THE ADVENTURES OF A FISHERMAN’S SON
Long ago there was a man and woman
who lived in a little mud hut under the palm trees
on the river bank. They had so many children they
did not know what to do. The little hut was altogether
too crowded. The man had to work early and late
to find food enough to feed so many. One day
the seventh son said to his father, “O, father,
I found a little puppy yesterday when I was playing
on the bank of the river. Please let me bring
it home to keep. I have always wanted one.”
The father consented sadly. He
did not know how to find food for the children, and
an extra puppy to feed seemed an added burden.
He went to the river bank to fish that day with a
heavy heart. He cast his net in vain. He
did not catch a single fish. He cast his net from
the other side with no better luck. He did not
catch even one little piabinha.
Suddenly he heard a voice which seemed
to come from the river bed itself, it was so deep.
This is what it said: “If you will give
me whatever new you find in your house when you go
home I will give you fisherman’s luck.
You will catch all the fish you wish.”
The man remembered the request which
his seventh son had made that morning. “The
new thing I’ll find in my house when I get home
will be that puppy,” said the man to himself.
“This will be a splendid way to get rid of the
puppy which I did not want to keep anyway.”
Accordingly the man consented to the
request which came from the strange voice in the depths
of the river. “You must seal this covenant
with your blood,” said the voice.
The man cut his finger a tiny bit
with his sharp knife and squeezed a few drops of blood
from the wound into the river. “If you break
this vow the curse of the river giant will be upon
you and your children for ever and ever,” said
the deep voice solemnly.
The fisherman cast his net where the
river giant commanded, and immediately it was so full
of fish that the man could hardly draw it out of the
water. Three times he drew out his net, so full
that it was in danger of breaking. “Truly
this was a fortunate bit of business,” said
the man. “Here I have fish enough to feed
my family and all I can sell in addition.”
As the fisherman approached his house
with his enormous catch of fish one of the children
came running to meet him. “O father, guess
what we have at our house which we did not have when
you went away,” said the child.
“A new puppy,” replied her father.
“O no, father,” replied
the child. “You have not guessed right at
all. It is a new baby brother.”
The poor fisherman burst into tears.
“What shall I do! What shall I do!”
he sobbed. “I dare not break my vow to the
river giant.”
The fisherman’s wife was heartbroken
when she heard about the business which her husband
had transacted with the river giant. However she
could think of no way to escape from keeping the contract
which he had made. She kissed the tiny babe good-bye
and gave it her blessing. Then the fisherman
took it down to the river bank and threw it into the
river at the exact spot from which the deep voice had
come.
There in the depths of the river the
river giant was waiting to receive the new born babe.
He took the little one into his palace of gold and
silver and mother-of-pearl with ornaments of diamonds,
and there the baby received excellent care.
Time passed and the little boy grew
into a big boy. At last he was fifteen years
old and a handsome lad indeed, tall and straight, with
eyes which were dark and deep like the river itself,
and hair as dark as the shades in the depths of the
river. All his life he had been surrounded with
every luxury, but he had never seen a single person.
He had never seen even the river giant. All he
knew of him was his deep voice which gave orders in
the palace.
One day the voice of the river giant
said, “I have to go away on a long journey.
I will leave with you all the keys to all the doors
in the palace, but do not meddle with anything.
If you do you must forfeit your life.”
Many days passed and the lad did not
hear the voice of the river giant. He missed
its sound in the palace. It was very still and
very lonely. At last at the end of fifteen days
he took one of the keys which the river giant had
left and opened the door which it fitted. The
door led into a room in the palace where the boy had
never been. Inside the room was a huge lion.
The lion was fat and well nourished, but there was
nothing for it to eat except hay. The boy did
not meddle with anything and shut the door.
Another fifteen days passed by, and
again the lad took one of the keys. He opened
another door in the palace which he had never entered.
Inside the room he found three horses, one black, one
white, and one chestnut. There was nothing in
the room for the horses to eat except meat, but in
spite of it they were fat and well nourished.
The boy did not touch anything and when he went out
he shut the door.
At the end of another fifteen days
all alone without even the voice of the river giant
for company, the lad tried another key in another
door. This room opened into a room full of armour.
There were daggers and knives and swords and muskets
and all sorts of armour which the boy had never seen
and did not know anything about. He was very much
interested in what he saw, but he did not meddle with
anything.
The next day he opened the room again
where the horses were kept. This time one of
the horses, the black one, spoke
to him and said, “We like hay to eat very much
better than this meat which was left to us by mistake.
The lion must have our hay. Please give this meat
to the lion and bring us back our hay. If you
will do this as I ask I’ll serve you for ever
and ever.”
The boy took the meat to the lion.
The lion was very much pleased to exchange the hay
for it. The lad then took the hay to the horses.
All at once he remembered how he had been told not
to meddle with anything. This had been meddling.
