214 lines
14 KiB
Text
214 lines
14 KiB
Text
The Griffin
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There was once upon a time a King, but where he reigned and what he was
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called, I do not know. He had no son, but an only daughter who had
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always been ill, and no doctor had been able to cure her. Then it was
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foretold to the King that his daughter should eat herself well with an
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apple. So he ordered it to be proclaimed throughout the whole of his
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kingdom, that whosoever brought his daughter an apple with which she
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could eat herself well, should have her to wife, and be King. This
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became known to a peasant who had three sons, and he said to the
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eldest, "Go out into the garden and take a basketful of those beautiful
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apples with the red cheeks and carry them to the court; perhaps the
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King's daughter will be able to eat herself well with them, and then
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thou wilt marry her and be King." The lad did so, and set out.
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When he had gone a short way he met a little iron man who asked him
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what he had there in the basket, to which replied Uele, for so was he
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named, "Frogs' legs." On this the little man said, "Well, so shall it
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be, and remain," and went away. At length Uele arrived at the palace,
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and made it known that he had brought apples which would cure the
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King's daughter if she ate them. This delighted the King hugely, and he
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caused Uele to be brought before him; but, alas! when he opened the
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basket, instead of having apples in it he had frogs' legs which were
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still kicking about. On this the King grew angry, and had him driven
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out of the house. When he got home he told his father how it had fared
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with him. Then the father sent the next son, who was called Seame, but
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all went with him just as it had gone with Uele. He also met the little
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iron man, who asked what he had there in the basket. Seame said, "Hogs'
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bristles," and the iron man said, "well, so shall it be, and remain."
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When Seame got to the King's palace and said he brought apples with
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which the King's daughter might eat herself well, they did not want to
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let him go in, and said that one fellow had already been there, and had
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treated them as if they were fools. Seame, however, maintained that he
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certainly had the apples, and that they ought to let him go in. At
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length they believed him, and led him to the King. But when he
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uncovered the basket, he had but hogs' bristles. This enraged the King
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most terribly, so he caused Seame to be whipped out of the house. When
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he got home he related all that had befallen him, then the youngest
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boy, whose name was Hans, but who was always called Stupid Hans, came
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and asked his father if he might go with some apples. "Oh!" said the
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father, "thou wouldst be just the right fellow for such a thing! If the
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clever ones can't manage it, what canst thou do?" The boy, however, did
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not believe him, and said, "Indeed, father, I wish to go." "Just get
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away, thou stupid fellow, thou must wait till thou art wiser," said the
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father to that, and turned his back. Hans, however, pulled at the back
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of his smock-frock and said, "Indeed, father, I wish to go." "Well,
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then, so far as I am concerned thou mayst go, but thou wilt soon come
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home again!" replied the old man in a spiteful voice. The boy, however,
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was tremendously delighted and jumped for joy. "Well, act like a fool!
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thou growest more stupid every day!" said the father again. Hans,
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however, did not care about that, and did not let it spoil his
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pleasure, but as it was then night, he thought he might as well wait
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until the morrow, for he could not get to court that day. All night
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long he could not sleep in his bed, and if he did doze for a moment, he
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dreamt of beautiful maidens, of palaces, of gold, and of silver, and
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all kinds of things of that sort. Early in the morning, he went forth
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on his way, and directly afterwards the little shabby-looking man in
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his iron clothes, came to him and asked what he was carrying in the
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basket. Hans gave him the answer that he was carrying apples with which
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the King's daughter was to eat herself well. "Then," said the little
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man, "so shall they be, and remain." But at the court they would none
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of them let Hans go in, for they said two had already been there who
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had told them that they were bringing apples, and one of them had
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frogs' legs, and the other hogs' bristles. Hans, however, resolutely
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maintained that he most certainly had no frogs' legs, but some of the
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most beautiful apples in the whole kingdom. As he spoke so pleasantly,
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the door-keeper thought he could not be telling a lie, and asked him to
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go in, and he was right, for when Hans uncovered his basket in the
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King's presence, golden-yellow apples came tumbling out. The King was
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delighted, and caused some of them to be taken to his daughter, and
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then waited in anxious expectation until news should be brought to him
