108 lines
6.6 KiB
Text
108 lines
6.6 KiB
Text
The Sea-Hare
|
|
|
|
There was once upon a time a princess, who, high under the battlements
|
|
in her castle, had an apartment with twelve windows, which looked out
|
|
in every possible direction, and when she climbed up to it and looked
|
|
around her, she could inspect her whole kingdom. When she looked out of
|
|
the first, her sight was more keen than that of any other human being;
|
|
from the second she could see still better, from the third more
|
|
distinctly still, and so it went on, until the twelfth, from which she
|
|
saw everything above the earth and under the earth, and nothing at all
|
|
could be kept secret from her. Moreover, as she was haughty, and would
|
|
be subject to no one, but wished to keep the dominion for herself
|
|
alone, she caused it to be proclaimed that no one should ever be her
|
|
husband who could not conceal himself from her so effectually, that it
|
|
should be quite impossible for her to find him. He who tried this,
|
|
however, and was discovered by her, was to have his head struck off,
|
|
and stuck on a post. Ninety-seven posts with the heads of dead men were
|
|
already standing before the castle, and no one had come forward for a
|
|
long time. The princess was delighted, and thought to herself, "Now I
|
|
shall be free as long as I live." Then three brothers appeared before
|
|
her, and announced to her that they were desirous of trying their luck.
|
|
The eldest believed he would be quite safe if he crept into a lime-pit,
|
|
but she saw him from the first window, made him come out, and had his
|
|
head cut off. The second crept into the cellar of the palace, but she
|
|
perceived him also from the first window, and his fate was sealed. His
|
|
head was placed on the nine and ninetieth post. Then the youngest came
|
|
to her and entreated her to give him a day for consideration, and also
|
|
to be so gracious as to overlook it if she should happen to discover
|
|
him twice, but if he failed the third time, he would look on his life
|
|
as over. As he was so handsome, and begged so earnestly, she said,
|
|
"Yes, I will grant thee that, but thou wilt not succeed."
|
|
|
|
Next day he meditated for a long time how he should hide himself, but
|
|
all in vain. Then he seized his gun and went out hunting. He saw a
|
|
raven, took a good aim at him, and was just going to fire, when the
|
|
bird cried, "Don't shoot; I will make it worth thy while not." He put
|
|
his gun down, went on, and came to a lake where he surprised a large
|
|
fish which had come up from the depths below to the surface of the
|
|
water. When he had aimed at it, the fish cried, "Don't shoot, and I
|
|
will make it worth thy while." He allowed it to dive down again, went
|
|
onwards, and met a fox which was lame. He fired and missed it, and the
|
|
fox cried, "You had much better come here and draw the thorn out of my
|
|
foot for me." He did this; but then he wanted to kill the fox and skin
|
|
it, the fox said, "Stop, and I will make it worth thy while." The youth
|
|
let him go, and then as it was evening, returned home.
|
|
|
|
Next day he was to hide himself; but howsoever much he puzzled his
|
|
brains over it, he did not know where. He went into the forest to the
|
|
raven and said, "I let thee live on, so now tell me where I am to hide
|
|
myself, so that the King's daughter shall not see me." The raven hung
|
|
his head and thought it over for a longtime. At length he croaked, "I
|
|
have it." He fetched an egg out of his nest, cut it into two parts, and
|
|
shut the youth inside it; then made it whole again, and seated himself
|
|
on it. When the King's daughter went to the first window she could not
|
|
discover him, nor could she from the others, and she began to be
|
|
uneasy, but from the eleventh she saw him. She ordered the raven to be
|
|
shot, and the egg to be brought and broken, and the youth was forced to
|
|
come out. She said, "For once thou art excused, but if thou dost not do
|
|
better than this, thou art lost!"
|
|
|
|
Next day he went to the lake, called the fish to him and said, "I
|
|
suffered thee to live, now tell me where to hide myself so that the
|
|
King's daughter may not see me." The fish thought for a while, and at
|
|
last cried, "I have it! I will shut thee up in my stomach." He
|
|
swallowed him, and went down to the bottom of the lake. The King's
|
|
daughter looked through her windows, and even from the eleventh did not
|
|
see him, and was alarmed; but at length from the twelfth she saw him.
|
|
She ordered the fish to be caught and killed, and then the youth
|
|
appeared. Every one can imagine what a state of mind he was in. She
|
|
said, "Twice thou art forgiven, but be sure that thy head will be set
|
|
on the hundredth post."
|
|
|
|
On the last day, he went with a heavy heart into the country, and met
|
|
the fox. "Thou knowest how to find all kinds of hiding-places," said
|
|
he; "I let thee live, now advise me where I shall hide myself so that
|
|
the King's daughter shall not discover me." "That's a hard task,"
|
|
answered the fox, looking very thoughtful. At length he cried, "I have
|
|
it!" and went with him to a spring, dipped himself in it, and came out
|
|
as a stall-keeper in the market, and dealer in animals. The youth had
|
|
to dip himself in the water also, and was changed into a small
|
|
sea-hare. The merchant went into the town, and showed the pretty little
|
|
animal, and many persons gathered together to see it. At length the
|
|
King's daughter came likewise, and as she liked it very much, she
|
|
bought it, and gave the merchant a good deal of money for it. Before he
|
|
gave it over to her, he said to it, "When the King's daughter goes to
|
|
the window, creep quickly under the braids of her hair." And now the
|
|
time arrived when she was to search for him. She went to one window
|
|
after another in turn, from the first to the eleventh, and did not see
|
|
him. When she did not see him from the twelfth either, she was full of
|
|
anxiety and anger, and shut it down with such violence that the glass
|
|
in every window shivered into a thousand pieces, and the whole castle
|
|
shook.
|
|
|
|
She went back and felt the sea-hare beneath the braids of her hair.
|
|
Then she seized it, and threw it on the ground exclaiming, "Away with
|
|
thee, get out of my sight!" It ran to the merchant, and both of them
|
|
hurried to the spring, wherein they plunged, and received back their
|
|
true forms. The youth thanked the fox, and said, "The raven and the
|
|
fish are idiots compared with thee; thou knowest the right tune to
|
|
play, there is no denying that!"
|
|
|
|
The youth went straight to the palace. The princess was already
|
|
expecting him, and accommodated herself to her destiny. The wedding was
|
|
solemnized, and now he was king, and lord of all the kingdom. He never
|
|
told her where he had concealed himself for the third time, and who had
|
|
helped him, so she believed that he had done everything by his own
|
|
skill, and she had a great respect for him, for she thought to herself,
|
|
"He is able to do more than I."
|