More CELTIC FAIRY TALES
The Greek Princess and the Young Gardener
There was once a king, but I didn't
hear what country he was over, and he had
one very beautiful daughter. Well, he was getting old and sickly, and the
doctors found out that the finest medicine in the world for him was the apples
of a tree that grew in the orchard just under his window. So you may be sure he
had the tree well minded, and used to get the apples counted from the time they
were the size of small marbles. One harvest, just as they were beginning to turn
ripe, the king was awakened one night by the flapping of wings outside in the
orchard ; and when he looked out, what did he see but a bird among the branches
of his tree. Its feathers were so bright that they made a light all round them,
and the minute it saw the king in his night-cap and night-shirt it picked off an
apple, and flew away "Oh, botheration to that thief of a gardener! "
says the king, "this is a nice way he's watching my precious fruit."
He didn't sleep a wink the rest of the night and as soon as any one was
stirring in the palace, he sent for the gardener, and abused him for his
neglect.
"Please your Majesty!" says he, "not another apple you shall
lose. My three sons are the best shots at the bow and arrow in the kingdom, and
they and myself will watch in turn every night."
When the night came, the gardener's eldest son took his post in the garden,
with his bow strung and his arrow between his fingers, and watched, and watched.
But at the dead hour, the king, that was wide awake, heard the flapping of
wings, and ran to the window. There was the bright bird in the tree, and the boy
fast asleep, sitting with his back to the wall, and his bow on his lap.
"Rise, you lazy thief!" says the king,
"there's the bird again, botheration to her!"
Up jumped the poor fellow ; but while he was fumbling with the arrow and the
string, away was the bird with the nicest apple on the tree. Well, to be sure,
how the king fumed and fretted, and how he abused the gardener and the boy, and
what a twenty-four hours he spent till midnight came again!
He had his eye this time on the second son of the gardener; but though he was
up and lively enough when the clock began to strike twelve, it wasn't done with
the last bang when he saw him stretched like one dead on the long grass, and saw
the bright bird again, and heard the flap of her wings, and saw her carry away
the third apple. The poor fellow woke with the roar the king let at him, and
even was in time enough to let fly an arrow after the bird. He did not hit her,
you may depend; and though the king was mad enough, he saw the poor fellows were
under 'pishtrogues, and could not help it.
Well, he had some hopes out of the youngest, for he was a brave, active young
fellow, that had everybody's good word. There he was ready, and there was the
king watching him, and talking to him at the first stroke of twelve. At the last
clang, the brightness coming before the bird lighted up the wall and the trees,
and the rushing of the wings was heard as it flew into the branches; but at the
same instant the crack of the arrow on her side might be heard a quarter of a
mile off. Down came the arrow and a large bright feather along with it, and away
was the bird, with a screech that was enough to break the drum of your ear. She
hadn't time to carry off an apple; and bedad, when the feather was thrown up
into the king's room it was heavier than lead, and turned out to be the finest
beaten gold.
Well, there was great cooramuch made about the youngest boy next day,
and he watched night after night for a week, but not a mite of a bird or bird's
feather was to be seen, and then the king told him to go home and sleep. Every
one admired the beauty of the gold feather beyond anything, but the king was
fairly bewitched. He was turning it round and round, and rubbing it against his
forehead and his nose the live-long day; and at last he proclaimed that he'd
give his daughter and half his kingdom to whoever would bring him the bird with
the gold feathers, dead or alive.
The gardener's eldest son had great conceit of himself and away he went to
look for the bird. In the afternoon he sat down under a tree to rest himself;
and eat a bit of bread and cold meat that he had in his wallet, when up comes as
fine a looking fox as you'd see in the burrow of Munfin. "Musha,
sir," says he, "would you spare a bit of that meat to a poor body
that's hungry?"
"Well," says the other, "you must have the divil's own
assurance, you common robber, to ask me such a question. Here's the
answer," and he let fly at the moddhereen rua.
The arrow scraped from his side up over his back, as if he was made of
hammered iron, and stuck in a tree a couple of perches off.
"Foul play," says the fox; but I respect your young brother, and
will give a bit of advice. At nightfall you'll come into a village. One side of
the street you'll see a large room lighted up, and filled with young men and
women, dancing and drinking. The other side you'll see a house with no light,
only from the fire in the front room, and no one near it but a man and his wife,
and their child. Take a fool's advice, and get lodging there." With that he
curled his tail over his crupper, and trotted off.
