GEIRLAUG THE KING'S DAUGHTER
One day a powerful king and his beautiful wife were sitting
in the gardens of their capital city, talking earnestly about the future life
of their little son, who was sleeping by their side in his beautiful golden
cradle. They had been married for many years without children, so when this
baby came they thought themselves the happiest couple in the whole world. He
was a fine sturdy little boy, who loved to kick and to strike out with his
fists; but even if he had been weak and small they would still have thought him
the most wonderful creature upon earth, and so absorbed were they in making
plans for him, that they never noticed a huge dark shadow creeping up, till a
horrible head with gleaming teeth stretched over them, and in an instant their
beloved baby was snatched away.
For a while the king and queen remained where they were,
speechless with horror. Then the king rose slowly, and holding out his hand to
his wife, led her weeping into the palace, and for many days their subjects saw
no more of them.
Meanwhile the dragon soared high into the air, holding the
cradle between his teeth, and the baby still slept on. He flew so fast that he
soon crossed the borders of another kingdom, and again he beheld the king and
queen of the country seated in the garden with a little girl lying in a
wonderful cradle of white satin and lace. Swooping down from behind as he had
done before, he was just about to seize the cradle, when the king jumped up and
dealt him such a blow with his golden staff that the dragon not only started
back, but in his pain let fall the boy, as he spread his wings and soared into
the air away from all danger.
'That was a narrow escape,' said the king, turning to his
wife, who sat pale with fright, and clasping her baby tightly in her arms.
'Frightful,' murmured the queen; 'but look, what is that glittering object that
is lying out there?' The king walked in the direction of her finger, and to his
astonishment beheld another cradle and another baby.
'Ah! the monster must have stolen this as he sought to steal
Geirlaug,' cried he. And stooping lower, he read some words that were written
on the fine linen that was wound round the boy. 'This is Grethari, son of
Grethari the king!' Unfortunately it happened that the two neighbouring
monarchs had had a serious quarrel, and for some years had ceased holding
communication with each other. So, instead of sending a messenger at once to
Grethari to tell him of the safety of his son, the king contented himself with
adopting the baby, which was brought up with Geirlaug the princess.
For a while things went well with the children, who were as
happy as the day was long, but at last there came a time when the queen could
no more run races or play at hide-and-seek with them in the garden as she was
so fond of doing, but lay and watched them from a pile of soft cushions.
By-and-by she gave up doing even that, and people in the palace spoke with low
voices, and even Geirlaug and Grethari trod gently and moved quietly when they
drew near her room. At length, one morning, they were sent for by the king
himself, who, his eyes red with weeping, told them that the queen was dead.
Great was the sorrow of the two children, for they had loved
the queen very dearly, and life seemed dull without her. But the
lady-in-waiting who took care of them in the tower which had been built for
them while they were still babies, was kind and good, and when the king was
busy or away in other parts of his kingdom she made them quite happy, and saw
that they were taught everything that a prince and princess ought to know. Thus
two or three years passed, when, one day, as the children were anxiously
awaiting their father's return from a distant city, there rode post haste into
the courtyard of the palace a herald whom the king had sent before him, to say
that he was bringing back a new wife.
Now, in itself, there was nothing very strange or dreadful in
the fact that the king should marry again, but, as the old lady-in-waiting soon
guessed, the queen, in spite of her beauty, was a witch, and as it was easy to
see that she was jealous of everyone who might gain power over her husband, it
boded ill for Geirlaug and Grethari. The faithful woman could not sleep for
thinking about her charges, and her soul sank when, a few months after the
marriage, war broke out with a country across the seas, and the king rode away
at the head of his troops. Then there happened what she had so long expected.
One night, when, unlike her usual habit, she was sleeping soundly--afterwards
she felt sure that a drug had been put into her food--the witch came to the
tower. Exactly what she did there no one knew, but, when the sun rose, the beds
of Grethari and Geirlaug were empty. At dawn the queen summoned some of her guards,
and told them that she had been warned in a dream that some evil fate would
befall her through a wild beast, and bade them go out and kill every animal
within two miles of the palace. But the only beasts they found were two black
foals of wondrous beauty, fitted for the king's riding; it seemed a pity to
kill them, for what harm could two little foals do anyone? So they let them run
away, frisking over the plain, and returned to the palace.
'Did you see nothing, really nothing?' asked the queen, when
they again appeared before her.
'Nothing, your majesty,' they replied. But the queen did not
believe them, and when they were gone, she gave orders to her steward that at
supper the guards should be well plied with strong drink so that their tongues
should be loosened, and, further, that he was to give heed to their babble, and
report to her, whatever they might let fall.
