FARMER
WEATHERBEARD
THERE
was once upon a time a man and a woman who had an only son, and he was called
Jack. The woman thought that it was his duty to go out to service, and told her
husband that he was to take him somewhere.
`You
must get him such a good place that he will become master of all masters,' she
said, and then she put some food and a roll of tobacco into a bag for them.
Well,
they went to a great many masters, but all said that they could make the lad as
good as they were themselves, but better than that they could not make him.
When the man came home to the old woman with this answer, she said, `I shall be
equally well pleased whatever you do with him; but this I do say, that you are
to have him made a master over all masters.' Then she once more put some food
and a roll of tobacco into the bag, and the man and his son had to set out
again.
When
they had walked some distance they got upon the ice, and there they met a man
in a carriage who was driving a black horse.
`Where
are you going?' he said.
`I
have to go and get my son apprenticed to someone who will be able to teach him
a trade, for my old woman comes of such well-to-do folk that she insists on his
being taught to be master of all masters,' said the man.
`We
are not ill met, then,' said the man who was driving, `for I am the kind of man
who can do that, and I am just looking out for such an apprentice. Get up
behind with you,' he said to the boy, and off the horse went with them straight
up into the air.
`No,
no, wait a little!' screamed the father of the boy. `I ought to know what your
name is and where you live.'
`Oh,
I am at home both in the north and the south and the east and the west, and I
am called Farmer Weatherbeard,' said the master. `You may come here again in a
year's time, and then I will tell you if the lad suits me.' And then they set
off again and were gone.
When
the man got home the old woman inquired what had become of the son.
`Ah!
Heaven only knows what has become of him!' said the man. `They went up aloft.'
And then he told her what had happened.
But
when the woman heard that, and found that the man did not at all know either
when their son would be out of his apprentice-ship, or where he had gone, she
packed him off again to find out, and gave him a bag of food and a roll of
tobacco to take away with him.
When
he had walked for some time he came to a great wood, and it stretched before
him all day long as he went on, and when night began to fall he saw a great
light, and went towards it. After a long, long time he came to a small hut at
the foot of a rock, outside which an old woman was standing drawing water up
from a well with her nose, it was so long.
`Good-evening,
mother,' said the man.
`Good-evening
to you too,' said the old woman. `No one has called me mother this hundred
years.'
`Can
I lodge here to-night?' said the man.
`No,'
said the old woman. But the man took out his roll of tobacco, lighted a little
of it, and then gave her a whiff. Then she was so delighted that she began to
dance, and thus the man got leave to stay the night there. It was not long
before he asked about Farmer Weatherbeard.
She
said that she knew nothing about him, but that she ruled over all the four-footed
beasts, and some of them might know him. So she gathered them all together by
blowing a whistle which she had, and questioned them, but there was not one of
them which knew anything about Farmer Weatherbeard.
`Well,'
said the old woman, `there are three of us sisters; it may be that one of the
other two knows where he is to be found. You shall have the loan of my horse
and carriage, and then you will get there by night; but her house is three
hundred miles off, go the nearest way you will.'
The
man set out and got there at night. When he arrived, this old woman also was
standing drawing water out of the well with her nose.
`Good-evening,
mother,' said the man.
`Good-evening
to you,' said the old woman. `No one has ever called me mother this hundred
years.'
`Can
I lodge here to-night?' said the man.
`No,'
said the old woman.
Then
he took out the roll of tobacco, took a whiff, and gave the old woman some
snuff on the back of her hand. Then she was so delighted that she began to
dance, and the man got leave to stay all night. It was not long before he began
to ask about Farmer Weatherbeard.
She
knew nothing about him, but she ruled over all the fishes, she said, and
perhaps some of them might know something. So she gathered them all together by
blowing a whistle which she had, and questioned them, but there was not one of
them which knew anything about Farmer Weatherbeard.
`Well,'
said the old woman, `I have another sister; perhaps she may know something
about him. She lives six hundred miles off, but you shall have my horse and
carriage, and then you will get there by nightfall.'
So
the man set off and he got there by nightfall. The old woman was standing
raking the fire, and she was doing it with her nose, so long it was.
`Good-evening,
mother,' said the man.
`Good-evening
to you,' said the old woman. `No one has called me mother this hundred years.'
`Can
I lodge here to-night?' said the man.
