THE FOREST LAD AND THE WICKED GIANT
Once upon a time there was a man who
took his wife and tiny baby son into the deep forest
to make their home. With his own hands he built
the house out of mud, and he made for it a thatched
roof from the grass of the forest. For food they
depended upon the fruits of the forest and the beasts
which they killed in the hunt. They lived like
hermits, seeing no one.
As the baby son grew into a large
strong boy he learned from his father all the secrets
of the forest. He grew wise as well as strong.
From his mother he heard stories of their former life
in the great city which had been their home before
they went to live in the forest. These were the
tales he loved to hear best of all. Very often
when his father went out into the forest to hunt the
boy would beg to remain at home with his mother.
While his father was away she would sit on the ground
before their hut and unfold to the boy all her memories
of their old life.
“Father,” said the lad
one day after his father had returned from his hunting
trip, “I am tired of living here in the forest
all by ourselves. Let us return to the city to
live.”
“Your mother has been telling
tales to you,” replied his father. “I
will see to it that she never mentions the city to
you again. We left the city to save our lives.
Let me never hear from you another word about returning
to the city.”
After that the lad was made to accompany
his father when he went out hunting. There was
no more opportunity to hear the tales he loved from
his mother’s lips. Nevertheless he hid away
in his mind all that his mother had told him of their
old life; and at night, when the fierce storms in
the forest or the sound of the wild beasts would not
let him sleep, he often lay awake upon his mat on
the floor of the hut, pondering over the stories she
had told.
At last the father grew sick of a
fever and died. Now that the lad and his mother
were left alone in the forest the lad said, “Come,
let us return to our home in the city. Let us
not stay here alone in the forest any longer.
I must live in my own life the tales you have told
me of the festas and the dancing, the great
tournaments, and the songs at night under the balconies
of the fair maidens.”
The lad’s request was so urgent
that his mother could not have refused him, even if
she, in her own heart, was not longing for a return
to the life of the city. Accordingly, they took
all their possessions, which consisted only of a horse
and a sword, and set out for the city.
The lad and his mother reached the
city at nightfall. They went from one street
to another, but saw no living being. They knocked
and clapped their hands before all the doors of the
city, but no one responded. At last they reached
the street where their old home had been. The
lad was delighted to see what a big handsome house
it was. “No wonder my mother longed to
return to a home like this,” he thought.
“How could she ever have endured the rude hut
in the depths of the forest?”
The doors of the beautiful house stood
wide open. The lad and his mother entered, and
passed from one room to another. His mother saw
one room after another with everything unchanged.
She recognized one object after another just as she
had left it. There was one room in the house
which was securely barred on the inside, however.
The lad and his mother spent the night
in their old home. In the morning they again
walked about the deserted streets of the city.
They saw no one and heard no living sound. It
was like a city of the dead. They grew hungry
at length; and the lad went outside the city to seek
for food in the forest, according to the custom which
he had known all his life.
The mother returned to her old home
to await the coming of her son. As soon as she
went upstairs she saw that the barred door was wide
open. There in the hall stood the most enormous
giant she had ever seen. The great halls of the
house were high, but the giant could not stand up
in them without stooping.
“Who are you and what are you
doing in my house?” roared the giant in such
a terrible voice that the house trembled.
The woman who had lived so many years
in the forest was not easily frightened. “Who
are you and what are you doing in my house?”
she shouted at the giant in the loudest tones she
could muster.
One might have expected that the giant
would have killed her instantly, but on the contrary
her bold answer pleased him exceedingly. He laughed
so hard that he had to lean against the wall to keep
from falling.
“So you think that this is your
house, do you?” said the giant as soon as he
could regain his voice. “Well, I’ll
tell you what we can do. I like you, and we can
share this house if you will consent to be my wife.”
“I am not alone,” said
the lad’s mother as soon as she could recover
from her surprise sufficiently to find words.
“My son is with me and I am expecting him any
moment to return from the forest whither he has gone
to procure food for us.”
“I can dispose of your son very
quickly, just as I have destroyed all the inhabitants
of this city,” said the giant with a frown.
“You cannot dispose of my son
so easily as you may think,” replied his mother.
“He has grown in the deep forest and is very
strong, far stronger than the city dwellers.
Besides his great strength, he is surrounded by the
magic circle of his mother’s love.”
“I do not know what the magic
circle of a mother’s love is like,” said
the giant. “I don’t remember having
seen one anywhere. Nevertheless I like you, and
because I like you I will endeavour to dispose of your
son as painlessly as possible. I believe you say
you are expecting him any moment. Just lie down
here and pretend that you are sick. When the
boy comes in tell him that you have a terrible pain
in your eyes. As you have lived long in the forest
you will know that the best remedy for a pain in your
eyes is the oil of the deadly cobra of the
jungle. Send the lad out into the jungle to obtain
this oil for you, and I promise you he will never
return alive. I’ll go back into my room
and bar the door so the boy will never see me, but
I shall listen through the wall to know whether you
carry out my command.”
At that very moment they heard the
lad’s footsteps and his gay voice at the door.
The giant went inside his room and barred the door.