The boy found things as the fox said, but begonies he chose the
dancing and drinking, and there we'll leave him. In a week's time, when they got
tired at home waiting for him, the second son said he'd try his fortune, and off
he set. He was just as ill-natured and foolish as his brother, and the same
thing happened to him. Well, when a week was over, away went the youngest of
all, and as sure as the hearth-money, he sat under the same tree, and pulled out
his bread and meat, and the same fox came up and saluted him. Well, the young
fellow shared his dinner with the moddhereen, and he wasn't long beating
about the bush, but told the other he knew all about his business.
"I'll help you," says he, "if I find you're biddable. So just
at nightfall you'll come into a village … Good-bye till to-morrow."
It was just as the fox said, but the boy took care not to go near dancer,
drinker, fiddler, or piper. He got welcome in the quiet house to supper and bed,
and was on his journey next morning before the sun was the height of the trees.
He wasn't gone a quarter of a mile when he saw the fox coming out of a wood
that was by the roadside.
"Good-morrow, fox," says one.
"Good-morrow, sir," says the other.
"Have you any notion how far you have to travel till you find the garden
bird?"
"Dickens a notion have I; - how could I?"
"Well, I have. She's in the King of Spain's palace, and that's a good
two hundred miles off."
"Oh, dear! we'll be a week going."
"No, we won't. Sit down on my tail, and we'll soon make the road
short."
"Tail, indeed! that 'ud be the droll saddle, my poor moddhereen."
"Do as I tell you, or I'll leave you to yourself."
Well, rather than vex him he sat down on the tail that was spread out level
like a wing, and away they went like thought. They overtook the wind that was
before them, and the wind that came after didn't overtake them. In the
afternoon, they stopped in a wood near the King of Spain's palace, and there
they stayed till nightfall.
"Now," says the fox, "I'll go before you to make the minds of
the guards easy, and you'll have nothing to do but go from lighted hall to
another lighted hall till you find the golden bird in the last. If you have a
head on you, you'll bring himself and his cage outside the door, and no one then
can lay hands on him or you. If you haven't a head I can't help you, nor no one
else." So he went over to the gates.
In a quarter of an hour the boy followed, and in the first hall he passed he
saw a score of armed guards standing upright, but all dead asleep. In the next
he saw a dozen, and in the next half a dozen, and in the next three, and in the
room beyond that there was no guard at all, nor lamp, nor candle, but it was as
bright as day; for there was the golden bird in a common wood and wire cage,
and on the table were the three apples turned into solid gold.
On the same table was the most lovely golden cage eye ever beheld, and it
entered the boy's head that it would be a thousand pities not to put the
precious bird into it, the common cage was so unfit for her. Maybe he thought of
the money it was worth ; anyhow he made the exchange, and he had soon good
reason to be sorry for it. The instant the shoulder of the bird's wing touched
the golden wires, he let such a squawk out of him as was enough to break
all the panes of glass in the windows, and at the same minute the three men, and
the half-dozen, and the dozen, and the score men, woke up and clattered their
swords and spears, and surrounded the poor boy, and jibed, and cursed, and swore
at home, till he didn't know whether it's his foot or head he was standing on.
They called the king, and told him what happened, and he put on a very grim
face. "It's on a gibbet you ought to be this moment," says
he, "but I'll give you a chance of your life, and of the golden bird, too. I lay you
under prohibitions, and restrictions, and death, and destruction, to go and
bring me the King of Moroco's bay filly that outruns the wind, and leaps
over the walls of castle-bawns. When you fetch it her into the bawn of this
palace, you must get the golden bird, and liberty to go where you please."
Out passed the boy, very down-hearted, but as he went along, who should come
out of a brake but the fox again.
"Ah, my friend," says he, "I was right when I suspected you
hadn't a head on you; but I won't rub your hair again' the grain. Get on my tail
again, and when we come to the King of Moroco's palace, we'll see what we can
do."
So away they went like thought. The wind that was before them they would
overtake the wind that was behind them would not overtake them.