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of the effect they had. But before much time had passed by, news was
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brought to him: but who do you think it was who came? it was his
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daughter herself! As soon as she had eaten of those apples, she was
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cured, and sprang out of her bed. The joy the King felt cannot be
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described! but now he did not want to give his daughter in marriage to
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Hans, and said he must first make him a boat which would go quicker on
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dry land than on water. Hans agreed to the conditions, and went home,
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and related how it had fared with him. Then the father sent Uele into
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the forest to make a boat of that kind. He worked diligently, and
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whistled all the time. At mid-day, when the sun was at the highest,
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came the little iron man and asked what he was making? Uele gave him
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for answer, "Wooden bowls for the kitchen." The iron man said, "So it
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shall be, and remain." By evening Uele thought he had now made the
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boat, but when he wanted to get into it, he had nothing but wooden
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bowls. The next day Seame went into the forest, but everything went
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with him just as it had done with Uele. On the third day Stupid Hans
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went. He worked away most industriously, so that the whole forest
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resounded with the heavy strokes, and all the while he sang and
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whistled right merrily. At mid-day, when it was the hottest, the little
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man came again, and asked what he was making? "A boat which will go
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quicker on dry land than on the water," replied Hans, "and when I have
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finished it, I am to have the King's daughter for my wife." "Well,"
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said the little man, "such an one shall it be, and remain." In the
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evening, when the sun had turned into gold, Hans finished his boat, and
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all that was wanted for it. He got into it and rowed to the palace. The
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boat went as swiftly as the wind. The King saw it from afar, but would
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not give his daughter to Hans yet, and said he must first take a
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hundred hares out to pasture from early morning until late evening, and
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if one of them got away, he should not have his daughter. Hans was
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contented with this, and the next day went with his flock to the
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pasture, and took great care that none of them ran away.
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Before many hours had passed came a servant from the palace, and told
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Hans that he must give her a hare instantly, for some visitors had come
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unexpectedly. Hans, however, was very well aware what that meant, and
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said he would not give her one; the King might set some hare soup
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before his guest next day. The maid, however, would not believe in his
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refusal, and at last she began to get angry with him. Then Hans said
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that if the King's daughter came herself, he would give her a hare. The
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maid told this in the palace, and the daughter did go herself. In the
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meantime, however, the little man came again to Hans, and asked him
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what he was doing there? He said he had to watch over a hundred hares
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and see that none of them ran away, and then he might marry the King's
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daughter and be King. "Good," said the little man, "there is a whistle
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for thee, and if one of them runs away, just whistle with it, and then
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it will come back again." When the King's daughter came, Hans gave her
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a hare into her apron; but when she had gone about a hundred steps with
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it, he whistled, and the hare jumped out of the apron, and before she
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could turn round was back to the flock again. When the evening came the
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hare-herd whistled once more, and looked to see if all were there, and
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then drove them to the palace. The King wondered how Hans had been able
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to take a hundred hares to graze without losing any of them; he would,
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however, not give him his daughter yet, and said he must now bring him
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a feather from the Griffin's tail. Hans set out at once, and walked
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straight forwards. In the evening he came to a castle, and there he
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asked for a night's lodging, for at that time there were no inns. The
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lord of the castle promised him that with much pleasure, and asked
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where he was going? Hans answered, "To the Griffin." "Oh! to the
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Griffin! They tell me he knows everything, and I have lost the key of
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an iron money-chest; so you might be so good as to ask him where it
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is." "Yes, indeed," said Hans, "I will do that." Early the next morning
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he went onwards, and on his way arrived at another castle in which he
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again stayed the night. When the people who lived there learnt that he
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was going to the Griffin, they said they had in the house a daughter
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who was ill, and that they had already tried every means to cure her,
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but none of them had done her any good, and he might be so kind as to
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ask the Griffin what would make their daughter healthy again? Hans said
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he would willingly do that, and went onwards. Then he came to a lake,
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and instead of a ferry-boat, a tall, tall man was there who had to
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carry everybody across. The man asked Hans whither he was journeying?
