He pictured it all so plainly to
himself, that he smiled even while the tears ran down his cheeks.
The little birds in the chestnut-trees twittered, “Tweet,
tweet;” they were so happy, although they had seen the funeral;
but they seemed as if they knew that the dead man was now in
heaven, and that he had wings much larger and more beautiful than
their own; and he was happy now, because he had been good here on
earth, and they were glad of it. John saw them fly away out of the
green trees into the wide world, and he longed to fly with them;
but first he cut out a large wooden cross, to place on his
father’s grave; and when he brought it there in the evening, he
found the grave decked out with gravel and flowers. Strangers had
done this; they who had known the good old father who was now
dead, and who had loved him very much.
Early the next morning, John packed up his little bundle of
clothes, and placed all his money, which consisted of fifty
dollars and a few shillings, in his girdle; with this he
determined to try his fortune in the world. But first he went into
the churchyard; and, by his father’s grave, he offered up a
prayer, and said, “Farewell.”
As he passed through the fields, all the flowers looked fresh
and beautiful in the warm sunshine, and nodded in the wind, as if
they wished to say, “Welcome to the green wood, where all is fresh
and bright.”
Then John turned to have one more look at the old church, in
which he had been christened in his infancy, and where his father
had taken him every Sunday to hear the service and join in singing
the psalms. As he looked at the old tower, he espied the ringer
standing at one of the narrow openings, with his little pointed
red cap on his head, and shading his eyes from the sun with his
bent arm. John nodded farewell to him, and the little ringer waved
his red cap, laid his hand on his heart, and kissed his hand to
him a great many times, to show that he felt kindly towards him,
and wished him a prosperous journey.
John continued his journey, and thought of all the wonderful
things he should see in the large, beautiful world, till he found
himself farther away from home than ever he had been before. He
did not even know the names of the places he passed through, and
could scarcely understand the language of the people he met, for
he was far away, in a strange land. The first night he slept on a
haystack, out in the fields, for there was no other bed for him;
but it seemed to him so nice and comfortable that even a king need
not wish for a better. The field, the brook, the haystack, with
the blue sky above, formed a beautiful sleeping-room. The green
grass, with the little red and white flowers, was the carpet; the
elder-bushes and the hedges of wild roses looked like garlands on
the walls; and for a bath he could have the clear, fresh water of
the brook; while the rushes bowed their heads to him, to wish him
good morning and good evening. The moon, like a large lamp, hung
high up in the blue ceiling, and he had no fear of its setting
fire to his curtains. John slept here quite safely all night; and
when he awoke, the sun was up, and all the little birds were
singing round him, “Good morning, good morning. Are you not up
yet?”
It was Sunday, and the bells were ringing for church. As the
people went in, John followed them; he heard God’s word, joined in
singing the psalms, and listened to the preacher. It seemed to him
just as if he were in his own church, where he had been
christened, and had sung the psalms with his father. Out in the
churchyard were several graves, and on some of them the grass had
grown very high. John thought of his father’s grave, which he knew
at last would look like these, as he was not there to weed and
attend to it. Then he set to work, pulled up the high grass,
raised the wooden crosses which had fallen down, and replaced the
wreaths which had been blown away from their places by the wind,
thinking all the time, “Perhaps some one is doing the same for my
father’s grave, as I am not there to do it ”
Outside the church door stood an old beggar, leaning on his
crutch. John gave him his silver shillings, and then he continued
his journey, feeling lighter and happier than ever. Towards
evening, the weather became very stormy, and he hastened on as
quickly as he could, to get shelter; but it was quite dark by the
time he reached a little lonely church which stood on a hill. “I
will go in here,” he said, “and sit down in a corner; for I am
quite tired, and want rest.”
So he went in, and seated himself; then he folded his hands,
and offered up his evening prayer, and was soon fast asleep and
dreaming, while the thunder rolled and the lightning flashed
without. When he awoke, it was still night; but the storm had
ceased, and the moon shone in upon him through the windows. Then
he saw an open coffin standing in the centre of the church, which
contained a dead man, waiting for burial. John was not at all
timid; he had a good conscience, and he knew also that the dead
can never injure any one. It is living wicked men who do harm to
others. Two such wicked persons stood now by the dead man, who had
been brought to the church to be buried. Their evil intentions
were to throw the poor dead body outside the church door, and not
leave him to rest in his coffin.
