A RUSSIAN FAIRY TALE
It was a great day when the Prince
was born. The King was delighted, and the Queen
nearly went mad with joy. The courtiers, though
they hardly dared dance a Trepak in the palace, could
not keep their heels still; while the guards, the
attendants, the little pages and pretty kitchen maids,
drank tea and coffee, glass after glass, till the following
morning, when they all had supper, and then crept off
on tip-toe to bed. The people clapped their hands
and sang and danced in the squares and streets, till
those who danced the longest got sore throats, and
those who sang the loudest got footsore. The
whole city could not sleep for joy. The young
Prince was the first-born, and would one day sit upon
the throne: was this a thing to put under the
pillow? On with the dance! Another song!
Drink deep to the young Prince!
The doctors smiled, and stroked the
smile down to the tips of their grey beards as they
nodded to one another amiably. The child was strong
and healthy, and would live; and besides, they all
agreed upon the point that he was a Prince, and had
his father’s nose. But alas! doctors are
not everybody. After the revel a wise man from
Persia, who was staying in the city at the time, awoke
from his slumbers and dressed himself, and went to
see the King. Sunk in a deep sleep, he had missed
the celebrations, but he had found a vision of the
future; and he was now hastening to see the King about
it, for, as you must understand, when a wise man knows
the worst he can never keep it to himself.
When he came before the King, he had
scarcely the heart to tell him what would befall his
first-born; but the King bade him speak out, and he
obeyed.
‘Sire,’ he said humbly,
’I come not to tell thee bad news, but rather
to warn thee in time, lest a vision that came to me
in the night should perchance come true.’
The King looked a little anxious,
for he had heard tales, strange but true, about this
wise man from Persia and his wonderful powers.
‘Speak on, Ferdasan,’ he said.
‘Sire,’ replied the seer,
’the dream that came to me was a deep-sleep
vision. Doubt not that it is a warning entrusted
to me to lay before you. O King, this is the
substance of it. Fifteen years came and went
before my inner eyes, and the son that has been born
to you from heaven grew more beautiful year by year.
But at the close of the fifteenth year he flew
away!’
‘Flew away!’ cried the
King, startled. ’And what was the manner
of his flight, O Ferdasan?’
’Sire, in the midst of the palace
gardens, Hausa, the Bird of the Sun, came to seek
him or to be sought by him. He mounted on the
back of this bird; and then, as the twilight fell,
it carried him away westward.’
‘With what purpose, Ferdasan?’
’That, sire, I can reveal to
you only in words that hide my thoughts, and
‘Nay, nay; tell me all, I command you.’
’His fate stands thus.
He is destined to marry the Maiden of the Dawn, and,
in quest of her, he will fly westward in his fifteenth
year, unless
‘Yes, unless what, man?’
‘Unless you yourself, sire, keep watch and ward
and so prevent him.’
The King stared at the seer. How could he believe
this thing?
‘It seems that you have come
to disturb my peace,’ he said angrily.
’What proof have I that you speak truly?
If your wisdom has brought me this warning, then your
wisdom can avert the evil fate. You will remain
in this palace until the die is cast. That is
my command.’
‘Sire,’ replied Ferdasan
humbly, ’my work is done, and I must return to
my cave in the mountains.’
‘What!’ cried the King in a rage, ‘you
defy me? I will compel you.’
‘You cannot,’ replied
Ferdasan. ’Seers stand before kings and
that is true in two ways.
‘We shall see.’ The
King clapped his hands fiercely. Then, as two
guards came running in answer to the summons, he cried,
’Take that man and place him in a dungeon!’
The guards turned upon Ferdasan, who
stood calm and unmoved, looking at the King.
Then, as they were about to seize him, a strange thing
happened. They clutched at the empty air and staggered
against one another, amazed. For a moment the
Throne-room seemed to echo a sweet music from far
away; for a moment it was filled with the faint fragrance
of mountain lilies; then the King saw a thin grey mist
slowly issuing through one of the windows, to dissolve
in the sunlight.
And then he knew.
From that time forward, the King regarded
the seer’s prediction with great anxiety.
He watched the young Prince continually in his first
years, and, when, as was often the case, he saw him
gazing wistfully towards the west when the sun had
set, he felt sure that the coming event had cast its
shadow before.
Accordingly, as soon as the young
Prince entered his fifteenth year, the King had him
imprisoned in a lofty tower situated in the palace
gardens, and placed a guard about it, for he was determined
to take no risk whatever.
But, while he kept the Prince a close
prisoner, he surrounded him with every luxury, for
he loved him dearly. He even promised him that,
on his fifteenth birthday, a great festival would
be held in his honour, though he himself would only
be allowed to watch the festivities from the high
window of the tower.