Well, the nightfall came on them in a wood near the palace, and says the fox,
"I'll go and make things easy for you at the stables, and when you are leading
out the filly, don't let her touch the door, nor doorposts, nor anything but the
ground, and that with her hoofs and if you haven't a head on you once you are in
the stable, you'll be worse off than before."
So the boy delayed for a quarter of an hour, and then he went into the big
bawn of the palace. There were two rows of armed men reaching from the gate to
the stable, and every man was in the depth of deep sleep, and through them went
the boy till he got into the stable. There was the filly, as handsome a beast as
ever stretched leg, and there was one stable-boy with a currycomb in his hand,
and another with a bridle, and another with a sieve of oats, and another with an
armful of hay, and all as if they were cut out of stone. The filly was the only
live thing in the place except himself. She had a common wood and leather saddle
on her back, but a golden saddle with the nicest work on it was hung from the
post, and he thought it the greatest pity not to put it in place of the other.
Well, I believe there was some pishrogues over it for a saddle ; anyhow,
he took off the other, and put the gold one in its place.
Out came a squeal from the filly's throat when she felt the strange article,
that might be heard from Tombrick to Bunclody, and all as ready were the armed
men and the stable-boys to run and surround the ornadhan of a boy, and
the King of Moroco was soon there along with the rest, with a face on him as
black as the sole of your foot. After he stood enjoying the abuse the poor boy
got from every-body for some time, he says to him, "You deserve high
hanging for your impudence, but l'll give you a chance for your life and the
filly, too. I lay on you all sorts of prohibitions, and restrictions, and death,
and destruction to go bring me Princess Golden Locks, the King of Greek's
daughter. When you deliver her into my hand, you may have the 'daughter of the
wind,' and welcome. Come in and take your supper and your rest, and be off at
the flight of night."
The poor boy was down in the mouth, you may suppose, as he was walking away
next morning, and very much ashamed when the fox looked up in his face after
coming out of the wood.
"What a thing it is," says he, "not to have a head when a body
wants it worst ; and here we have a fine long journey before us to the King of
Greek's palace. The worse luck now, the same always. Here, get on my tail, and
we'll be making the road shorter."
So he sat on the fox's tail, and swift as thought they went. The wind that
was before them they would overtake it, the wind that was behind them would not
overtake them, and in the evening they were eating their bread and cold meat in
the wood near the castle.
"Now," says the fox, when they were done, "I'll go before you
to make things easy. Follow me in a quarter of an hour. Don't let Princess
Golden Locks touch the jambs of the doors with her hands, or hair, or clothes,
and if you're asked any favour, mind how you answer. Once she's outside the
door, no one can take her from you."
Into the palace walked the boy at the proper time, and there were the score,
and the dozen, and the half-dozen, and the three guards all standing up or
leaning on their arms, and all dead asleep, and in the farthest room of all was
the Princess Golden Locks, as lovely as Venus herself. She was asleep in one
chair, and her father, the King of Greek, in another. He stood before her for
ever so long with the love sinking deeper into his heart every minute. till at
last he went down on one knee, and took her darling white hand in his hand, and
kissed it.
When she opened her eyes, she was a little frightened, but I believe not very
angry, for the boy, as I call him, was a fine handsome young fellow, and all the
respect and love that ever you could think of was in his face. She asked him
what he wanted, and he stammered, and blushed, and began his story six times,
before she understood it.
"And would you give me up to that ugly black King of Moroco?" says
she.
"I am obliged to do so," says he, "by prohibitions, and
restrictions, and death, and destruction, but I'll have his life and free you,
or lose my own. If I can't get you for my wife, my days on the earth will be
short."
"Well," says she, "let me take leave of my father at any
rate."
"Ah, I can't do that," says he, "or they'd all waken, and
myself would be put to death, or sent to some task worse than any I got
yet."
But she asked leave at any rate to kiss the old man; that wouldn't waken him,
and then she'd go. How could he refuse her, and his heart tied up in every curl
of her hair? But, bedad, the moment her lips touched her father's, he let a cry,
and every one of the score, the dozen guards woke up, and clashed their arms,
and were going to make gibbets of the foolish boy.
But the king ordered them to hold their hands, till he'd be insensed of
what it was all about, and when he heard the boy's story he gave him a chance
for his life.
