THE QUEST OF CLEVERNESS
Once long ago there lived a king who
had a stupid son. His father sent him to school
for many years hoping that he might learn something
there. His teachers all gave him up as hopelessly
stupid, and with one accord they said, “It is
no use trying to teach this lad out of books.
It is just a waste of our valuable time.”
At length the king called together
all the wisest men of his kingdom to consult with
them as to the best way to make the prince wise and
clever. They talked the matter over for a year
and a day. It was the unanimous opinion of the
wise men of the kingdom that the lad should be sent
on a journey through many lands. In this way he
might learn many of the things which his teachers
had not been able to teach him out of books.
Accordingly the prince was equipped
for his journey. He was given fine raiment, a
splendid black horse upon which to ride, and a great
bag full of money. Thus prepared, he started
forth from the palace one bright morning with the
blessing of the king, his father, and of all the wise
men of the kingdom.
The prince journeyed through many
lands. In one country he learned one thing, and
in another country he learned another thing. There
was no country or kingdom so small or poor that it
did not have something to teach the prince. And
the prince, though he had been so insufferably stupid
at his books, learned the lessons of his journey with
an open mind.
After long wanderings the prince arrived
at a city where there was an auction going on.
A singing bird was being offered for sale. “What
is the special advantage of this singing bird?”
asked the prince.
“This bird, at the command of
its owner, will sing a song which will put to sleep
any one who listens to it,” was the reply.
The prince decided that the bird was worth purchasing.
The next thing which was offered for
sale was a beetle. “What is the special
advantage of this beetle?” asked the prince.
“This beetle will gnaw its way
through any wall in the world,” was the reply.
The prince purchased the beetle.
Then a butterfly was offered for sale.
“What is the special advantage of owning this
butterfly?” asked the prince.
“This butterfly is strong enough
to bear upon its wings any weight which is put upon
them,” was the answer.
The prince bought the butterfly.
With his bird and beetle and butterfly he travelled
on and on until he became lost in the jungle.
The foliage was so dense that he could not see his
way, so he climbed to the top of the tallest tree
he saw. From its summit he spied in the distance
what looked like a mountain; but, when he had journeyed
near to it, he saw that it was really the wall which
surrounds the land of the giants.
A great giant whose head reached to
the clouds stood on the wall as guard. A song
from the singing bird put this guard to sleep immediately.
The beetle soon had gnawed an entrance through the
wall. Through this opening the prince entered
the land of the giants.
The very first person whom the prince
saw in the land of the giants was a lovely captive
princess. The opening which the beetle had made
in the wall led directly to the dungeon in which she
was confined.
The prince had learned many things
on his journey, and among the lessons he had learned
was this one: “Always rescue a fair maiden
in distress.” He immediately asked what
he could do to rescue the beautiful captive princess.
“You can never succeed in rescuing
me, I fear,” replied the princess. “At
the door of this palace there is a giant on guard who
never sleeps.”
“Never mind,” replied
the prince. “I’ll put him to sleep.”
Just at that moment the giant himself
strode into the dungeon. He had heard voices
there. “Sing, my little bird, sing,”
commanded the prince to his singing bird.
At the first burst of melody the giant
went to sleep there in the dungeon, though he had
never before taken a wink of sleep in all his life.
“This beetle of mine has gnawed
an entrance through the great wall which surrounds
the land of the giants,” said the prince to the
captive princess. “To escape we’ll
not have to climb the high wall.”
“What of the guard who stands
on top of the wall with his head reaching up to the
clouds?” asked the princess. “Will
he not spy us?”
“My singing bird has put him
to sleep, too,” replied the prince. “If
we hurry out he will not yet be awake.”
“I have been confined here in
this dungeon so long that I fear I have forgotten
how to walk,” said the princess.
“Never mind,” replied
the prince. “My butterfly will bear you
upon his wings.”
With the lovely princess borne safely
upon the butterfly’s wings the prince swiftly
escaped from the land of the giants. The giant
on the wall yawned in his sleep as they looked up
at him. “He is good for another hour’s
nap,” remarked the prince.
The prince returned to his father’s
kingdom as soon as he could find the way back.
He took with him the lovely princess, and the singing
bird, and the gnawing beetle, and the strong-winged
butterfly.
His father and all the people of the
kingdom received him with great joy. “Never
again will the prince of our kingdom be called stupid,”
said the wise men when they heard the account of his
adventures. “With his singing bird and
his gnawing beetle and his strong-winged butterfly
he has become the cleverest youth in the land.”