“Why do you do this?” asked John, when he saw what they were
going to do; “it is very wicked. Leave him to rest in peace, in
Christ’s name.”
“Nonsense,” replied the two dreadful men. “He has cheated us;
he owed us money which he could not pay, and now he is dead we
shall not get a penny; so we mean to have our revenge, and let him
lie like a dog outside the church door.”
“I have only fifty dollars,” said John, “it is all I possess in
the world, but I will give it to you if you will promise me
faithfully to leave the dead man in peace. I shall be able to get
on without the money; I have strong and healthy limbs, and God
will always help me.”
“Why, of course,” said the horrid men, “if you will pay his
debt we will both promise not to touch him. You may depend upon
that;” and then they took the money he offered them, laughed at
him for his good nature, and went their way.
Then he laid the dead body back in the coffin, folded the
hands, and took leave of it; and went away contentedly through the
great forest. All around him he could see the prettiest little
elves dancing in the moonlight, which shone through the trees.
They were not disturbed by his appearance, for they knew he was
good and harmless among men. They are wicked people only who can
never obtain a glimpse of fairies. Some of them were not taller
than the breadth of a finger, and they wore golden combs in their
long, yellow hair.
They were rocking themselves two together on the large
dew-drops with which the leaves and the high grass were sprinkled.
Sometimes the dew-drops would roll away, and then they fell down
between the stems of the long grass, and caused a great deal of
laughing and noise among the other little people. It was quite
charming to watch them at play. Then they sang songs, and John
remembered that he had learnt those pretty songs when he was a
little boy. Large speckled spiders, with silver crowns on their
heads, were employed to spin suspension bridges and palaces from
one hedge to another, and when the tiny drops fell upon them, they
glittered in the moonlight like shining glass. This continued till
sunrise. Then the little elves crept into the flower-buds, and the
wind seized the bridges and palaces, and fluttered them in the air
like cobwebs.
As John left the wood, a strong man’s voice called after him,
“Hallo, comrade, where are you travelling?”
“Into the wide world,” he replied; “I am only a poor lad, I
have neither father nor mother, but God will help me.”
“I am going into the wide world also,” replied the stranger;
“shall we keep each other company?”
“With all my heart,” he said, and so they went on together.
Soon they began to like each other very much, for they were both
good; but John found out that the stranger was much more clever
than himself. He had travelled all over the world, and could
describe almost everything. The sun was high in the heavens when
they seated themselves under a large tree to eat their breakfast,
and at the same moment an old woman came towards them. She was
very old and almost bent double. She leaned upon a stick and
carried on her back a bundle of firewood, which she had collected
in the forest; her apron was tied round it, and John saw three
great stems of fern and some willow twigs peeping out. just as she
came close up to them, her foot slipped and she fell to the ground
screaming loudly; poor old woman, she had broken her leg! John
proposed directly that they should carry the old woman home to her
cottage; but the stranger opened his knapsack and took out a box,
in which he said he had a salve that would quickly make her leg
well and strong again, so that she would be able to walk home
herself, as if her leg had never been broken. And all that he
would ask in return was the three fern stems which she carried in
her apron.
“That is rather too high a price,” said the old woman, nodding
her head quite strangely. She did not seem at all inclined to part
with the fern stems. However, it was not very agreeable to lie
there with a broken leg, so she gave them to him; and such was the
power of the ointment, that no sooner had he rubbed her leg with
it than the old mother rose up and walked even better than she had
done before. But then this wonderful ointment could not be bought
at a chemist’s.
“What can you want with those three fern rods?” asked John of
his fellow-traveller.
“Oh, they will make capital brooms,” said he; “and I like them
because I have strange whims sometimes.” Then they walked on
together for a long distance.
“How dark the sky is becoming,” said John; “and look at those
thick, heavy clouds.”
“Those are not clouds,” replied his fellow-traveller; “they are
mountains—large lofty mountains—on the tops of which we should be
above the clouds, in the pure, free air. Believe me, it is
delightful to ascend so high, tomorrow we shall be there.” But the
mountains were not so near as they appeared; they had to travel a
whole day before they reached them, and pass through black forests
and piles of rock as large as a town. The journey had been so
fatiguing that John and his fellow-traveller stopped to rest at a
roadside inn, so that they might gain strength for their journey
on the morrow. In the large public room of the inn a great many
persons were assembled to see a comedy performed by dolls.
