As soon as the rope was tied, the soldier climbed
up the tree, and let himself down through the hollow to the ground
beneath; and here he found, as the witch had told him, a large
hall, in which many hundred lamps were all burning. Then he opened
the first door. “Ah!” there sat the dog, with the eyes as large as
teacups, staring at him.
“You’re a pretty fellow,” said the soldier, seizing him, and
placing him on the witch’s apron, while he filled his pockets from
the chest with as many pieces as they would hold. Then he closed
the lid, seated the dog upon it again, and walked into another
chamber, And, sure enough, there sat the dog with eyes as big as
mill-wheels.
“You had better not look at me in that way,” said the soldier;
“you will make your eyes water;” and then he seated him also upon
the apron, and opened the chest. But when he saw what a quantity
of silver money it contained, he very quickly threw away all the
coppers he had taken, and filled his pockets and his knapsack with
nothing but silver.
Then he went into the third room, and there the dog was really
hideous; his eyes were, truly, as big as towers, and they turned
round and round in his head like wheels.
“Good morning,” said the soldier, touching his cap, for he had
never seen such a dog in his life. But after looking at him more
closely, he thought he had been civil enough, so he placed him on
the floor, and opened the chest. Good gracious, what a quantity of
gold there was! enough to buy all the sugar-sticks of the
sweet-stuff women; all the tin soldiers, whips, and rocking-horses
in the world, or even the whole town itself There was, indeed, an
immense quantity. So the soldier now threw away all the silver
money he had taken, and filled his pockets and his knapsack with
gold instead; and not only his pockets and his knapsack, but even
his cap and boots, so that he could scarcely walk.
He was really rich now; so he replaced the dog on the chest,
closed the door, and called up through the tree, “Now pull me out,
you old witch.”
“Have you got the tinder-box?” asked the witch.
“No; I declare I quite forgot it.” So he went back and fetched
the tinderbox, and then the witch drew him up out of the tree, and
he stood again in the high road, with his pockets, his knapsack,
his cap, and his boots full of gold.
“What are you going to do with the tinder-box?” asked the
soldier.
“That is nothing to you,” replied the witch; “you have the
money, now give me the tinder-box.”
“I tell you what,” said the soldier, “if you don’t tell me what
you are going to do with it, I will draw my sword and cut off your
head.”
“No,” said the witch.
The soldier immediately cut off her head, and there she lay on
the ground. Then he tied up all his money in her apron. and slung
it on his back like a bundle, put the tinderbox in his pocket, and
walked off to the nearest town. It was a very nice town, and he
put up at the best inn, and ordered a dinner of all his favorite
dishes, for now he was rich and had plenty of money.
The servant, who cleaned his boots, thought they certainly were
a shabby pair to be worn by such a rich gentleman, for he had not
yet bought any new ones. The next day, however, he procured some
good clothes and proper boots, so that our soldier soon became
known as a fine gentleman, and the people visited him, and told
him all the wonders that were to be seen in the town, and of the
king’s beautiful daughter, the princess.
“Where can I see her?” asked the soldier.
“She is not to be seen at all,” they said; “she lives in a
large copper castle, surrounded by walls and towers. No one but
the king himself can pass in or out, for there has been a prophecy
that she will marry a common soldier, and the king cannot bear to
think of such a marriage.”
“I should like very much to see her,” thought the soldier; but
he could not obtain permission to do so. However, he passed a very
pleasant time; went to the theatre, drove in the king’s garden,
and gave a great deal of money to the poor, which was very good of
him; he remembered what it had been in olden times to be without a
shilling. Now he was rich, had fine clothes, and many friends, who
all declared he was a fine fellow and a real gentleman, and all
this gratified him exceedingly. But his money would not last
forever; and as he spent and gave away a great deal daily, and
received none, he found himself at last with only two shillings
left. So he was obliged to leave his elegant rooms, and live in a
little garret under the roof, where he had to clean his own boots,
and even mend them with a large needle. None of his friends came
to see him, there were too many stairs to mount up. One dark
evening, he had not even a penny to buy a candle; then all at once
he remembered that there was a piece of candle stuck in the
tinder-box, which he had brought from the old tree, into which the
witch had helped him.
He found the tinder-box, but no sooner had he struck a few
sparks from the flint and steel, than the door flew open and the
dog with eyes as big as teacups, whom he had seen while down in
the tree, stood before him, and said, “What orders, master?”
“Hallo,” said the soldier; “well this is a pleasant tinderbox,
if it brings me all I wish for.”
“Bring me some money,” said he to the dog.
He was gone in a moment, and presently returned, carrying a
large bag of coppers in his month. The soldier very soon
discovered after this the value of the tinder-box. If he struck
the flint once, the dog who sat on the chest of copper money made
his appearance; if twice, the dog came from the chest of silver;
and if three times, the dog with eyes like towers, who watched
over the gold. The soldier had now plenty of money; he returned to
his elegant rooms, and reappeared in his fine clothes, so that his
friends knew him again directly, and made as much of him as
before.
