The Crimson Fairy Book by Andrew Lang (heaven official's blessing novel english txt) ๐
'Good evening, mother. I see you have lived long in this world; doyou know anything about the three bulrushes?'
'Yes, indeed, I've lived long and been much about in the world, butI have never seen or heard anything of what you ask. Still, if youwill wait till to-morrow I may be able to tell you something.'
Well, he waited till the morning, and quite early the old womanappeared and took out a little pipe and blew in it, and in a momentall the crows in the world were flying about her. Not one wasmissing. Then she asked if they knew anything about the threebulrushes, but not one of them did.
The prince went on his way, and a little further on he found anotherhut in which lived an old man. On being questioned the old mansaid he knew nothing, but begged the prince to stay overnight, andthe next morning the old man called all the ravens together, butthey too had nothing to tell.
The prince bade him farewell and set out. He wandered so far thathe crossed seven kingdoms, an
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All this the master heard and understood, and as soon as morning dawned he ordered all the dogs to be killed excepting the old dog. The farm servants wondered at this order, and exclaimed: โBut surely, sir, that would be a pity?โ
The master answered: โDo as I bid youโ; and made ready to return home with his wife, and they mounted their horses, her steed being a mare. As they went on their way, it happened that the husband rode on ahead, while the wife was a little way behind. The husbandโs horse, seeing this, neighed, and said to the mare: โCome along, make haste; why are you so slow?โ And the mare answered: โIt is very easy for you, you carry only your master, who is a thin man, but I carry my mistress, who is so fat that she weights as much as three.โ When the husband heard that he looked back and laughed, which the wife perceiving, she urged on the mare till she caught up with her husband, and asked him why he laughed. โFor nothing at all,โ he answered; โjust because it came into my head.โ She would not be satisfied with this answer, and urged him more and more to tell her why he had laughed. But he controlled himself and said: โLet me be, wife; what ails you? I do not know myself why I laughed.โ But the more he put her off, the more she tormented him to tell her the cause of his laughter. At length he said to her: โKnow, then, that if I tell it you I shall immediately and surely die.โ But even this did not quiet her; she only besought him the more to tell her.
Meanwhile they had reached home, and before getting down from his horse the man called for a coffin to be brought; and when it was there he placed it in front of the house, and said to his wife:
โSee, I will lay myself down in this coffin, and will then tell you why I laughed, for as soon as I have told you I shall surely die.โ So he lay down in the coffin, and while he took a last look around him, his old dog came out from the farm and sat down by him, and whined. When the master saw this, he called to his wife: โBring a piece of bread to give to the dog.โ The wife brought some bread and threw it to the dog, but he would not look at it. Then the farm cock came and pecked at the bread; but the dog said to it: โWretched glutton, you can eat like that when you see that your master is dying?โ The cock answered: โLet him die, if he is so stupid. I have a hundred wives, which I call together when I find a grain of corn, and as soon as they are there I swallow it myself; should one of them dare to be angry, I would give her a lesson with my beak. He has only one wife, and he cannot keep her in order.โ
As soon as the man understood this, he got up out of the coffin, seized a stick, and called his wife into the room, saying: โCome, and I will tell you what you so much want to knowโ; and then he began to beat her with the stick, saying with each blow: โIt is that, wife, it is that!โ And in this way he taught her never again to ask why he had laughed.
The Boy Who Could Keep A Secret
Once upon a time there lived a poor widow who had one little boy. At first sight you would not have thought that he was different from a thousand other little boys; but then you noticed that by his side hung the scabbard of a sword, and as the boy grew bigger the scabbard grew bigger too. The sword which belonged to the scabbard was found by the little boy sticking out of the ground in the garden, and every day he pulled it up to see if it would go into the scabbard. But though it was plainly becoming longer and longer, it was some time before the two would fit.
However, there came a day at last when it slipped in quite easily. The child was so delighted that he could hardly believe his eyes, so he tried it seven times, and each time it slipped in more easily than before. But pleased though the boy was, he determined not to tell anyone about it, particularly not his mother, who never could keep anything from her neighbours.
Still, in spite of his resolutions, he could not hide altogether that something had happened, and when he went in to breakfast his mother asked him what was the matter.