`No,'
said the old woman. But the man pulled out his roll of tobacco again, and
filled his pipe with some of it, and gave the old woman enough snuff to cover
the back of her hand. Then she was so delighted that she began to dance, and
the man got leave to stay in her house. It was not long before he asked about
Farmer Weatherbeard. She knew nothing at all about him, she said, but she
governed all the birds; and she gathered them together with her whistle. When
she questioned them all, the eagle was not there, but it came soon afterwards,
and when asked, it said that it had just come from Farmer Weatherbeard's. Then
the old woman said that it was to guide the man to him. But the eagle would
have something to eat first, and then it wanted to wait until the next day, for
it was so tired with the long journey that it was scarcely able to rise from
the earth.
When
the eagle had had plenty of food and rest, the old woman plucked a feather out
of its tail, and set the man in the feather's place, and then the bird flew
away with him, but they did not get to Farmer Weatherbeard's before midnight.
When
they got there the Eagle said: `There are a great many dead bodies lying
outside the door, but you must not concern yourself about them. The people who
are inside the house are all so sound asleep that it will not be easy to awake
them; but you must go straight to the table-drawer, and take out three bits of
bread, and if you hear anyone snoring, pluck three feathers from his head; he
will not waken for that.'
The
man did this; when he had got the bits of bread he first plucked out one
feather.
`Oof!'
screamed Farmer Weatherbeard.
So
the man plucked out another, and then Farmer Weatherbeard shrieked `Oof!'
again; but when the man had plucked the third, Farmer Weatherbeard screamed so
loudly that the man thought that brick and mortar would be rent in twain, but
for all that he went on sleeping. And now the Eagle told the man what he was to
do next, and he did it. He went to the stable door, and there he stumbled
against a hard stone, which he picked up, and beneath it lay three splinters of
wood, which he also picked up. He knocked at the stable door and it opened at
once. He threw down the three little bits of bread and a hare came out and ate
them. He caught the hare. Then the Eagle told him to pluck three feathers out
of its tail, and put in the hare, the stone, the splinters of wood and himself
instead of them, and then he would be able to carry them all home.
When
the Eagle had flown a long way it alighted on a stone.
`Do
you see anything?' it asked.
`Yes;
I see a flock of crows coming flying after us,' said the man.
`Then
we shall do well to fly on a little farther,' said the Eagle, and off it set.
In
a short time it asked again, `Do you see anything now?'
`Yes;
now the crows are close behind us,' said the man.
`Then
throw down the three feathers which you plucked out of his head,' said the
Eagle.
So
the man did this, and no sooner had he flung them down than the feathers became
a flock of ravens, which chased the crows home again. Then the Eagle flew on
much farther with the man, but at length it alighted on a stone for a while.
`Do
you see anything?' it said.
`I
am not quite certain,' said the man, `but I think I see something coming in the
far distance.'
`Then
we shall do well to fly on a little farther,' said the Eagle, and away it went.
`Do
you see anything now?' it said, after some time had gone by.
`Yes;
now they are close behind us,' said the man.
`Then
throw down the splinters of wood which you took from beneath the gray stone by
the stable door,' said the Eagle. The man did this, and no sooner had he flung
them down than they grew up into a great thick wood, and Farmer Weatherbeard
had to go home for an axe to cut his way through it. So the Eagle flew on a
long, long way, but then it grew tired and sat down on a fir tree.
`Do
you see anything?' it asked.
`Yes;
I am not quite certain,' said the man, `but I think I can catch a glimpse of
something far, far away.'
`Then
we shall do well to fly on a little farther,' said the Eagle, and it set off
again.
`Do
you see anything now?' it said after some time had gone by.
`Yes;
he is close behind us now,' said the man.
`Then
you must fling down the great stone which you took away from the stable door,'
said the Eagle.
The
man did so, and it turned into a great high mountain of stone, which Farmer
Weatherbeard had to break his way through before he could follow them. But when
he had got to the middle of the mountain he broke one of his legs, so he had to
go home to get it put right.
While
he was doing this the Eagle flew off to the man's home with him, and with the
hare, and when they had got home the man went to the churchyard, and had some
Christian earth laid upon the hare, and then it turned into his son Jack.
When
the time came for the fair the youth turned himself into a light-coloured
horse, and bade his father go to the market with him. `If anyone should come
who wants to buy me,' said he, `you are to tell him that you want a hundred
dollars for me; but you must not forget to take off the halter, for if you do I
shall never be able to get away from Farmer Weatherbeard, for he is the man who
will come and bargain for me.'
