HOW THE GIANTESS GUIMARA BECAME SMALL
Once upon a time a prince called D.
Joao went hunting with a number of companions.
In the deep forest he became separated from his comrades
and soon found out that he was lost. He wandered
about for a long time, and at last he spied what looked
like a mountain range in the distance. He journeyed
toward it as fast as he could travel, and when he
got near to it he was surprised to find out that it
was really a high wall. It was the great wall
which bounds the land of the giants. The ruler
of the country was an enormous giant whose head reached
almost to the clouds. The giant’s wife was
nearly as enormous as he was, and their only child
was as tall as her mother. Her name was Guimara.
When the giant saw D. Joao he called
out, “O, little man, what are you doing down
there?” D. Joao narrated his adventures to the
giant, and the giant said, “Your story of your
wanderings interests me. It is not often that
little men like you pass this way. If you like
you may live in my palace and be my servant.”
D. Joao accepted the giant’s offer and stayed
at the palace.
The giant’s daughter Guimara
was very much pleased with D. Joao. He was the
first little man she had ever seen. She fell deeply
in love with him. Her father, however, was very
much disgusted at her lack of good taste. He
preferred to have a giant for a son-in-law. Accordingly
he thought of a plot to get D. Joao into trouble.
The next day he sent for D. Joao to
appear before him. “O little man,”
he said to him, “they tell me that you are very
proud of yourself and that you are boasting among
my servants that you are able to tear down my palace
in a single night and set it up again as quickly as
you tore it down.”
“I never have made any such
boast, your majesty,” replied D. Joao.
He went to Guimara and told her about
it. “I am an enchantress,” said Guimara.
“Leave it to me and we will surprise my father.”
The very next night Guimara and D.
Joao tore down the giant’s palace and set it
up again exactly as it was before. The giant was
greatly surprised. He suspected that his daughter
had meddled with the affair.
The next day he sent for D. Joao and
said to him, “O little man, they tell me that
you say that in a single night you are able to change
the Isle of Wild Beasts into a beautiful garden full
of all sorts of flowers and with a silvery fountain
in the centre.”
“I never said any such thing,
your majesty,” replied D. Joao.
He told Guimara about it and she said
that it would be great fun to escape from her room
that night and make over the Isle of the Wild Beasts
into a lovely garden.
Accordingly Guimara worked hard all
night long helping D. Joao to make the Isle of the
Wild Beasts over into a garden full of all sorts of
beautiful flowers and with a silvery fountain in the
centre. The king was greatly surprised to see
the garden in the morning and he was very angry at
Guimara and D. Joao.
Guimara was so frightened at her father’s
terrible wrath that she decided to run away with D.
Joao. She counselled him to procure the best
horse from her father’s stable for them to ride.
At midnight Guimara crept out of her
room and ran to the place where D. Joao was waiting
for her with the horse, which travelled one hundred
leagues at each step. They mounted the horse and
rode away.
Early the next morning the princess
Guimara was missed from the royal palace. Soon
it was discovered that D. Joao was gone too, and also
the best horse from the stables. The giant talked
over the matter with his wife. She told him to
take another horse which could travel a hundred leagues
a step and go after them as fast as he could.
The giant followed his wife’s advice, and soon
he had nearly caught up with the fugitives, for they
had grown tired and had stopped to rest.
Guimara spied her father coming and
turned herself into a little river. She turned
D. Joao into an old negro, the horse into a tree,
the saddle into a bed of onions, and the musket they
carried into a butterfly.
When the giant came to the river he
called out to the old negro who was taking a bath,
“O, my old negro, have you seen anything of a
little man accompanied by a handsome young woman?”
The old negro did not say a single
word to him, but dived into the water. When he
came out he called the giant’s attention to the
bed of onions. “I planted these onions,”
he said. “Aren’t they a good crop?”
The bed of onions smelled so strong
that the giant did not like to stay near them.
The butterfly flew at the giant’s eyes and almost
into them. He was disgusted and went home to
talk it over with his wife.
“How silly you were,”
said the giant’s wife. “Don’t
you see that Guimara had changed herself into a river
and had changed D. Joao into an old negro, the horse
into a tree, the saddle into a bed of onions, and
the musket into a butterfly? Hurry after them
at once.”
The giant again went in pursuit, promising
his wife that next time he would not let Guimara play
any tricks on him. The next time that Guimara
saw her father coming she thought of a new plan.
She changed herself into a church. She turned
D. Joao into a padre, the horse into a bell,
the saddle into an altar and the musket into a mass-book.
When the giant approached the church
he was completely deceived. “O, holy padre,”
he said to the priest, “have you seen anything
of a little man, accompanied by a handsome young woman,
passing this way?”
The padre went on with his mass and said:
“I am a hermit padre Devoted
to the Immaculate; I do not hear what you say.
Dominus vobiscum.”
The giant could get no other response
from him. At last he gave up in despair and went
home to talk things over with his wife.
“Of all stupid fools you are
the most stupid of all,” said his wife when
she had heard the tale. “Don’t you
see that Guimara has changed herself into a church,
D. Joao into a priest, the horse into a bell, the
saddle into the altar, and the musket into the mass-book?
Hurry after them again as fast as you can. I
am going with you, myself, this time, to see that
Guimara does not play any more tricks on you.”
This time the fugitives had travelled
far when Guimara’s parents overtook them.
They had almost reached D. Joao’s own kingdom.
Guimara threw a handful of dust into her parents’
eyes, and it became so dark that they could not see.
Guimara and D. Joao escaped safely into his own kingdom.
When they had started out on the journey,
Guimara had said, “O, D. Joao, whatever happens,
don’t forget me for one single minute. Think
of me all the time.” He had promised and
he had remembered her every instant on the journey.
However, when they reached his own kingdom, he was
so happy to see home once more after all his adventures
that he thought he had never before been so happy
in all his life. After one has been living in
Giantland it is very pleasant to get home where things
are a few sizes smaller and a bit more convenient.
Then, too, it was very pleasant for him to see all
his friends again. He was so happy at being home
that, just for one little minute, he forgot all about
Guimara.
When D. Joao remembered Guimara he
turned around to look at her. When he saw her
he could hardly believe his eyes. Instead of being
a tall, tall giantess with her head up in the clouds,
she reached just to D. Joao’s own shoulder.
D. Joao was so surprised that he had to sit down in
a chair and be fanned. He couldn’t say a
single word for eighteen minutes and a half his
breath had been so completely taken away.
“It is a good thing that you
happened to think of me just as soon as you did,”
remarked Guimara. “I was getting smaller
and smaller. If you had neglected to think of
me for another minute I should have faded away entirely
and you would have never known what had become of me.”
When Guimara became small she lost
her power as an enchantress entirely. Her lovely
eyes were always a trifle sad because D. Joao had
forgotten her that one little minute. She never
went back to Giantland but reigned as queen of D.
Joao’s kingdom for many years.