THE PRINCESS OF THE SPRINGS
Once, long ago, the Moon Giant wooed
the beautiful giantess who dwells in the Great River
and won her love. He built for her a wonderful
palace where the Great River runs into the sea.
It was made of mother-of-pearl with rich carvings,
and gold and silver and precious stones were used
to adorn it. Never before in all the world had
a giant or giantess possessed such a magnificent home.
When the baby daughter of the Moon
Giant and the Giantess of the Great River was born
it was decreed among the giants that she should be
the Princess of all the Springs and should rule over
all the rivers and lakes. The light of her eyes
was like the moonbeams, and her smile was like moonlight
on still waters. Her strength was as the strength
of the Great River, and the fleetness of her foot
was as the swiftness of the Great River.
As the beautiful Spring Princess grew
older many suitors came to sing her praises beneath
the palace windows, but she favoured none of them.
She was so happy living in her own lovely palace with
her own dear mother that she did not care at all for
any suitor. No other daughter ever loved her
mother as the Spring Princess loved the Giantess of
the Great River.
At last the Sun Giant came to woo
the Spring Princess. The strength of the Sun
Giant was as the strength of ten of the other suitors
of the fair princess. He was so powerful that
he won her heart.
When he asked her to marry him, however,
and go with him to his own palace, the Spring Princess
shook her lovely head. “O Sun Giant, you
are so wonderful and so powerful that I love you as
I never before have loved a suitor who sang beneath
my palace window,” said she, “but I love
my mother, too. I cannot go away with you and
leave my own dear mother. It would break my heart.”
The Sun Giant told the Spring Princess
again and again of his great love for her, of his
magnificent palace which would be her new home, of
the happy life which awaited her as queen of the palace.
At length she listened to his pleadings and decided
that she could leave home and live with him for nine
months of the year. For three months of every
year, however, she would have to return to the wonderful
palace of mother-of-pearl where the Great River runs
into the sea and spend the time with her mother, the
Giantess of the Great River.
The Sun Giant at last sorrowfully
consented to this arrangement and the wedding feast
was held. It lasted for seven days and seven nights.
Then the Spring Princess went away with the Sun Giant
to his own home.
Every year the Spring Princess went
to visit her mother for three months according to
the agreement. For three months of every year
she lived in the palace of mother-of-pearl where the
Great River runs into the sea. For three months
of every year the rivers sang once more as they rushed
along their way. For three months the lakes sparkled
in the bright sunlight as their hearts once more were
brimful of joy.
When at last the little son of the
Spring Princess was born she wanted to take him with
her when she went to visit her mother. The Sun
Giant, however, did not approve of such a plan.
He firmly refused to allow the child to leave home.
After much pleading, all in vain, the Spring Princess
set out upon her journey alone, with sorrow in her
heart. She left her baby son with the best nurses
she could procure.
Now it happened that the Giantess
of the Great River had not expected that her daughter
would be able to visit her that year. She had
thought that all the rivers and lakes, the palace of
mother-of-pearl, and her own mother heart would have
to get along as best they could without a visit from
the Spring Princess. The Giantess of the Great
River had gone away to water the earth. One of
the land giants had taken her prisoner and would not
let her escape.
When the Spring Princess arrived at
the beautiful palace of mother-of-pearl and gold and
silver and precious stones, where the Great River
runs into the sea, there was no one at home. She
ran from room to room in the palace calling out, “O
dear mother, Giantess of the Great River, dear, dear
mother! Where are you? Where have you hidden
yourself?”
There was no answer. Her own
voice echoed back to her through the beautiful halls
of mother-of-pearl with their rich carvings. The
palace was entirely deserted.
She ran outside the palace and called
to the fishes of the river, “O fishes of the
river, have you seen my own dear mother?”
She called to the sands of the sea,
“O sands of the sea, have you seen my darling
mother?”