The showman had just erected his little theatre, and the people
were sitting round the room to witness the performance. Right in
front, in the very best place, sat a stout butcher, with a great
bull-dog by his side who seemed very much inclined to bite. He sat
staring with all his eyes, and so indeed did every one else in the
room. And then the play began. It was a pretty piece, with a king
and a queen in it, who sat on a beautiful throne, and had gold
crowns on their heads. The trains to their dresses were very long,
according to the fashion; while the prettiest of wooden dolls,
with glass eyes and large mustaches, stood at the doors, and
opened and shut them, that the fresh air might come into the room.
It was a very pleasant play, not at all mournful; but just as the
queen stood up and walked across the stage, the great bull-dog,
who should have been held back by his master, made a spring
forward, and caught the queen in the teeth by the slender wrist,
so that it snapped in two.
This was a very dreadful disaster. The poor man, who was
exhibiting the dolls, was much annoyed, and quite sad about his
queen; she was the prettiest doll he had, and the bull-dog had
broken her head and shoulders off. But after all the people were
gone away, the stranger, who came with John, said that he could
soon set her to rights. And then he brought out his box and rubbed
the doll with some of the salve with which he had cured the old
woman when she broke her leg. As soon as this was done the doll’s
back became quite right again; her head and shoulders were fixed
on, and she could even move her limbs herself: there was now no
occasion to pull the wires, for the doll acted just like a living
creature, excepting that she could not speak. The man to whom the
show belonged was quite delighted at having a doll who could dance
of herself without being pulled by the wires; none of the other
dolls could do this.
During the night, when all the people at the inn were gone to
bed, some one was heard to sigh so deeply and painfully, and the
sighing continued for so long a time, that every one got up to see
what could be the matter. The showman went at once to his little
theatre and found that it proceeded from the dolls, who all lay on
the floor sighing piteously, and staring with their glass eyes;
they all wanted to be rubbed with the ointment, so that, like the
queen, they might be able to move of themselves. The queen threw
herself on her knees, took off her beautiful crown, and, holding
it in her hand, cried, “Take this from me, but do rub my husband
and his courtiers.”
The poor man who owned the theatre could scarcely refrain from
weeping; he was so sorry that he could not help them. Then he
immediately spoke to John’s comrade, and promised him all the
money he might receive at the next evening’s performance, if he
would only rub the ointment on four or five of his dolls. But the
fellow-traveller said he did not require anything in return,
excepting the sword which the showman wore by his side. As soon as
he received the sword he anointed six of the dolls with the
ointment, and they were able immediately to dance so gracefully
that all the living girls in the room could not help joining in
the dance.
The coachman danced with the cook, and the waiters with the
chambermaids, and all the strangers joined; even the tongs and the
fire-shovel made an attempt, but they fell down after the first
jump. So after all it was a very merry night. The next morning
John and his companion left the inn to continue their journey
through the great pine-forests and over the high mountains. They
arrived at last at such a great height that towns and villages lay
beneath them, and the church steeples looked like little specks
between the green trees. They could see for miles round, far away
to places they had never visited, and John saw more of the
beautiful world than he had ever known before. The sun shone
brightly in the blue firmament above, and through the clear
mountain air came the sound of the huntsman’s horn, and the soft,
sweet notes brought tears into his eyes, and he could not help
exclaiming, “How good and loving God is to give us all this beauty
and loveliness in the world to make us happy!”
His fellow-traveller stood by with folded hands, gazing on the
dark wood and the towns bathed in the warm sunshine. At this
moment there sounded over their heads sweet music. They looked up,
and discovered a large white swan hovering in the air, and singing
as never bird sang before. But the song soon became weaker and
weaker, the bird’s head drooped, and he sunk slowly down, and lay
dead at their feet.
“It is a beautiful bird,” said the traveller, “and these large
white wings are worth a great deal of money. I will take them with
me. You see now that a sword will be very useful.”
So he cut off the wings of the dead swan with one blow, and
carried them away with him.
They now continued their journey over the mountains for many
miles, till they at length reached a large city, containing
hundreds of towers, that shone in the sunshine like silver. In the
midst of the city stood a splendid marble palace, roofed with pure
red gold, in which dwelt the king. John and his companion would
not go into the town immediately; so they stopped at an inn
outside the town, to change their clothes; for they wished to
appear respectable as they walked through the streets. The
landlord told them that the king was a very good man, who never
injured any one: but as to his daughter, “Heaven defend us!”