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"To the Griffin," said Hans. "Then when you get to him," said the man,
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"just ask him why I am forced to carry everybody over the lake." "Yes,
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indeed, most certainly I'll do that," said Hans. Then the man took him
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up on his shoulders, and carried him across. At length Hans arrived at
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the Griffin's house, but the wife only was at home, and not the Griffin
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himself. Then the woman asked him what he wanted? Thereupon he told her
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everything;--that he had to get a feather out of the Griffin's tail, and
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that there was a castle where they had lost the key of their
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money-chest, and he was to ask the Griffin where it was?--that in
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another castle the daughter was ill, and he was to learn what would
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cure her?--and then not far from thence there was a lake and a man
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beside it, who was forced to carry people across it, and he was very
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anxious to learn why the man was obliged to do it. Then said the woman,
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"But look here, my good friend, no Christian can speak to the Griffin;
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he devours them all; but if you like, you can lie down under his bed,
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and in the night, when he is quite fast asleep, you can reach out and
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pull a feather out of his tail, and as for those things which you are
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to learn, I will ask about them myself." Hans was quite satisfied with
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this, and got under the bed. In the evening, the Griffin came home, and
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as soon as he entered the room, said, "Wife, I smell a Christian."
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"Yes," said the woman, "one was here to-day, but he went away again;"
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and on that the Griffin said no more.
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In the middle of the night when the Griffin was snoring loudly, Hans
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reached out and plucked a feather from his tail. The Griffin woke up
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instantly, and said, "Wife, I smell a Christian, and it seems to me
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that somebody was pulling at my tail." His wife said, "Thou hast
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certainly been dreaming, and I told thee before that a Christian was
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here to-day, but that he went away again. He told me all kinds of
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things that in one castle they had lost the key of their money-chest,
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and could find it nowhere." "Oh! the fools!" said the Griffin; "the key
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lies in the wood-house under a log of wood behind the door." "And then
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he said that in another castle the daughter was ill, and they knew no
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remedy that would cure her." "Oh! the fools!" said the Griffin; "under
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the cellar-steps a toad has made its nest of her hair, and if she got
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her hair back she would be well." "And then he also said that there was
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a place where there was a lake and a man beside it who was forced to
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carry everybody across." "Oh, the fool!" said the Griffin; "if he only
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put one man down in the middle, he would never have to carry another
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across." Early the next morning the Griffin got up and went out. Then
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Hans came forth from under the bed, and he had a beautiful feather, and
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had heard what the Griffin had said about the key, and the daughter,
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and the ferry-man. The Griffin's wife repeated it all once more to him
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that he might not forget it, and then he went home again. First he came
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to the man by the lake, who asked him what the Griffin had said, but
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Hans replied that he must first carry him across, and then he would
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tell him. So the man carried him across, and when he was over Hans told
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him that all he had to do was to set one person down in the middle of
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the lake, and then he would never have to carry over any more. The man
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was hugely delighted, and told Hans that out of gratitude he would take
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him once more across, and back again. But Hans said no, he would save
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him the trouble, he was quite satisfied already, and pursued his way.
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Then he came to the castle where the daughter was ill; he took her on
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his shoulders, for she could not walk, and carried her down the
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cellar-steps and pulled out the toad's nest from beneath the lowest
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step and gave it into her hand, and she sprang off his shoulder and up
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the steps before him, and was quite cured. Then were the father and
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mother beyond measure rejoiced, and they gave Hans gifts of gold and of
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silver, and whatsoever else he wished for, that they gave him. And when
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he got to the other castle he went at once into the wood-house, and
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found the key under the log of wood behind the door, and took it to the
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lord of the castle. He also was not a little pleased, and gave Hans as
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a reward much of the gold that was in the chest, and all kinds of
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things besides, such as cows, and sheep, and goats. When Hans arrived
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before the King, with all these things--with the money, and the gold,
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and the silver and the cows, sheep and goats, the King asked him how he
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had come by them. Then Hans told him that the Griffin gave every one
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whatsoever he wanted. So the King thought he himself could make such
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things useful, and set out on his way to the Griffin; but when he got
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to the lake, it happened that he was the very first who arrived there
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after Hans, and the man put him down in the middle of it and went away,
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and the King was drowned. Hans, however, married the daughter, and
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became King.
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