and
all went well with the Prince. Early every morning
he led the horses out to the fields, and brought them
home safe and sound in the evening.
One day, while he was watching the
horses, he came to the banks of a river, and saw a
big fish, which through some mischance had been cast
on the land, struggling hard to get back into the water.
Iwanich, who felt sorry for the poor
creature, seized it in his arms and flung it into
the stream. But no sooner did the fish find itself
in the water again, than, to the Prince’s amazement,
it swam up to the bank and said:
‘My kind benefactor, how can
I reward you for your goodness?’
‘I desire nothing,’ answered
the Prince. ’I am quite content to have
been able to be of some service to you.’
‘You must do me the favour,’
replied the fish, ’to take a scale from my body,
and keep it carefully. If you should ever need
my help, throw it into the river, and I will come
to your aid at once.’
Iwanich bowed, loosened a scale from
the body of the grateful beast, put it carefully away,
and returned home.
A short time after this, when he was
going early one morning to the usual grazing place
with his horses, he noticed a flock of birds assembled
together making a great noise and flying wildly backwards
and forwards.
Full of curiosity, Iwanich hurried
up to the spot, and saw that a large number of ravens
had attacked an eagle, and although the eagle was
big and powerful and was making a brave fight, it was
overpowered at last by numbers, and had to give in.
But the Prince, who was sorry for
the poor bird, seized the branch of a tree and hit
out at the ravens with it; terrified at this unexpected
onslaught they flew away, leaving many of their number
dead or wounded on the battlefield.
As soon as the eagle saw itself free
from its tormentors it plucked a feather from its
wing, and, handing it to the Prince, said: ’Here,
my kind benefactor, take this feather as a proof of
my gratitude; should you ever be in need of my help
blow this feather into the air, and I will help you
as much as is in my power.’
Iwanich thanked the bird, and placing
the feather beside the scale he drove the horses home.
Another day he had wandered farther
than usual, and came close to a farmyard; the place
pleased the Prince, and as there was plenty of good
grass for the horses he determined to spend the day
there. Just as he was sitting down under a tree
he heard a cry close to him, and saw a fox which had
been caught in a trap placed there by the farmer.
In vain did the poor beast try to free itself; then
the good-natured
Prince came once more to the rescue, and let the fox
out of the trap.
The fox thanked him heartily, tore
two hairs out of his bushy tail, and said: ’Should
you ever stand in need of my help throw these two
hairs into the fire, and in a moment I shall be at
your side ready to obey you.’
Iwanich put the fox’s hairs
with the scale and the feather, and as it was getting
dark he hastened home with his horses.
In the meantime his service was drawing
near to an end, and in three more days the year was
up, and he would be able to get his reward and leave
the witch.
On the first evening of these last
three days, when he came home and was eating his supper,
he noticed the old woman stealing into the stables.
The Prince followed her secretly to
see what she was going to do. He crouched down
in the doorway and heard the wicked witch telling the
horses to wait next morning till Iwanich was asleep,
and then to go and hide themselves in the river, and
to stay there till she told them to return; and if
they didn’t do as she told them the old woman
threatened to beat them till they bled.
When Iwanich heard all this he went
back to his room, determined that nothing should induce
him to fall asleep next day. On the following
morning he led the mare and foal to the fields as usual,
but bound a cord round them both which he kept in
his hand.
But after a few hours, by the magic
arts of the old witch, he was overpowered by sleep,
and the mare and foal escaped and did as they had
been told to do. The Prince did not awake till
late in the evening; and when he did, he found, to
his horror, that the horses had disappeared.
Filled with despair, he cursed the moment when he had
entered the service of the cruel witch, and already
he saw his head sticking up on the sharp spike beside
the others.
Then he suddenly remembered the fish’s
scale, which, with the eagle’s feather and the
fox’s hairs, he always carried about with him.
He drew the scale from his pocket, and hurrying to
the river he threw it in. In a minute the grateful
fish swam towards the bank on which Iwanich was standing,
and said: ’What do you command, my friend
and benefactor?’
The Prince replied: ’I
had to look after a mare and foal, and they have run
away from me and have hidden themselves in the river;
if you wish to save my life drive them back to the
land.’
‘Wait a moment,’ answered
the fish, ’and I and my friends will soon drive
them out of the water.’ With these words
the creature disappeared into the depths of the stream.
Almost immediately a rushing hissing
sound was heard in the waters, the waves dashed against
the banks, the foam was tossed into the air, and the
two horses leapt suddenly on to the dry land, trembling
and shaking with fear.
Iwanich sprang at once on to the mare’s
back, seized the foal by its bridle, and hastened
home in the highest spirits.
When the witch saw the Prince bringing
the horses home she could hardly conceal her wrath,
and as soon as she had placed Iwanich’s supper
before him she stole away again to the stables.
The Prince followed her, and heard her scolding the
beasts harshly for not having hidden themselves better.
She bade them wait next morning till Iwanich was asleep
and then to hide themselves in the clouds, and to remain
there till she called. If they did not do as she
told them she would beat them till they bled.
The next morning, after Iwanich had
led his horses to the fields, he fell once more into
a magic sleep. The horses at once ran away and
hid themselves in the clouds, which hung down from
the mountains in soft billowy masses.