โOh, mother, I had such a nice dream last night,โ said he; โbut I canโt tell it to anybody.โ
โYou can tell it to me,โ she answered. โIt must have been a nice dream, or you wouldnโt look so happy.โ
โNo, mother; I canโt tell it to anybody,โ returned the boy, โtill it comes true.โ
โI want to know what it was, and know it I will,โ cried she, โand I will beat you till you tell me.โ
But it was no use, neither words nor blows would get the secret out of the boy; and when her arm was quite tired and she had to leave off, the child, sore and aching, ran into the garden and knelt weeping beside his little sword. It was working round and round in its hole all by itself, and if anyone except the boy had tried to catch hold of it, he would have been badly cut. But the moment he stretched out his hand it stopped and slid quietly into the scabbard.
For a long time the child sat sobbing, and the noise was heard by the king as he was driving by. โGo and see who it is that is crying so,โ said he to one of his servants, and the man went. In a few minutes he returned saying: โYour Majesty, it is a little boy who is kneeling there sobbing because his mother has beaten him.โ
โBring him to me at once,โ commanded the monarch, โand tell him that it is the king who sends for him, and that he has never cried in all his life and cannot bear anyone else to do so.โ On receiving this message the boy dried his tears and went with the servant to the royal carriage. โWill you be my son?โ asked the king.
โYes, if my mother will let me,โ answered the boy. And the king bade the servant go back to the mother and say that if she would give her boy to him, he should live in the palace and marry his prettiest daughter as soon as he was a man.
The widowโs anger now turned into joy, and she came running to the splendid coach and kissed the kingโs hand. โI hope you will be more obedient to his Majesty than you were to me,โ she said; and the boy shrank away half-frightened. But when she had gone back to her cottage, he asked the king if he might fetch something that he had left in the garden, and when he was given permission, he pulled up his little sword, which he slid into the scabbard.
Then he climbed into the coach and was driven away.
After they had gone some distance the king said: โWhy were you crying so bitterly in the garden just now?โ
โBecause my mother had been beating me,โ replied the boy.
โAnd what did she do that for?โ asked the king again.
โBecause I would not tell her my dream.โ
โAnd why wouldnโt you tell it to her?โ
โBecause I will never tell it to anyone till it comes true,โ answered the boy.
โAnd wonโt you tell it to me either?โ asked the king in surprise.
โNo, not even to you, your Majesty,โ replied he.
โOh, I am sure you will when we get home,โ said the king smiling, and he talked to him about other things till they came to the palace.
โI have brought you such a nice present,โ he said to his daughters, and as the boy was very pretty they were delighted to have him and gave him all their best toys.
โYou must not spoil him,โ observed the king one day, when he had been watching them playing together. He has a secret which he wonโt tell to anyone.โ
โHe will tell me,โ answered the eldest princess; but the boy only shook his head.
โHe will tell me,โ said the second girl.
โNot I,โ replied the boy.
โHe will tell me,โ cried the youngest, who was the prettiest too.
โI will tell nobody till it comes true,โ said the boy, as he had said before; โand I will beat anybody who asks me.โ
The king was very sorry when he heard this, for he loved the boy dearly; but he thought it would never do to keep anyone near him who would not do as he was bid. So he commanded his servants to take him away and not to let him enter the palace again until he had come to his right senses.
The sword clanked loudly as the boy was led away, but the child said nothing, though he was very unhappy at being treated so badly when he had done nothing. However, the servants were very kind to him, and their children brought him fruit and all sorts of nice things, and he soon grew merry again, and lived amongst them for many years till his seventeenth birthday.
Meanwhile the two eldest princesses had become women, and had married two powerful kings who ruled over great countries across the sea. The youngest one was old enough to be married too, but she was very particular, and turned up her nose at all the young princes who had sought her hand.
One day she was sitting in the palace feeling rather dull and lonely, and suddenly she began to wonder what the servants were doing, and whether it was not more amusing down in their quarters. The king was at his council and the queen was ill in bed, so there was no one to stop the princess, and she hastily ran across the gardens to the houses where the servants lived. Outside she noticed a youth who was handsomer than any prince she had ever seen, and in a moment she knew him to be the little boy she had once played with.
โTell me your secret and I will marry you,โ she said to him; but the boy only gave her the beating he had promised her long ago, when she asked him the same question. The girl was very angry, besides being hurt, and ran home to complain to her father.
โIf he had a thousand souls, I would kill them all,โ swore the king.
That very day a gallows was built outside the town, and all the people crowded round to see the execution of the young man who had dared to beat the kingโs daughter. The prisoner, with his hands tied behind his back, was brought out by the hangman, and amidst dead silence his sentence was being read by the judge when suddenly the sword clanked against his side. Instantly a great noise was heard and a golden coach rumbled over the stones, with a white flag waving out of the window. It stopped underneath the gallows, and from it stepped the king of the Magyars, who begged that the life of the boy might be spared.
โSir, he has
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