The boy burst into tears. “I shall lose
my life as the punishment for this deed,” he
sobbed.
The horses listened in amazement.
“I got you into this trouble,” said the
black horse. “Now I’ll get you out.
Just trust me to find a way out.”
The black horse advised the boy to
take some extra clothes and a sword and musket and
mount upon his back. “I have lived here
in the depths of the river so long that my speed is
greater than that of the river itself,” said
the horse. “If there was any doubt of it
before, now that I have had some hay once more I am
sure I can run faster than any river in the world.”
It was true. When the river giant
came back home and found that the boy had meddled
he ran as fast as he could in pursuit of the lad.
The black horse safely and surely carried the lad
beyond his reach.
The black horse and his rider travelled
on and on until finally they came to a kingdom which
was ruled over by a king who had three beautiful daughters.
The lad at once applied for a position in the service
of this king. “I do not know what you can
do,” said the king. “You have such
soft white hands. Perhaps you may serve to carry
bouquets of flowers from my garden every morning to
my three daughters.”
The lad had eyes which were dark and
deep like the depths of the river, and when he carried
bouquets of flowers from the garden to the king’s
daughters the youngest princess fell in love with him
at once. Her two sisters laughed at her.
“I don’t care what you say,” said
the youngest princess. “He is far handsomer
than any of the princes who have ever sung of love
beneath our balcony.”
That very night two princes from neighbouring
kingdoms came to sing in the palace garden beneath
the balcony of the three princesses. The two
oldest daughters of the king were proud and haughty,
but the youngest princess had love in her heart and
love in her eyes. For this reason she was one
whom all the princes admired most.
The lad from the river listened to
their songs. “I wish I looked like these
two princes and knew songs like theirs,” said
he. Just then he caught sight of his own reflection
in the fountain in the garden. He saw that he
looked quite as well as they. “I too will
sing a song before the balcony of the princesses,”
he decided.
He did not know that he could sing,
but in truth his voice had in it all the music of
the rushing of the river. When he sang even the
two rival musicians stopped to listen to his song.
The two older princesses did not know who was singing,
but the youngest princess recognized him at once.
The next day a great tournament took
place. The lad from the river had never seen
a tournament, but after he had watched it for a moment
he decided to enter. He went to get the black
horse which had carried him out of the depths of the
river and the arms he had brought with him from the
palace of the river giant. With such a horse and
such arms he carried off all the honours of the tournament.
Every one at the tournament wondered who the strange
cavalheiro could be. No one recognized
him except the youngest princess. She knew who
it was the moment she saw him and gave him her ribbon
to wear.
The next day all the cavalheiros
who had taken part in the tournament set out to slay
the wild beast which often came out of the jungle
to attack the city. It was the lad from the river
who killed the beast, as all the cavalheiros
knew. When they returned to the palace with the
news that the beast had been slain, the king said,
“Tomorrow night we will hold the greatest festa
which this palace has ever witnessed. Tomorrow
let all the cavalheiros who are here assembled
go forth to hunt for birds to grace our table.”
The next day the cavalheiros
went out to hunt the birds, and it was the lad from
the river who succeeded in slaying the birds.
None of the other cavalheiros were at all successful.
The two neighbouring princes who were suitors for
the hand of the youngest princess made a contract.
“We cannot let this stranger carry off all the
honours,” said one to the other. “You
say that you killed the beast, and I will say that
it was I who killed the birds.”
That night at the festa one
prince stood up before the king and told his story
of slaying the beast, and the other prince stood up
and told how he had killed the birds. The other
cavalheiros knew that it was false, but when
they looked around for the cavalheiro who had
done the valiant deeds they could not find him.
The lad from the river had on his old clothes which
he wore as a servant in the garden and stood at the
lower part of the banquet hall among the servants.
When the king had heard the stories
of the two princes he was greatly pleased with what
they had done. “The one who killed the beast
shall have a princess for a bride,” said he,
“and the one who killed the birds he too shall
have a princess for his bride.”
The youngest princess saw the lad
from the river standing among the servants and smiled
into his eyes. The lad came and threw himself
before the king. “O my king,” said
he, “these stories to which you have listened
are false, as all these assembled cavalheiros
will prove. It is I who killed the beast and
all the birds. I claim a princess as my bride.”
All the assembled cavalheiros
recognized the lad in spite of his changed appearance
in his gardening clothes. “Viva!”
they shouted. “He speaks the truth.
He is the valiant one of us who killed the beast and
the birds. To him belongs the reward.”
The youngest princess had a heart
filled with joy. The wedding feast was celebrated
the very next day. The river giant found out about
it and sent a necklace of pearls and diamonds as a
wedding gift to the bride of the lad whom he had brought
up in his palace. The fisherman and his wife,
however, never knew the great good fortune which had
come to their son.