THE BEAST SLAYER
Once upon a time there was a man and
his wife who were very poor. The man earned his
living making wooden bowls and platters to sell and
worked early and late, but wooden bowls and platters
were so very cheap that he could barely support his
family no matter how hard he worked. The man
and his wife were the parents of three lovely daughters.
They were all exceedingly beautiful, and the man and
his wife often lamented the fact that they did not
have money enough to educate them and clothe them
fittingly.
One day there came to the door of
the poor man’s house a handsome young man mounted
on a beautiful horse. He asked to buy one of the
poor man’s daughters. The father was very
much shocked at this request. “I may be
poor,” said he, “but I am not so poor that
I have to sell my children.”
The young man, however, threatened
to kill him if he refused to do his bidding; so finally,
after a short struggle, the father consented to part
with his eldest daughter. He received a great
sum of money in return.
The father was now a rich man and
did not wish to make bowls and platters any longer.
His wife, however, urged him to keep on with his former
occupation. Accordingly he went on with his work.
The very next day there came to his door another young
man, even handsomer than the other, mounted upon even
a finer horse. This young man made the same request
that the other had done. He wanted to buy one
of the daughters.
The father burst into tears and told
all the dreadful happenings of the day before.
The young man, however, showed no pity and continued
to demand one of the daughters. He made fearful
threats if the man would not yield to his request,
and the father became so frightened that he at length
parted with his second daughter. The first young
man had paid a great sum of money, but this one paid
even more.
Though he was now very rich the father
still went on making bowls and platters to please
his wife. The next day when he was at work the
handsomest young man he had ever seen appeared riding
upon a most beautiful steed. This young man demanded
the third daughter. The poor father had to yield
just as before, though it nearly broke his heart to
part with his only remaining child. The price
which the young man paid was so very great that the
family was now as rich as it had once been poor.
Their home was not childless very
long, for soon a baby son came to them. They
brought up the boy in great luxury. One day when
the child was at school he quarrelled with one of
his playmates. This taunt was thrown in his face:
“Ah, ha! You think your father was always
rich, do you? He is a rich man now, it is true,
but it is because he sold your three sisters.”
The words made the boy sad, but he said nothing about
the matter at home. He hid it away in his mind
until he had become a man. Then he went to his
father and mother and demanded that they should tell
him all about it.
His parents told the young man the
whole story of the strange experiences through which
they had obtained their wealth. “I am now
a man,” said the son. “I feel that
it is right that I should go out into the world in
search of my sisters. Perhaps I might be able
to find them and aid them in some way. Give me
your blessing and allow me to go.”
His father and mother gave him their
blessing, and the young man started out to make a
search through all the world. Soon he came to
a house where there were three brothers quarrelling
over a boot, a cap, and a key. “What is
the matter?” asked the young man. “Why
are these things so valuable that you should quarrel
over them?”
The brothers replied that if one said
to the boot, “O Boot, put me somewhere,”
the boot would immediately put him anywhere he wished
to go. If one said to the cap, “O Cap,
hide me,” immediately the cap would hide him
so he could not be seen. The key could unlock
any door in the whole world. The young man at
once wanted to own these things himself, and he offered
so much money for them that at last the three brothers
decided to end their quarrel by selling the boot, the
cap, and the key and dividing the money.
The young man put the three treasures
in his saddle bag and went on his way. As soon
as he was out of sight of the house he said to the
boot, “O Boot, put me in the house of my eldest
sister.”
Immediately the young man found himself
in the most magnificent palace he had ever seen in
his life. He asked to speak with his sister, but
the queen of the palace replied that she had no brother
and did not wish to be bothered with the stranger.
It took much urging for the young man to gain permission
from her to relate his story; but, when she had once
heard it, everything sounded so logical that she decided
to receive him as her brother. She asked how he
had ever found her home, and how he had come through
the thicket which surrounded her palace. The
young man told her about his magic boot.
In the afternoon the queen suddenly
burst into tears. Her brother asked what the
trouble was. “O dear! O dear!
What shall we do! What shall we do!” sobbed
the queen. “My husband is King of the Fishes.
When he comes home to dinner tonight he will be very
angry to find a human in his palace.” The
young man told her about his magic cap and comforted
her fears.
Soon the King of Fishes arrived, accompanied
by all his retinue. He came into the palace in
a very bad temper, giving kicks and blows to everything
which came in his way, and saying in a fierce, savage
voice, “Lee, low, lee, leer, I smell the
blood of a human, here. I smell the blood of
a human, here.”
It took much persuasion on the part
of the queen to get him to take a bath. After
his bath he appeared in the form of a handsome man.
He then ate his dinner, and when he had nearly finished
the meal his wife said to him, “If you should
see my brother here what would you do to him?”
“I would be kind to him, of
course, just as I am to you,” responded the
King of the Fishes. “If he is here let him
appear.”
The young man then took off the magic
cap by which he had hidden himself. The king
treated him most kindly and courteously. He invited
him to live for the rest of his life in the palace.
The young man declined the invitation, saying that
he had two other sisters to visit. He took his
departure soon, and when he went away his brother-in-law
gave him a scale with these words: “If you
are ever in any danger in which I can help you, take
this scale and say, ’Help me, O King of the
Fishes.’”
The young man put the scale in his
saddle bag. Then he took out his magic boot and
said, “O Boot, put me in the home of my second
sister.” He found his second sister queen
of even a more wonderful palace than his eldest sister.
Her husband was King of Rams and treated the newly
found brother of his queen with great consideration.
When the young man had finished his visit there the
King of Rams gave him a piece of wool saying, “If
you are ever in any peril in which I can help you
pull this wool and ask help of the King of Rams.”