She was indeed a wicked princess. She possessed beauty
enough—nobody could be more elegant or prettier than she was; but
what of that? for she was a wicked witch; and in consequence of
her conduct many noble young princes had lost their lives. Any one
was at liberty to make her an offer; were he a prince or a beggar,
it mattered not to her. She would ask him to guess three things
which she had just thought of, and if he succeed, he was to marry
her, and be king over all the land when her father died; but if he
could not guess these three things, then she ordered him to be
hanged or to have his head cut off.
The old king, her father, was very much grieved at her conduct,
but he could not prevent her from being so wicked, because he once
said he would have nothing more to do with her lovers; she might
do as she pleased. Each prince who came and tried the three
guesses, so that he might marry the princess, had been unable to
find them out, and had been hanged or beheaded. They had all been
warned in time, and might have left her alone, if they would. The
old king became at last so distressed at all these dreadful
circumstances, that for a whole day every year he and his soldiers
knelt and prayed that the princess might become good; but she
continued as wicked as ever. The old women who drank brandy would
color it quite black before they drank it, to show how they
mourned; and what more could they do?
“What a horrible princess!” said John; “she ought to be well
flogged. If I were the old king, I would have her punished in some
way.”
Just then they heard the people outside shouting, “Hurrah!”
and, looking out, they saw the princess passing by; and she was
really so beautiful that everybody forgot her wickedness, and
shouted “Hurrah!” Twelve lovely maidens in white silk dresses,
holding golden tulips in their hands, rode by her side on
coal-black horses. The princess herself had a snow-white steed,
decked with diamonds and rubies. Her dress was of cloth of gold,
and the whip she held in her hand looked like a sunbeam. The
golden crown on her head glittered like the stars of heaven, and
her mantle was formed of thousands of butterflies’ wings sewn
together. Yet she herself was more beautiful than all.
When John saw her, his face became as red as a drop of blood,
and he could scarcely utter a word. The princess looked exactly
like the beautiful lady with the golden crown, of whom he had
dreamed on the night his father died. She appeared to him so
lovely that he could not help loving her.
“It could not be true,” he thought, “that she was really a
wicked witch, who ordered people to be hanged or beheaded, if they
could not guess her thoughts. Every one has permission to go and
ask her hand, even the poorest beggar. I shall pay a visit to the
palace,” he said; “I must go, for I cannot help myself.”
Then they all advised him not to attempt it; for he would be
sure to share the same fate as the rest. His fellow-traveller also
tried to persuade him against it; but John seemed quite sure of
success. He brushed his shoes and his coat, washed his face and
his hands, combed his soft flaxen hair, and then went out alone
into the town, and walked to the palace.
“Come in,” said the king, as John knocked at the door. John
opened it, and the old king, in a dressing gown and embroidered
slippers, came towards him. He had the crown on his head, carried
his sceptre in one hand, and the orb in the other. “Wait a bit,”
said he, and he placed the orb under his arm, so that he could
offer the other hand to John; but when he found that John was
another suitor, he began to weep so violently, that both the
sceptre and the orb fell to the floor, and he was obliged to wipe
his eyes with his dressing gown. Poor old king! “Let her alone,”
he said; “you will fare as badly as all the others. Come, I will
show you.”
Then he led him out into the princess’s pleasure gardens, and
there he saw a frightful sight. On every tree hung three or four
king’s sons who had wooed the princess, but had not been able to
guess the riddles she gave them. Their skeletons rattled in every
breeze, so that the terrified birds never dared to venture into
the garden. All the flowers were supported by human bones instead
of sticks, and human skulls in the flower-pots grinned horribly.
It was really a doleful garden for a princess. “Do you see all
this?” said the old king; “your fate will be the same as those who
are here, therefore do not attempt it. You really make me very
unhappy,—I take these things to heart so very much.”