She called to the shells of the shore,
“O shells of the shore, have you seen my precious
mother?”
There was no answer. No one knew
what had become of the Giantess of the Great River.
The Spring Princess was so worried
that she thought her heart would break in its anguish.
In her distress she ran over all the earth.
Then she went to the house of the
Great Wind. The Giant of the Great Wind was away,
but his old father was at home. He was very sorry
for the Spring Princess when he heard her sad story.
“I am sure my son can help you find your mother,”
he said as he comforted her. “He will soon
get home from his day’s work.”
When the Giant of the Great Wind reached
home he was in a terrible temper. He stormed
and raged and gave harsh blows to everything he met.
His father had hid the Spring Princess in a closet
out of the way, and it was fortunate indeed for her
that he had done so.
After the Great Wind Giant had taken
his bath and eaten his dinner he was better natured.
Then his father said to him, “O my son, if a
wandering princess had come this way on purpose to
ask you a question, what would you do to her?”
“Why, I’d answer her question
as best I could, of course,” responded the Giant
of the Great Wind.
His father straightway opened the
closet door and the Spring Princess stepped out.
In spite of her long wanderings and great anguish of
mind she was still very lovely as she knelt before
the Giant of the Great Wind in her soft silvery green
garments embroidered with pearls and diamonds.
The big heart of the Giant of the Great Wind was touched
at her beauty and at her grief.
“O Giant of the Great Wind,”
said the Spring Princess, as he gently raised her
from her knees before him, “I am the daughter
of the Giantess of the Great River. I have lost
my mother. I have searched for her through all
the earth and now I have come to you for help.
Can you tell me anything about where she is and how
I can find her?”
The Giant of the Great Wind put on
his thinking cap. He thought hard. “Your
mother is in the power of a land giant who has imprisoned
her,” he said. “I happen to know
all about the affair. I passed that way only
yesterday. I’ll gladly go with you and help
you get her home. We’ll start at once.”
The Giant of the Great Wind took the
Spring Princess back to earth on his swift horses.
Then he stormed the castle of the land giant who had
imprisoned the Giantess of the Great River. The
Spring Princess dug quietly beneath the castle walls
to the dungeon where her mother was confined.
You may be sure that her mother was overjoyed to see
her.
When the Spring Princess had led her
mother safely outside the castle walls she thanked
the Giant of the Great Wind for all he had done to
help her. Then the Giantess of the Great River
and the Spring Princess hastened back to the wonderful
palace of mother-of-pearl set with gold and silver
and precious stones, where the Great River runs into
the Sea. As soon as she had safely reached there
once more the Spring Princess suddenly remembered
that she had stayed away from her home in the palace
of the Sun Giant longer than the three months she was
supposed to stay according to the agreement. She
at once said good-bye to her mother and hastened to
the home of the Sun Giant, her husband, and to her
baby son.
Now the Sun Giant had been very much
worried at first when the three months had passed
and the Spring Princess had not come back to him and
her little son. Then he became angry. He
became so angry that he married another princess.
The new wife discharged the nurses who were taking
care of the tiny son of the Spring Princess and put
him in the kitchen just as if he had been a little
black slave baby.
When the Spring Princess arrived at
the palace of the Sun Giant the very first person
she saw was her own little son, so dirty and neglected
that she hardly recognized him. Then she found
out all that had happened in her absence.
The Spring Princess quickly seized
her child and clasped him tight in her arms.
Then she fled to the depths of the sea, and wept, and
wept, and wept. The waters of the sea rose so
high that they reached even to the palace of the Sun
Giant. They covered the palace, and the Sun Giant,
his new wife, and all the court entirely disappeared
from view. For forty days the face of the Sun
Giant was not seen upon the earth.
The little son of the Spring Princess
grew up to be the Giant of the Rain. In the rainy
season and the season of thunder showers he rules
upon the earth. He sends upon the earth such tears
as the Spring Princess shed in the depths of the seas.