And
thus it happened. A horse-dealer came who had a great fancy to bargain for the
horse, and the man got a hundred dollars for it, but when the bargain was made,
and Jack's father had got the money, the horse-dealer wanted to have the
halter.
`That
was no part of our bargain,' said the man, `and the halter you shall not have,
for I have other horses which I shall have to sell.'
So
each of them went his way. But the horse dealer had not got very far with Jack
before he resumed his own form again, and when the man got home he was sitting
on the bench by the stove.
The
next day he changed himself into a brown horse and told his father that he was
to set off to market with him. `If a man should come who wants to buy me,' said
Jack, `you are to tell him that you want two hundred dollars, for that he will
give, and treat you besides; but whatsoever you drink, and whatsoever you do,
don't forget to take the halter off me, or you will never see me more.'
And
thus it happened. The man got his two hundred dollars for the horse, and was
treated as well, and when they parted from each other it was just as much as he
could do to remember to take off the halter. But the buyer had not got far on
his way before the youth took his own form again, and when the man reached home
Jack was already sitting on the bench by the stove.
On
the third day all happened in the same way. The youth changed himself into a
great black horse, and told his father that if a man came and offered him three
hundred dollars, and treated him well and handsomely into the bargain, he was
to sell him, but whatsoever he did, or how much soever he drank, he must not
forget to take off the halter, or else he himself would never get away from
Farmer Weatherbeard as long as he lived.
`No,'
said the man, `I will not forget.'
When
he got to the market, he received the three hundred dollars, but Farmer
Weatherbeard treated him so handsomely that he quite forgot to take off the
halter; so Farmer Weatherbeard went away with the horse.
When
he had got some distance he had to go into an inn to get some more brandy; so
he set a barrel full of red-hot nails under his horse's nose, and a trough
filled with oats beneath its tail, and then he tied the halter fast to a hook
and went away into the inn. So the horse stood there stamping, and kicking, and
snorting, and rearing, and out came a girl who thought it a sin and a shame to
treat a horse so ill.
`Ah,
poor creature, what a master you must have to treat you thus!' she said, and
pushed the halter off the hook so that the horse might turn round and eat the
oats.
`I
am here!' shrieked Farmer Weatherbeard, rushing out of doors. But the horse had
already shaken off the halter and flung himself into a goose-pond, where he
changed himself into a little fish. Farmer Weatherbeard went after him, and
changed himself into a great pike. So Jack turned himself into a dove, and
Farmer Weatherbeard turned himself into a hawk, and flew after the dove and
struck it. But a Princess was standing at a window in the King's palace
watching the struggle.
`If
thou didst but know as much as I know, thou wouldst fly in to me through the
window,' said the Princess to the dove.
So
the dove came flying in through the window and changed itself into Jack again,
and told her all as it had happened.
`Change
thyself into a gold ring, and set thyself on my finger,' said the Princess.
`No,
that will not do,' said Jack, `for then Farmer Weatherbeard will make the King
fall sick, and there will be no one who can make him well again before Farmer
Weatherbeard comes and cures him, and for that he will demand the gold ring.'
`I
will say that it was my mother's, and that I will not part with it,' said the
Princess.
So
Jack changed himself into a gold ring, and set himself on the Princess's
finger, and Farmer Weatherbeard could not get at him there. But then all that
the youth had foretold came to pass.
The
King became ill, and there was no doctor who could cure him till Farmer
Weatherbeard arrived, and he demanded the ring which was on the Princess's
finger as a reward.
So
the King sent a messenger to the Princess for the ring. She, however, refused
to part with it, because she had inherited it from her mother. When the King
was informed of this he fell into a rage, and said that he would have the ring,
let her have inherited it from whom she might.
`Well,
it's of no use to be angry about it,' said the Princess, `for I can't get it
off. If you want the ring you will have to take the finger too!'
`I
will try, and then the ring will very soon come off,' said Farmer Weatherbeard.
`No,
thank you, I will try myself,' said the Princess, and she went away to the
fireplace and put some ashes on the ring.
So
the ring came off and was lost among the ashes.
Farmer
Weatherbeard changed himself into a hare, which scratched and scraped about in
the fireplace after the ring until the ashes were up to its ears. But Jack
changed himself into a fox, and bit the hare's head off, and if Farmer
Weatherbeard was possessed by the evil one all was now over with him.[25]
[25] From
P. C. Asbjornsen.
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