John kissed the good old king’s hand, and said he was sure it
would be all right, for he was quite enchanted with the beautiful
princess. Then the princess herself came riding into the palace
yard with all her ladies, and he wished her “Good morning.” She
looked wonderfully fair and lovely when she offered her hand to
John, and he loved her more than ever. How could she be a wicked
witch, as all the people asserted? He accompanied her into the
hall, and the little pages offered them gingerbread nuts and
sweetmeats, but the old king was so unhappy he could eat nothing,
and besides, gingerbread nuts were too hard for him. It was
decided that John should come to the palace the next day, when the
judges and the whole of the counsellors would be present, to try
if he could guess the first riddle. If he succeeded, he would have
to come a second time; but if not, he would lose his life,—and no
one had ever been able to guess even one.
However, John was not at all anxious about the result of his
trial; on the contrary, he was very merry. He thought only of the
beautiful princess, and believed that in some way he should have
help, but how he knew not, and did not like to think about it; so
he danced along the high-road as he went back to the inn, where he
had left his fellow-traveller waiting for him. John could not
refrain from telling him how gracious the princess had been, and
how beautiful she looked. He longed for the next day so much, that
he might go to the palace and try his luck at guessing the
riddles. But his comrade shook his head, and looked very mournful.
“I do so wish you to do well,” said he; “we might have continued
together much longer, and now I am likely to lose you; you poor
dear John! I could shed tears, but I will not make you unhappy on
the last night we may be together. We will be merry, really merry
this evening; to-morrow, after you are gone, shall be able to weep
undisturbed.”
It was very quickly known among the inhabitants of the town
that another suitor had arrived for the princess, and there was
great sorrow in consequence. The theatre remained closed, the
women who sold sweetmeats tied crape round the sugar-sticks, and
the king and the priests were on their knees in the church. There
was a great lamentation, for no one expected John to succeed
better than those who had been suitors before.
In the evening John’s comrade prepared a large bowl of punch,
and said, “Now let us be merry, and drink to the health of the
princess.” But after drinking two glasses, John became so sleepy,
that he could not keep his eyes open, and fell fast asleep. Then
his fellow-traveller lifted him gently out of his chair, and laid
him on the bed; and as soon as it was quite dark, he took the two
large wings which he had cut from the dead swan, and tied them
firmly to his own shoulders. Then he put into his pocket the
largest of the three rods which he had obtained from the old woman
who had fallen and broken her leg. After this he opened the
window, and flew away over the town, straight towards the palace,
and seated himself in a corner, under the window which looked into
the bedroom of the princess.
The town was perfectly still when the clocks struck a quarter
to twelve. Presently the window opened, and the princess, who had
large black wings to her shoulders, and a long white mantle, flew
away over the city towards a high mountain. The fellow-traveller,
who had made himself invisible, so that she could not possibly see
him, flew after her through the air, and whipped the princess with
his rod, so that the blood came whenever he struck her. Ah, it was
a strange flight through the air! The wind caught her mantle, so
that it spread out on all sides, like the large sail of a ship,
and the moon shone through it. “How it hails, to be sure!” said
the princess, at each blow she received from the rod; and it
served her right to be whipped.
At last she reached the side of the mountain, and knocked. The
mountain opened with a noise like the roll of thunder, and the
princess went in. The traveller followed her; no one could see
him, as he had made himself invisible. They went through a long,
wide passage. A thousand gleaming spiders ran here and there on
the walls, causing them to glitter as if they were illuminated
with fire. They next entered a large hall built of silver and
gold. Large red and blue flowers shone on the walls, looking like
sunflowers in size, but no one could dare to pluck them, for the
stems were hideous poisonous snakes, and the flowers were flames
of fire, darting out of their jaws. Shining glow-worms covered the
ceiling, and sky-blue bats flapped their transparent wings.
Altogether the place had a frightful appearance. In the middle of
the floor stood a throne supported by four skeleton horses, whose
harness had been made by fiery-red spiders.
The throne itself was made of milk-white glass, and the
cushions were little black mice, each biting the other’s tail.
Over it hung a canopy of rose-colored spider’s webs, spotted with
the prettiest little green flies, which sparkled like precious
stones. On the throne sat an old magician with a crown on his ugly
head, and a sceptre in his hand. He kissed the princess on the
forehead, seated her by his side on the splendid throne, and then
the music commenced. Great black grasshoppers played the mouth
organ, and the owl struck herself on the body instead of a drum.