The Prince implored his father to
let him wander in the gardens on his birthday; but
the King was so afraid that, by some means or other,
he would be spirited away, that he refused. In
addition to this, he double-locked and barred the
topmost room of the tower in which the Prince was
imprisoned.
On the day of the festival, the sun
rose bright. As the Prince watched it from his
high window, his heart rose with it. At noon he
had fully decided to disobey his father and escape
from his prison. He brooded till sunset; then,
as the twilight gathered, he went to the window again
and listened to the sounds of festivity in the city
all around. Presently, he leaned out over the
window-sill and looked down. It was a long way
to the ground, but the gardens were beautiful, and
he was determined to reach them and roam free among
the trees and flowers. Was not this his birthday,
and was not the city holding high festival in his
honour? It seemed hard that he should be a prisoner,
when even the guards of his prison had stolen away
to join the merry throng. The city without was
a blaze of light and a chorus of revel, but the gardens
below seemed to be deserted: now was his opportunity.
Turning back into the apartment, he
swept his eyes round for anything that would serve
as a rope. There were heavy hangings falling from
the high ceiling: he could not pull these down.
There was the carpet; yes, he could make a rope of
that.
He quickly secured a knife, and ripped
from the edge of the carpet many long threads.
When he had a sufficient number, he set to work to
plait a rope, splicing fresh threads in at intervals
until it was nearly a hundred feet long. Then
he tied one end of it securely to one of the pillars
supporting the roof, and let the free length of it
down from the window. By the light of the full
moon sailing overhead, he could see that the end of
the rope reached as far as the branches of a tree
growing at the foot of the tower.
It was now past midnight, and the
garden below was just as silent as the city outside
was loud with merriment. As the Prince climbed
over the window-sill and let himself down the rope,
he took no thought as to how he might get back again;
it was quite enough to get away from the lonely, stifling
place of his imprisonment.
At last his feet touched the topmost
bough of the tree, but there was rope to spare; and
he went on until, at the end of it, he was able to
grasp a bough thick enough to bear his weight; and
by this means he climbed along to the trunk, and so
to the ground.
There was no one about. The guards
were all away merrymaking in the Prince’s honour.
Although he was still a prisoner within the garden
walls, he was enjoying his adventure and the sense
of freedom to wander, even in the gardens.
He took his way along pathways where
the moonbeams strayed. He drank in the cool night
air, and paused ever and again to pluck a sweet-smelling
night-flower. Wandering on, he came at length
to a bank at the end of the garden, beyond which he
knew was a steep cliff overlooking a valley.
Before his father had shut him up in the tower, he
had always been forbidden to approach that end of
the garden, and he had never done so; but now his
curiosity led him on, and he advanced cautiously along
an avenue of overarching trees. But it soon grew
so dense and dark, that he was about to turn back,
when suddenly he espied a misty light beginning to
grow brighter and brighter at the far end of the avenue.
Eager to find out where this light
came from, and seeing his way more clearly now, he
hastened on, and soon arrived at the mouth of a large
cave, which, inside, was as bright as day. He
ventured farther forward and peered round a buttress
of rock; and there, in the centre of the cave, a strange
sight met his eyes. A gigantic bird was standing
there, getting ready to fly through the farther opening
overlooking the valley. It was stretching its
neck and flapping its wings; and, from every feather
of these, flashed rays and sparkles of light, illuminating
the whole place.
In the centre of the cavern floor
was a crystal pool into which, from a ledge high up
on the wall, fell a broad cascade almost like a flowing
veil, and the strong light shed by the giant bird shone
through this on to the rock behind it. And there
the Prince saw the most beautiful thing he had ever
set eyes on.
It was an oval picture, framed in
crystal, and hanging behind the transparent cascade a
picture of a beautiful Princess. And, as he looked,
her eyes met his.
Immediately the young Prince was filled
with a great longing to find the original of this
portrait, but it seemed that his only way of doing
so was through the help of the great bird, which was
now attracting his attention by strange signs.
First it looked at him with a kindly eye; then it
craned its neck towards the farther opening of the
cave, and, flapping its wings as if about to fly,
ran a step or two and then stopped and looked back
at him. After doing this two or three times it
crouched down and turned its head sideways, looking
straight at him, as much as to say, ‘Don’t
you want to ride in the air?’
The Prince saw the bird’s meaning,
but, to signify that he wanted to find the Princess,
he pointed to the picture. At this the bird spread
its wings right out until the tips brushed against
each side of the cave, the feathers quivering intensely
and throwing out a bright light which almost blinded
the Prince.
Then the bird drew in its wings and
made a sign to him to mount between them. At
this the Prince, feeling sure that the giant bird meant
to take him to the Princess, climbed up and seated
himself between the great wings.
In another moment the bird had launched
itself from the farther opening of the cave, and they
were soon sailing high over the valley. Some
revellers in the city looked up and saw what they took
to be a meteor flashing across the sky; but it was
really the Fire Bird bearing the Prince swiftly to
the far-off palace of the Princess.