"There is," says he, "a great heap of clay in front of the
palace, that won't let the sun shine on the walls in the middle of summer. Every
one that ever worked at it found two shovelfuls added to it for every one they
threw away. Remove it, and I'll let my daughter go with you. If you're the man I
suspect you to be, I think she'll be in no danger of being wife to that yellow Molott."
Early next morning was the boy tackled to his work, and for every shovelful
he flung away two came back on him, and at last he could hardly get out of the
heap that gathered round him. Well, the poor fellow scrambled out some way, and
sat down on a sod, and he'd have cried only for the shame of it. He began at it
in ever so many places, and one was still worse than the other, and in the heel
of the evening, when he was sitting with his head between his hands, who should
be standing before him but the fox.
"Well, my poor fellow," says he, "you're low enough. Go in: I
won't say anything to add to your trouble. Take your supper and your rest:
to-morrow will be a new day."
"How is the work going off?" says the king, when they I were at
supper.
"Faith, your Majesty," says the poor boy, "it's not going off;
but coming on it is. I suppose you'll have the trouble of digging me out at
sunset to-morrow, and waking me."
"I hope not," says the princess, with a smile on her kind face; and
the boy was as happy as anything the rest of the evening.
He was wakened up next morning with voices shouting, and bugles blowing, and
drums beating, and such a hullibullo he never heard in his life before. He ran
out to see what was the matter, and there, where the heap of clay was the
evening before, were soldiers, and servants, and lords, and ladies, dancing like
mad for joy that it was gone.
"Ah, my poor fox!" says he to himself; "this is your
work."
Well, there was little delay about his return. The king was going to send a
great retinue with the princess and himself; but he wouldn't let him take the
trouble.
"I have a friend," says he, "that will bring us both to the
King of Moroco's palace in a day, d -- fly away with him!"
There was great crying when she was parting from her father.
"Ah!" says he, "what a lonesome life I'll have now! Your
poor brother in the power of that wicked witch, and kept away from us, and now
you taken from me in my old age!"
Well, they both were walking on through the wood, and he telling her how much
he loved her; out walked the fox from behind a brake, and in a short time he and
she were sitting on the brush, and holding one another fast for fear of slipping
off; and away they went like thought. The wind that was before them they would
overtake it, and in the evening he and she were in the big bawn of the King of
Moroco's castle.
"Well," says he to the boy, "you've done your duty well; bring
out the bay filly. I'd give the full of the bawn of such fillies, if I had them,
for this handsome princess. Get on your steed, and here is a good purse of
guineas for the road."
"Thank you," says he. "I suppose you'll let me shake hands
with the princess before I start."
"Yes, indeed, and welcome."
Well, he was some little time about the hand-shaking, and before it was over
he had her fixed snug behind him; and while you could count three, he, and she,
and the filly were through all the guards, and a hundred perches away.; On they
went, and next morning they were in the wood near the King of Spain's palace,
and there was the fox before them.
"Leave your princess here with me," says he, "and go get the
golden bird and the three apples. If you don't bring us back the filly along
with the bird, I must carry you both home myself."
Well, when the King of Spain saw the boy and the filly in the bawn, he made
the golden bird, and the golden cage, and the golden apples be brought out and
handed to him, and was very thankful and very glad of his prize. But the boy
could not part with the nice beast without petting it and rubbing it; and while
no one was expecting such a thing, he was up on its back, and through the
guards, and a hundred perches away, and he wasn't long till he came to where he
left his princess and the fox.
They hurried away till they were safe out of the King of Spain's land, and
then they went on easier; and if I was to tell you all the loving things they
said to one another, the story wouldn't be over till morning. When they were
passing the village of the dance house, they found his two brothers begging, and
they brought them along. When they came to where the fox appeared first, he
begged the young man to cut off his head and his tail.
He would not do it for him; he shivered at the very thought, but the eldest
brother was ready enough. The head and tail vanished with the blows, and the
body changed into the finest young man you could see, and who was he but the
princess's brother that was bewitched. Whatever joy they had before, they had
twice as much now, and when they arrived at the palace bonfires were set
blazing, oxes roasting, and puncheons of wine put out in the lawn.
The young Prince of Greece was married to the king's daughter, and the
prince's sister to the gardener's son. He and she went a shorter way back to her
father's house, with many attendants, and the king was so glad of the golden
bird and the golden apples, that he had sent a waggon full of gold and a waggon
full of silver along with them.
  
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