It was altogether a ridiculous concert. Little black goblins with
false lights in their caps danced about the hall; but no one could
see the traveller, and he had placed himself just behind the
throne where he could see and hear everything. The courtiers who
came in afterwards looked noble and grand; but any one with common
sense could see what they really were, only broomsticks, with
cabbages for heads. The magician had given them life, and dressed
them in embroidered robes. It answered very well, as they were
only wanted for show. After there had been a little dancing, the
princess told the magician that she had a new suitor, and asked
him what she could think of for the suitor to guess when he came
to the castle the next morning.
“Listen to what I say,” said the magician, “you must choose
something very easy, he is less likely to guess it then. Think of
one of your shoes, he will never imagine it is that. Then cut his
head off; and mind you do not forget to bring his eyes with you
to-morrow night, that I may eat them.”
The princess curtsied low, and said she would not forget the
eyes.
The magician then opened the mountain and she flew home again,
but the traveller followed and flogged her so much with the rod,
that she sighed quite deeply about the heavy hail-storm, and made
as much haste as she could to get back to her bedroom through the
window. The traveller then returned to the inn where John still
slept, took off his wings and laid down on the bed, for he was
very tired. Early in the morning John awoke, and when his fellow-traveller
got up, he said that he had a very wonderful dream about the
princess and her shoe, he therefore advised John to ask her if she
had not thought of her shoe. Of course the traveller knew this
from what the magician in the mountain had said.
“I may as well say that as anything,” said John. “Perhaps your
dream may come true; still I will say farewell, for if I guess
wrong I shall never see you again.”
Then they embraced each other, and John went into the town and
walked to the palace. The great hall was full of people, and the
judges sat in arm-chairs, with eider-down cushions to rest their
heads upon, because they had so much to think of. The old king
stood near, wiping his eyes with his white pocket-handkerchief.
When the princess entered, she looked even more beautiful than she
had appeared the day before, and greeted every one present most
gracefully; but to John she gave her hand, and said, “Good morning
to you.”
Now came the time for John to guess what she was thinking of;
and oh, how kindly she looked at him as she spoke. But when he
uttered the single word shoe, she turned as pale as a ghost; all
her wisdom could not help her, for he had guessed rightly. Oh, how
pleased the old king was! It was quite amusing to see how he
capered about. All the people clapped their hands, both on his
account and John’s, who had guessed rightly the first time. His
fellow-traveller was glad also, when he heard how successful John
had been. But John folded his hands, and thanked God, who, he felt
quite sure, would help him again; and he knew he had to guess
twice more. The evening passed pleasantly like the one preceding.
While John slept, his companion flew behind the princess to the
mountain, and flogged her even harder than before; this time he
had taken two rods with him. No one saw him go in with her, and he
heard all that was said.
The princess this time was to think of a glove, and he told
John as if he had again heard it in a dream. The next day,
therefore, he was able to guess correctly the second time, and it
caused great rejoicing at the palace. The whole court jumped about
as they had seen the king do the day before, but the princess lay
on the sofa, and would not say a single word. All now depended
upon John. If he only guessed rightly the third time, he would
marry the princess, and reign over the kingdom after the death of
the old king: but if he failed, he would lose his life, and the
magician would have his beautiful blue eyes. That evening John
said his prayers and went to bed very early, and soon fell asleep
calmly. But his companion tied on his wings to his shoulders, took
three rods, and, with his sword at his side, flew to the palace.
It was a very dark night, and so stormy that the tiles flew from
the roofs of the houses, and the trees in the garden upon which
the skeletons hung bent themselves like reeds before the wind.
The lightning flashed, and the thunder rolled in one
long-continued peal all night. The window of the castle opened,
and the princess flew out. She was pale as death, but she laughed
at the storm as if it were not bad enough. Her white mantle
fluttered in the wind like a large sail, and the traveller flogged
her with the three rods till the blood trickled down, and at last
she could scarcely fly; she contrived, however, to reach the
mountain. “What a hail-storm!” she said, as she entered; “I have
never been out in such weather as this.”
“Yes, there may be too much of a good thing sometimes,” said
the magician.
Then the princess told him that John had guessed rightly the
second time, and if he succeeded the next morning, he would win,
and she could never come to the mountain again, or practice magic
as she had done, and therefore she was quite unhappy. “I will find
out something for you to think of which he will never guess,
unless he is a greater conjuror than myself. But now let us be
merry.”
Then he took the princess by both hands, and they danced with
all the little goblins and Jack-o’-lanterns in the room. The red
spiders sprang here and there on the walls quite as merrily, and
the flowers of fire appeared as if they were throwing out sparks.