How many thousands of miles they flew
between the darkest hour and dawn, the Prince could
not tell. Nestling warm and comfortable among
the soft feathers, he heard the roar of the great
creature’s wings, and knew they were travelling
at a tremendous pace. And at last the Fire Bird
craned its neck downwards, and, as they began to descend
in a slanting direction, the Prince could see something
sparkling on the horizon in the first rosy light of
dawn.
Nearer and nearer they came, and now
he could distinguish the great gates and towers of
what seemed to be a palace of pure crystal, surrounded
by beautiful gardens.
Swiftly they swooped downwards, and
the Fire Bird alighted on the edge of a broad balcony,
and crouched down for the Prince to dismount.
The journey had not been in vain.
There, on a mossy bank among the beautiful flowers
in the garden, he found the Princess asleep; and, as
he looked down at her, he saw that her face was the
face he had seen in the portrait.
He tried to wake her, but her sleep
was sound: she did not stir. He breathed
on her eyelids and whispered in her ear, but still
she slept on.
Seeing this, the Bird grew restless,
and craning its neck forward, seized the Prince with
its beak and placed him again between its wings.
Then it sprang upwards and soared swiftly into the
sky.
Soon they were back in the cave, and
the Prince, dreading to return to the prison tower,
spent the hours of daylight in his warm nest between
the Fire Bird’s wings.
The following night, as the hours
were drawing on towards dawn, the Bird set forth again.
But again the Prince was unable to wake the sleeping
Princess, so they returned once more. But, on
the third night, when they reached the Princess, the
light of dawn was in the sky, and, as it grew every
moment rosier and rosier, the Princess awoke of her
own accord to find the young Prince sitting among
the flowers by her side. She had only just time
to see the Fire Bird pluck a feather from its wing
with its beak, and let it fall at her feet, before
it soared away. She picked up the feather and
placed it in her bosom. Then she looked at the
Prince.
There is love, and there is love;
but such love as sprang up at the same moment in two
hearts can never be described. It was as if she
had been dreaming about him all her life, and now
she had awakened to find him. It was as if his
journey had been to Paradise. She raised her arms
to him, and he enfolded her and kissed her. Then
they wandered among the flowers and trees, and all
the birds understood: they sang so divinely.
Towards evening, as the shadows began
to fall, the Princess’s sister, who was a wicked
Sorceress, came into the garden and stood behind a
tree watching the lovers.
‘I’ll soon put an end
to this,’ she said, clenching her hands in jealous
rage. She went away and performed spells, and,
by her wicked arts, she summoned the image of the
Prince before her, so that his life went out of his
body, and he remained in the Princess’s arms
like one dead.
Terrified and distracted with grief,
the Princess carried the lifeless body of her lover
into the palace and laid it on a couch in her own
apartment. There, exhausted with the effort, she
fell upon it, weeping bitterly. She called his
name, but he did not answer. His ears were deaf,
his eyes were closed, his pale lips did not respond
to her kisses.
But the Prince was not dead:
he was bewitched. The Sorceress, by means of
his image, had torn his heart from his breast and had
taken it far away. Yet, all the time, that heart
was still beating with life, and with love for the
Princess.
Forlorn and sorrowful the Princess
sat by the couch, when suddenly she started up with
clenched hands.
‘I know! I know!’
she cried. Then she bent down and kissed the Prince’s
lips. She felt them tremble against hers, and,
though she could not call him back, she knew that
he was not dead. ’Oh! my wicked sister!
This is your work. You have bewitched my love!
Never again! This is the end!’
She ran everywhere, in and about the
palace, in search of her sister, her hands clenched,
her eyes blazing, her teeth set. But she could
not find her. At last a page, terrified to death
at her aspect, confessed that her sister had fled
from the palace alone, mounted on the fleetest steed
of the stables.
The Princess at once resolved to follow
her and force her to restore the Prince to life and
health. But, at the very outset, there was a
terrible difficulty to be surmounted. The Princess
herself had never been beyond the walls that encircled
the vast grounds of the palace. She knew that
there were twelve gates, and that only one of these
was left unlocked from sunset till sunrise, and that
none could tell which one it might be. Now the
law of the palace permitted her to try one gate each
night, and one gate only.
She sat down and thought, and then
decided to try the same gate each night until it happened
to be the right one. For twelve nights she tried,
but each time she found the gate locked and barred.
Then she suddenly remembered that,
when the Fire Bird had brought the Prince to her,
it had plucked a bright feather from its wing and let
it fall at her feet. She had preserved it in
a golden casket. Could it be that this feather
had magic powers? She ran with all haste to her
apartment, and took it from the casket. As she
did so, it sparkled and quivered. As she held
it up she was more than ever convinced that it held
magic powers.
