THERE was once a king’s
son who had a larger and more beautiful collection of books than any
one else in the world, and full of splendid copper-plate engravings.
He could read and obtain information respecting every people of
every land; but not a word could he find to explain the situation of
the garden of paradise, and this was just what he most wished to
know.
His grandmother had told him when he was quite a
little boy, just old enough to go to school, that each flower in the
garden of paradise was a sweet cake, that the pistils were full of
rich wine, that on one flower history was written, on another
geography or tables; so those who wished to learn their lessons had
only to eat some of the cakes, and the more they ate, the more
history, geography, or tables they knew. He believed it all then;
but as he grew older, and learnt more and more, he became wise
enough to understand that the splendor of the garden of paradise
must be very different to all this. “Oh, why did Eve pluck the fruit
from the tree of knowledge? why did Adam eat the forbidden fruit?”
thought the king’s son: “if I had been there it would never have
happened, and there would have been no sin in the world.” The garden
of paradise occupied all his thoughts till he reached his
seventeenth year.
One day he was walking alone in the wood, which was his greatest
pleasure, when evening came on. The clouds gathered, and the rain
poured down as if the sky had been a waterspout; and it was as dark
as the bottom of a well at midnight; sometimes he slipped over the
smooth grass, or fell over stones that projected out of the rocky
ground. Every thing was dripping with moisture, and the poor prince
had not a dry thread about him. He was obliged at last to climb over
great blocks of stone, with water spurting from the thick moss.
He began to feel quite faint, when he heard a most singular
rushing noise, and saw before him a large cave, from which came a
blaze of light. In the middle of the cave an immense fire was
burning, and a noble stag, with its branching horns, was placed on a
spit between the trunks of two pine-trees. It was turning slowly
before the fire, and an elderly woman, as large and strong as if she
had been a man in disguise, sat by, throwing one piece of wood after
another into the flames.
“Come in,” she said to the prince; “sit down by the fire and dry
yourself.”
“There is a great draught here,” said the prince, as he seated
himself on the ground.
“It will be worse when my sons come home,” replied the woman;
“you are now in the cavern of the Winds, and my sons are the four
Winds of heaven: can you understand that?”
“Where are your sons?” asked the prince.
“It is difficult to answer stupid questions,” said the woman. “My
sons have plenty of business on hand; they are playing at
shuttlecock with the clouds up yonder in the king’s hall,” and she
pointed upwards.
“Oh, indeed,” said the prince; “but you speak more roughly and
harshly and are not so gentle as the women I am used to.”
“Yes, that is because they have nothing else to do; but I am
obliged to be harsh, to keep my boys in order, and I can do it,
although they are so head-strong. Do you see those four sacks
hanging on the wall? Well, they are just as much afraid of those
sacks, as you used to be of the rat behind the looking-glass. I can
bend the boys together, and put them in the sacks without any
resistance on their parts, I can tell you. There they stay, and dare
not attempt to come out until I allow them to do so. And here comes
one of them.” |