The lad’s mother lay down with a cloth over
her eyes, moaning in loud tones. “The giant
little knows the strength and skill of the lad whose
mother I am,” she said to herself as she smiled
amidst her moans and groans.
“O dear little mother, what
evil has befallen you during my absence?” asked
the boy as he entered the room.
His mother complained of the pain
in her eyes just as the giant had instructed.
“The only thing which will cure me of this terrible
affliction is the oil of the cobra,” she
said.
The boy well knew the dangers which
attended securing the oil from the deadly cobra
of the jungle, but never in his life had he disregarded
a request from his mother. He at once set out
for the jungle; and, in spite of the perils of the
deed, he succeeded in obtaining the oil which his
mother had requested.
On the way back to the city, the boy
met a little old woman carrying a pole over her shoulder
from which there hung, head downward, several live
fowls which she was taking to market. It was really
the Holy Mother herself who had come to aid the lad
in answer to his mother’s prayer.
“Where are you going, my lad?”
asked the old woman. The boy told his story and
showed the precious oil which he had obtained from
the cobra. “The day is coming, the
day is coming, my lad, when you will, in truth, need
the cobra’s oil,” said the little
old woman. “But that day is not today.
Today hen’s oil will serve your purpose just
as well. You may kill one of my hens and use
the hen’s oil, but leave the cobra’s
oil with me so that I may keep it safely for you until
the day when you will require it.”
The boy heeded the advice of the little
old woman and killed one of her hens. He left
the cobra’s oil with her and took the
hen’s oil in its place to his mother. Because
his mother had nothing at all the matter with her
eyes, the hen’s oil cured them just as well as
the cobra’s oil. There was no one
who knew the difference, except the boy and the little
old woman.
When the boy had gone out the giant
came in from his own room and said, “In truth
your son is a brave lad. I did not dream that
he would have the courage to go in search of the oil
of the deadly cobra, much less succeed in his
quest.”
“You do not know the great love
we bear each other,” said the lad’s mother.
“I am going to demand a new
proof of your son’s strength and skill,”
said the giant. “Tomorrow you must complain
of the pain in your back and send the boy in search
of the oil of the porcupine to cure it. This
is my command.”
The next day the woman had to complain
of a pain in her back just as the giant had commanded.
There was nothing else which she could do. The
boy at once went in search of a porcupine, and succeeded
in slaying one and getting the oil.
On his way back to the city the lad
again met the little old woman who was really Nossa
Senhora. “Leave the oil of the porcupine
with me, my son,” said she when she had heard
his story. “I will keep it for you until
the morrow when you will have great need of it.
Today hen’s oil will serve your purpose just
as well.”
Because the boy’s mother had
nothing at all the matter with her back she was cured
with the hen’s oil which the boy brought, just
as easily as if it had been the porcupine’s
oil. The giant came out of his room and said,
“In truth, lad, you are a boy of great skill
and strength.”
The boy had not seen the giant before
and he was very much surprised. Before he even
had time to recover from his amazement the giant had
seized him and bound him securely with a great rope.
“If you are really a strong boy you will break
this rope,” said the giant. “If you
are not strong enough to break it I shall cut you into
five pieces with my sword.”
The boy struggled with all his might
to break the great rope. It was no use.
He was not strong enough. The giant stood by laughing.
When the lad’s mother saw that
he could not break the rope she fell upon her knees
before the giant and cried, “Do what you will
to me, but spare my son!”
The cruel giant laughed at her request.
When she saw that she could not keep him from slaying
the boy, she said, “If you will not grant my
large request I beg that you will listen to just a
tiny, tiny, little one. When you cut my son into
five pieces do it with his father’s sword which
he has brought with him from the little hut in the
forest where we used to live. Then bind his body
upon the back of his father’s horse which he
brought with him out of the forest and turn the horse
loose, so it may travel, perchance, back to the forest
from which I brought my lad to meet this terrible
death.”
The giant did as she requested, and
the horse bore the slain boy’s body along the
road to the forest. Outside the city they met
the little old woman who was really Nossa Senhora.
She took the parts of the lad’s body and anointed
them with the porcupine’s oil. Then she
held them tight together. They stayed securely
joined. “Are you lacking anything,”
she asked the boy.
The boy felt of his legs, his arms,
his ears, his nose, his hair. “I am all
here except my eyesight,” he said. The little
old woman anointed his eyes with the cobra’s
oil. His sight was immediately restored.
Then he knew that the little old woman was indeed the
Holy Mother. She vanished as he knelt to receive
her blessing.
The boy in his new strength quickly
hastened back to the city. It was night and the
giant was asleep. He seized his father’s
sword and plunged it into the giant’s body.
The giant turned over without awakening. “The
mosquitoes are biting me,” he muttered in his
sleep.
The boy saw the giant’s own
enormous sword lying on the floor. It was so
heavy he could barely lift it, but mustering all his
strength he drove it into the giant’s body.
The giant died immediately.
“The magic circle of a mother’s
love, with the Holy Mother’s help, will guard
a lad against all perils,” said the boy’s
mother when she heard her son’s story and saw
the giant lying dead.