After a while he began to think it was very strange that no one
could get a look at the princess. “Every one says she is very
beautiful,” thought he to himself; “but what is the use of that if
she is to be shut up in a copper castle surrounded by so many
towers. Can I by any means get to see her. Stop! where is my
tinder-box?” Then he struck a light, and in a moment the dog, with
eyes as big as teacups, stood before him.
“It is midnight,” said the soldier, “yet I should very much
like to see the princess, if only for a moment.”
The dog disappeared instantly, and before the soldier could
even look round, he returned with the princess. She was lying on
the dog’s back asleep, and looked so lovely, that every one who
saw her would know she was a real princess. The soldier could not
help kissing her, true soldier as he was. Then the dog ran back
with the princess; but in the morning, while at breakfast with the
king and queen, she told them what a singular dream she had had
during the night, of a dog and a soldier, that she had ridden on
the dog’s back, and been kissed by the soldier.
“That is a very pretty story, indeed,” said the queen. So the
next night one of the old ladies of the court was set to watch by
the princess’s bed, to discover whether it really was a dream, or
what else it might be.
The soldier longed very much to see the princess once more, so
he sent for the dog again in the night to fetch her, and to run
with her as fast as ever he could. But the old lady put on water
boots, and ran after him as quickly as he did, and found that he
carried the princess into a large house. She thought it would help
her to remember the place if she made a large cross on the door
with a piece of chalk. Then she went home to bed, and the dog
presently returned with the princess. But when he saw that a cross
had been made on the door of the house, where the soldier lived,
he took another piece of chalk and made crosses on all the doors
in the town, so that the lady-in-waiting might not be able to find
out the right door.
Early the next morning the king and queen accompanied the lady
and all the officers of the household, to see where the princess
had been.
“Here it is,” said the king, when they came to the first door
with a cross on it.
“No, my dear husband, it must be that one,” said the queen,
pointing to a second door having a cross also.
“And here is one, and there is another!” they all exclaimed;
for there were crosses on all the doors in every direction.
So they felt it would be useless to search any farther. But the
queen was a very clever woman; she could do a great deal more than
merely ride in a carriage. She took her large gold scissors, cut a
piece of silk into squares, and made a neat little bag. This bag
she filled with buckwheat flour, and tied it round the princess’s
neck; and then she cut a small hole in the bag, so that the flour
might be scattered on the ground as the princess went along.
During the night, the dog came again and carried the princess on
his back, and ran with her to the soldier, who loved her very
much, and wished that he had been a prince, so that he might have
her for a wife.
The dog did not observe how the flour ran out of the bag all
the way from the castle wall to the soldier’s house, and even up
to the window, where he had climbed with the princess. Therefore
in the morning the king and queen found out where their daughter
had been, and the soldier was taken up and put in prison. Oh, how
dark and disagreeable it was as he sat there, and the people said
to him, “To-morrow you will be hanged.” It was not very pleasant
news, and besides, he had left the tinder-box at the inn. In the
morning he could see through the iron grating of the little window
how the people were hastening out of the town to see him hanged;
he heard the drums beating, and saw the soldiers marching. Every
one ran out to look at them. and a shoemaker’s boy, with a leather
apron and slippers on, galloped by so fast, that one of his
slippers flew off and struck against the wall where the soldier
sat looking through the iron grating.
“Hallo, you shoemaker’s boy, you need not be in such a hurry,”
cried the soldier to him. “There will be nothing to see till I
come; but if you will run to the house where I have been living,
and bring me my tinder-box, you shall have four shillings, but you
must put your best foot foremost.”
The shoemaker’s boy liked the idea of getting the four
shillings, so he ran very fast and fetched the tinder-box, and
gave it to the soldier. And now we shall see what happened.
Outside the town a large gibbet had been erected, round which
stood the soldiers and several thousands of people. The king and
the queen sat on splendid thrones opposite to the judges and the
whole council. The soldier already stood on the ladder; but as
they were about to place the rope around his neck, he said that an
innocent request was often granted to a poor criminal before he
suffered death. He wished very much to smoke a pipe, as it would
be the last pipe he should ever smoke in the world. The king could
not refuse this request, so the soldier took his tinder-box, and
struck fire, once, twice, thrice,— and there in a moment stood all
the dogs;—the one with eyes as big as teacups, the one with eyes
as large as mill-wheels, and the third, whose eyes were like
towers. “Help me now, that I may not be hanged,” cried the
soldier.
And the dogs fell upon the judges and all the councillors;
seized one by the legs, and another by the nose, and tossed them
many feet high in the air, so that they fell down and were dashed
to pieces.
“I will not be touched,” said the king. But the largest dog
seized him, as well as the queen, and threw them after the others.
Then the soldiers and all the people were afraid, and cried, “Good
soldier, you shall be our king, and you shall marry the beautiful
princess.”
So they placed the soldier in the king’s carriage, and the
three dogs ran on in front and cried “Hurrah!” and the little boys
whistled through their fingers, and the soldiers presented arms.
The princess came out of the copper castle, and became queen,
which was very pleasing to her. The wedding festivities lasted a
whole week, and the dogs sat at the table, and stared with all
their eyes. |