She looked at the feather, and she
thought of the Fire Bird itself, and wished that it
could only come and advise her what to do.
Scarcely had she conceived the wish,
when a faint sound from far away struck upon her ears.
As she listened, it grew louder and louder, and nearer
and nearer, until at last she knew it was the roar
of the Fire Bird’s wings. She ran out onto
the balcony, and there she saw it, like a meteor in
the sky, every moment growing bigger.
At last, with a glad, shrill cry,
it swooped down, and its giant wings fluttered and
vibrated a moment before it alighted on the edge of
the balcony, its fiery golden light sparkling on the
crystal pillars and shimmering in the air all around.
The Princess held up the feather,
and the Fire Bird bowed its head slowly three times.
Then it suddenly turned round as if to fly away, but
looked back at her, and raised its wings, and fluffed
out the soft, glistening feathers in the hollow of
its back. Arching its head round, it began to
act as if it were preparing a nest for her between
its wings, and the Princess saw plainly that it was
only waiting for her to seat herself there before
flying away. The Bird knew what she wanted; she
was sure of that. So she mounted between the wings,
and nestled down on a soft feather bed of dazzling
golden light, warm and comfortable. Then, with
a long, jubilant cry the Bird rose in the air, and,
craning its neck westward, flashed through space at
a terrific rate.
Very soon they overtook the setting
sun, passed it, and left it sinking on the horizon
as they went on into the purlieus of the Land of Night
and Silence, which lies beyond the great round shoulder
of the world. And here the Fire Bird blazed along,
leaving a trail of light in its wake and throwing
a radiance on the hills and forests over which it
passed; until it came, by way of the Valley-which-has-no-Borders,
to the Forest-without-an-End.
Here the Bird swooped downwards and
alighted before a black-mouthed cave. He crouched
while the Princess dismounted. As she did so,
the Bird plucked two fresh feathers from its wing
with its beak and held them out to her. They
shed a brilliant light, and she, seeing at once that
they would serve as lamps, took them, one in each
hand, and advanced into the gloomy cave.
She had not gone far when she heard
a voice crooning a witch song, and, peering round
the edge of a rock, she espied her sister seated beside
a cauldron, beneath which was a freezing fire fed
with blocks of frozen brine.
From the witch song her sister was
singing, the Princess learned that her lover’s
heart was in the cauldron. She listened while
the Sorceress sang:
’Seethe! Seethe!
Heart of her lover,
Beating in tune
with mine.
Never the two their love can
recover,
Never their arms
entwine.
Freeze! Freeze!
Heart in this cauldron,
Seared by the
frozen brine!’
With a scream the Princess rushed
forward, and, before her wicked sister could prevent
her, she had upset the cauldron with a crash.
Some of the icy fire of brine splashed up in the face
of the Sorceress, and with a loud, grating shriek,
she fell to the ground senseless dead!
The Princess snatched up her lover’s
heart, and placed it in her bosom against her own,
where she could feel it still beating. Then, without
waiting another moment, she ran back to the Fire Bird,
and sprang upon its back with a cry of joy, patting
its neck and stroking its feathers.
Up in the sky they soared again, and
away over the world towards the palace in the Home
of the Dawn. And, as they neared their destination,
the Princess suddenly missed something. Quickly
she felt in her bosom to see if the heart of her lover
was safe; but lo, it was gone! It seemed to have
grown warm and melted right away.
Distressed at this, she urged the
Fire Bird to still greater speed, until his track
through the sky was like that of a shooting star.
At length they swooped down and alighted on the balcony
of the palace. The roaring of the Fire Bird’s
wings was stilled, but the hum of its feathers continued a
throbbing pulsation of musical sound.
As the Princess alighted, the Prince
himself came running to her. Then, with a mingled
cry of delight, the lovers leapt to greet each other,
and, when they were enfolded in each other’s
arms, the Fire Bird discreetly turned his head away
and preened his tail feathers.
The Princess did not trouble about
her lover’s heart which she had taken from the
Sorceress and missed on the way. She now felt
it beating against her own, and knew that it was in
its right place. The Prince was free from the
wicked spell at last.
The Fire Bird’s work was done.
Without a word he sprang into the air, and was soon
lost to sight. And the lovers did not hear him
go, for, by some mysterious power, he hushed his wings
and went secretly, for, as you must have seen, he
was really a very old bird.
The Prince and the Princess were married
very soon, and, during the celebrations, the Fire
Bird was seen to circle thrice every night round the
palace, but he never settled.
As King and Queen of the People of
the Dawn, they reigned for long years, and the Fire
Bird was always their friend. On every anniversary
of their wedding day, they awoke to the sound of his
roaring wings. He always brought a present; and
do you know what it was? Just a single feather
of his shining wing, so that they might obtain whatever
joy they wished for.