When the Prince awoke and found that
both the mare and the foal had disappeared, he bethought
him at once of the eagle, and taking the feather out
of his pocket he blew it into the air.
In a moment the bird swooped down
beside him and asked: ’What do you wish
me to do?’
‘My mare and foal,’ replied
the Prince, ’have run away from me, and have
hidden themselves in the clouds; if you wish to save
my life, restore both animals to me.’
‘Wait a minute,’ answered
the eagle; ’with the help of my friends I will
soon drive them back to you.’
With these words the bird flew up
into the air and disappeared among the clouds.
Almost directly Iwanich saw his two
horses being driven towards him by a host of eagles
of all sizes. He caught the mare and foal, and
having thanked the eagle he drove them cheerfully
home again.
The old witch was more disgusted than
ever when she saw him appearing, and having set his
supper before him she stole into the stables, and
Iwanich heard her abusing the horses for not having
hidden themselves better in the clouds. Then
she bade them hide themselves next morning, as soon
as Iwanich was asleep, in the King’s hen-house,
which stood on a lonely part of the heath, and to
remain there till she called. If they failed
to do as she told them she would certainly beat them
this time till they bled.
On the following morning the Prince
drove his horses as usual to the fields. After
he had been overpowered by sleep, as on the former
days, the mare and foal ran away and hid themselves
in the royal hen-house.
When the Prince awoke and found the
horses gone he determined to appeal to the fox; so,
lighting a fire, he threw the two hairs into it, and
in a few moments the fox stood beside him and asked:
’In what way can I serve you?’
‘I wish to know,’ replied
Iwanich, ‘where the King’s hen-house is.’
‘Hardly an hour’s walk
from here,’ answered the fox, and offered to
show the Prince the way to it.
While they were walking along the
fox asked him what he wanted to do at the royal hen-house.
The Prince told him of the misfortune that had befallen
him, and of the necessity of recovering the mare and
foal.
‘That is no easy matter,’
replied the fox. ’But wait a moment.
I have an idea. Stand at the door of the hen-house,
and wait there for your horses. In the meantime
I will slip in among the hens through a hole in the
wall and give them a good chase, so that the noise
they make will arouse the royal henwives, and they
will come to see what is the matter. When they
see the horses they will at once imagine them to be
the cause of the disturbance, and will drive them out.
Then you must lay hands on the mare and foal and catch
them.
All turned out exactly as the sly
fox had foreseen. The Prince swung himself on
the mare, seized the foal by its bridle, and hurried
home.
While he was riding over the heath
in the highest of spirits the mare suddenly said to
her rider: ’You are the first person who
has ever succeeded in outwitting the old witch Corva,
and now you may ask what reward you like for your
service. If you promise never to betray me I
will give you a piece of advice which you will do well
to follow.’
The Prince promised never to betray
her confidence, and the mare continued: ’Ask
nothing else as a reward than my foal, for it has not
its like in the world, and is not to be bought for
love or money; for it can go from one end of the earth
to another in a few minutes. Of course the cunning
Corva will do her best to dissuade you from taking
the foal, and will tell you that it is both idle and
sickly; but do not believe her, and stick to your
point.’
Iwanich longed to possess such an
animal, and promised the mare to follow her advice.
This time Corva received him in the
most friendly manner, and set a sumptuous repast before
him. As soon as he had finished she asked him
what reward he demanded for his year’s service.
‘Nothing more nor less,’
replied the Prince, ’than the foal of your mare.’
The witch pretended to be much astonished
at his request, and said that he deserved something
much better than the foal, for the beast was lazy
and nervous, blind in one eye, and, in short, was quite
worthless.
But the Prince knew what he wanted,
and when the old witch saw that he had made up his
mind to have the foal, she said, ’I am obliged
to keep my promise and to hand you over the foal;
and as I know who you are and what you want, I will
tell you in what way the animal will be useful to
you. The man in the cauldron of boiling pitch,
whom you set free, is a mighty magician; through your
curiosity and thoughtlessness Militza came into his
power, and he has transported her and her castle and
belongings into a distant country.
’You are the only person who
can kill him; and in consequence he fears you to such
an extent that he has set spies to watch you, and they
report your movements to him daily.
’When you have reached him,
beware of speaking a single word to him, or you will
fall into the power of his friends. Seize him
at once by the beard and dash him to the ground.’
Iwanich thanked the old witch, mounted
his foal, put spurs to its sides, and they flew like
lightning through the air.
Already it was growing dark, when
Iwanich perceived some figures in the distance; they
soon came up to them, and then the Prince saw that
it was the magician and his friends who were driving
through the air in a carriage drawn by owls.
When the magician found himself face
to face with Iwanich, without hope of escape, he turned
to him with false friendliness and said: ‘Thrice
my kind benefactor!’
But the Prince, without saying a word,
seized him at once by his beard and dashed him to
the ground. At the same moment the foal sprang
on the top of the magician and kicked and stamped
on him with his hoofs till he died.
Then Iwanich found himself once more
in the palace of his bride, and Militza herself flew
into his arms.
From this time forward they lived
in undisturbed peace and happiness till the end of
their lives.