The owl beat the drum, the crickets whistled and the grasshoppers
played the mouth-organ. It was a very ridiculous ball. After they
had danced enough, the princess was obliged to go home, for fear
she should be missed at the palace. The magician offered to go
with her, that they might be company to each other on the way.
Then they flew away through the bad weather, and the traveller
followed them, and broke his three rods across their shoulders.
The magician had never been out in such a hail-storm as this. Just
by the palace the magician stopped to wish the princess farewell,
and to whisper in her ear, “To-morrow think of my head.”
But the traveller heard it, and just as the princess slipped
through the window into her bedroom, and the magician turned round
to fly back to the mountain, he seized him by the long black
beard, and with his sabre cut off the wicked conjuror’s head just
behind the shoulders, so that he could not even see who it was. He
threw the body into the sea to the fishes, and after dipping the
head into the water, he tied it up in a silk handkerchief, took it
with him to the inn, and then went to bed. The next morning he
gave John the handkerchief, and told him not to untie it till the
princess asked him what she was thinking of. There were so many
people in the great hall of the palace that they stood as thick as
radishes tied together in a bundle. The council sat in their
arm-chairs with the white cushions. The old king wore new robes,
and the golden crown and sceptre had been polished up so that he
looked quite smart. But the princess was very pale, and wore a
black dress as if she were going to a funeral.
“What have I thought of?” asked the princess, of John. He
immediately untied the handkerchief, and was himself quite
frightened when he saw the head of the ugly magician. Every one
shuddered, for it was terrible to look at; but the princess sat
like a statue, and could not utter a single word. At length she
rose and gave John her hand, for he had guessed rightly.
She looked at no one, but sighed deeply, and said, “You are my
master now; this evening our marriage must take place.”
“I am very pleased to hear it,” said the old king. “It is just
what I wish.”
Then all the people shouted “Hurrah.” The band played music in
the streets, the bells rang, and the cake-women took the black
crape off the sugar-sticks. There was universal joy. Three oxen,
stuffed with ducks and chickens, were roasted whole in the
market-place, where every one might help himself to a slice. The
fountains spouted forth the most delicious wine, and whoever
bought a penny loaf at the baker’s received six large buns, full
of raisins, as a present. In the evening the whole town was
illuminated. The soldiers fired off cannons, and the boys let off
crackers. There was eating and drinking, dancing and jumping
everywhere. In the palace, the high-born gentlemen and beautiful
ladies danced with each other, and they could be heard at a great
distance singing the following song:—
“Here are maidens, young and fair,
Dancing in the summer air;
Like two spinning-wheels at play,
Pretty maidens dance away-
Dance the spring and summer through
Till the sole falls from your shoe.”
But the princess was still a witch, and she could not love
John. His fellow-traveller had thought of that, so he gave John
three feathers out of the swan’s wings, and a little bottle with a
few drops in it. He told him to place a large bath full of water
by the princess’s bed, and put the feathers and the drops into it.
Then, at the moment she was about to get into bed, he must give
her a little push, so that she might fall into the water, and then
dip her three times. This would destroy the power of the magician,
and she would love him very much. John did all that his companion
told him to do. The princess shrieked aloud when he dipped her
under the water the first time, and struggled under his hands in
the form of a great black swan with fiery eyes. As she rose the
second time from the water, the swan had become white, with a
black ring round its neck. John allowed the water to close once
more over the bird, and at the same time it changed into a most
beautiful princess. She was more lovely even than before, and
thanked him, while her eyes sparkled with tears, for having broken
the spell of the magician.
The next day, the king came with the whole court to offer their
congratulations, and stayed till quite late. Last of all came the
travelling companion; he had his staff in his hand and his
knapsack on his back. John kissed him many times and told him he
must not go, he must remain with him, for he was the cause of all
his good fortune. But the traveller shook his head, and said
gently and kindly, “No: my time is up now; I have only paid my
debt to you. Do you remember the dead man whom the bad people
wished to throw out of his coffin? You gave all you possessed that
he might rest in his grave; I am that man.” As he said this, he
vanished.
The wedding festivities lasted a whole month. John and his
princess loved each other dearly, and the old king lived to see
many a happy day, when he took their little children on his knees
and let them play with his sceptre. And John became king over the
whole country. |