With the aid of his magic boot the
young man went to visit the home of his youngest sister.
He found her in the most magnificent palace of them
all. Her husband was King of Pigeons. When
the young man departed he gave him a feather telling
him if he was ever in any danger that all he had to
do was to pull the feather and say, “Help me,
O King of the Pigeons.”
All three of the young man’s
brothers-in-law had admired the power of his magic
boot and they had all advised him to visit the land
of the King of Giants by means of it. After having
left each of his three sisters full of happiness in
her costly palace he felt free to act upon this advice,
so by means of his magic boot he again found himself
in a new country.
He soon heard on the street that the
King of the land of Giants had a beautiful giantess
daughter whom he wished to give in marriage if she
could be persuaded to choose a husband. She was
such a famous beauty that no one could pass before
her palace without eagerly gazing up in hopes of seeing
her lovely face at the window. The giant princess
had grown weary of being the object of so much attention,
and she had made a vow that she would marry no one
except a man who could pass before her without lifting
his eyes.
The young man became interested when
he heard this and at once rode past the palace with
his eyes fixed steadily on the ground. He did
not give a single glance upward in the direction of
the window where the beautiful giant princess was
watching him. The princess was overcome with
joy at the sight of the handsome stranger who appeared
as if in response to her vow. The king summoned
him to the palace at once and ordered that the wedding
should be celebrated immediately.
After the wedding the giant princess
soon found out that her husband carried his choicest
treasures in his saddle bags. She inquired their
significance and her husband told her all about them.
She was especially interested in the key. She
said that there was a room in the palace which was
never opened. In this room there was a fierce
beast which always came to life again whenever it was
killed. The giant princess had always been anxious
to see the beast with her own eyes, and she suggested
that they should use the key to unlock the door of
the forbidden room and take a peep at the beast.
Her husband, however, gave her no
encouragement to do this. He decided that it
was too risky a bit of amusement; but one day when
he had gone hunting with the king and court the princess
was overjoyed to find that the magic key had been
left behind. She at once picked it up and opened
the forbidden door. The beast gave a great leap,
roaring out at her, “You are the very one I
have sought,” as he seized her with his sharp
claws.
When her husband and father returned
from their hunting trip they were very much worried
to find that the princess had disappeared. No
one knew where she was. After searching through
the palace and garden all in vain they went to the
place where the beast was always kept. The prince
recognized his magic key in the door, but the room
was empty. The beast had fled with the giant
princess.
Once more the young man made use of
his magic boot and soon was by the side of the princess.
The beast had hidden her in a cave by the sea and
had gone away in search of food. The giant princess
was delighted to find her husband whom she had never
expected to see again and wanted to hasten away from
the cave with him at once.
“You have got yourself into
this affair,” said her husband. “I
can get you out again, I think, but I believe that
it is your duty to at least make an effort to take
the beast’s life. Perhaps when he comes
back to the cave you can extract from him the secret
of his charmed life.”
The princess awaited the return of
the beast. Then she asked him to tell her the
secret of his charmed life. The beast was very
much flattered to have the giant princess so interested
in him, and he told it to her at once. He never
thought of a plot. This is what he said:
“My life is in the sea. In the sea there
is a chest. In the chest there is a stone.
In the stone there is a pigeon. In the pigeon
there is an egg. In the egg there is a candle.
At the moment when that candle is extinguished I die.”
All this time the prince had remained
there, hiding under his magic cap. He heard every
word the beast said. As soon as the beast had
gone to sleep the prince stood on the seashore and
said: “Help me, O King of the Fishes,”
as he took out the scale which his brother-in-law had
given him. Immediately there appeared a great
multitude of fishes asking what he wished them to
do. He asked them to get the chest from the depths
of the sea. They replied that they had never seen
such a chest, but that probably the sword-fish would
know about it.
They hastened to call the sword-fish
and he came at once. He said that he had seen
the chest only a moment before. All the fishes
went with him to get it, and they soon brought the
chest out of the sea. The prince opened the chest
easily with the aid of his magic key, and inside he
found a stone.
Then the prince pulled the piece of
wool which his second brother-in-law had given him
and said, “Help me, O King of the Rams.”
Immediately there appeared a great drove of rams, running
to the seashore from all directions. They attacked
the stone, giving it mighty blows with their hard
heads and horns. Soon they broke open the stone,
and from out of it there flew a pigeon.
The beast now awoke from his sleep
and knew that he was very ill. He remembered
all that he had told the princess and accused her of
having made a plot against his life. He seized
his great ax to kill the princess.
In the meantime the prince had pulled
the feather which his third brother-in-law had given
him and cried, “Help me, O King of the Pigeons.”
Immediately a great flock of pigeons appeared attacking
the pigeon and tearing it to pieces.
Just as the beast had caught the princess
and was about to slay her, the prince took the egg
from within the slain pigeon. He at once broke
the egg and blew out the candle. At that moment
the beast fell dead, and the princess escaped unharmed.
The prince carried the giant princess
home to her father’s kingdom and the king made
a great festa which lasted many days. There
was rejoicing throughout the whole kingdom because
of the death of the beast and because of the safety
of the lovely princess. The prince was praised
throughout the kingdom and there is talk of him even
unto this very day.
The prince had cut off the head of
the great beast and the tip of its tail. The
head he had given to the king, but the tip of the tail
he kept for himself. The beast was so enormous
that just the tip of its tail made a great ring large
enough to encircle the prince’s body. One
day, just in fun, he twined the tip of the beast’s
tail around his waist. He immediately grew and
grew until he became a giant himself, almost as tall
as the king of the land of giants, and several leagues
taller than the princess. It is not strange that
a man who became a giant among giants should be famous
even until now.