'Your majesty's commands have been obeyed,' said the steward
when, late in the evening, he begged admittance to the royal apartments; 'but,
after all, the men have told you the truth. I listened to their talk from
beginning to end, and nothing did they see save two black foals.' He might have
added more, but the look in the queen's blazing eyes terrified him, and, bowing
hastily, he backed quickly out of her presence.
In a week's time the king came home, and right glad were all
the courtiers to see him.
'Now, perhaps, she will find some one else to scream at,'
whispered they amongst themselves. 'She' was the queen, who had vented her rage
on her attendants during these days, though what had happened to make her so
angry nobody knew. But whatever might be the meaning of it, things would be
sure to improve with the king to rule in the palace instead of his wife.
Unfortunately, their joy only lasted a short while; for the very first night
after the king's arrival the queen related the evil dream she had dreamt in his
absence, and begged him to go out the next morning and kill every living
creature he saw within two miles of the city. The king, who always believed
everything the queen said, promised to do as she wished. But before he had
ridden through the lovely gardens that surrounded the palace, he was attracted
by the singing of two little blue birds perched on a scarlet-berried holly,
which made him think of everything beautiful that he had ever heard of or
imagined. Hour after hour passed by, and still the birds sang, and still the
king listened, though of course he never guessed that it was Geirlaug and
Grethari whose notes filled him with enchantment. At length darkness fell; the
birds' voices were hushed, and the king awoke with a start to find that for that
day his promise to the queen could not be kept.
'Well! did you see anything?' she asked eagerly, when the
king entered her apartments.
'Ah, my dear, I am almost ashamed to confess to you. But the
fact is that before I rode as far as the western gate the singing of two
strange little blue birds made me forget all else in the world. And you will
hardly believe it--but not until it grew dark did I remember where I was and
what I should have been doing. However, to-morrow nothing shall hinder me from
fulfilling your desires.'
'There will be no to-morrow,' muttered the queen, as she
turned away with a curious glitter in her eyes. But the king did not hear her.
That night the king gave a great supper in the palace in
honour of the victory he had gained over the enemy. The three men whom the
queen had sent forth to slay the wild beasts held positions of trust in the
household, for to them was committed the custody of the queen's person. And on
the occasion of a feast their places were always next that of the king, so it
was easy for the queen to scatter a slow but fatal poison in their cups without
anyone being the wiser. Before dawn the palace was roused by the news that the
king was dead, and that the three officers of the guards were dying also. Of
course nobody's cries and laments were as loud as those of the queen. But when
once the splendid funeral was over, she gave out that she was going to shut
herself up in a distant castle till the year of her mourning was over, and
after appointing a regent of the kingdom, she set out attended only by a maid
who knew all her secrets. Once she had left the palace she quickly began to
work her spells, to discover under what form Geirlaug and Grethari lay hidden.
Happily, the princess had studied magic under a former governess, so was able
to fathom her step-mother's wicked plot, and hastily changed herself into a
whale, and her foster-brother into its fin. Then the queen took the shape of a
shark and gave chase.
For several hours a fierce battle raged between the whale and
the shark, and the sea around was red with blood; first one of the combatants
got the better, and then the other, but at length it became plain to the crowd
of little fishes gathered round to watch, that the victory would be to the whale.
And so it was. But when, after a mighty struggle, the shark floated dead and
harmless on the surface of the water, the whale was so exhausted that she had
only strength enough to drag her wounded body into a quiet little bay, and for
three days she remained there as still and motionless as if she had been dead
herself. At the end of the three days her wounds were healed, and she began to
think what it was best to do.
'Let us go back to your father's kingdom,' she said to
Grethari, when they had both resumed their proper shapes, and were sitting on a
high cliff above the sea.
'How clever you are! I never should have thought of that!'
answered Grethari, who, in truth, was not clever at all. But Geirlaug took a
small box of white powder from her dress, and sprinkled some over him and some
over herself, and, quicker than lightning, they found themselves in the palace
grounds from which Grethari had been carried off by the dragon so many years
before.
'Now take up the band with the golden letters and bind it
about your forehead,' said Geirlaug, 'and go boldly up to the castle. And,
remember, however great may be your thirst, you must drink nothing till you
have first spoken to your father. If you do, ill will befall us both.'
'Why should I be thirsty?' replied Grethari, staring at her
in astonishment. 'It will not take me five minutes to reach the castle gate.'
Geirlaug held her peace, but her eyes had in them a sad look. 'Good-bye,' she
said at last, and she turned and kissed him.
Grethari had spoken truly when he declared that he could
easily get to the castle in five minutes. At least, no one would have dreamed
that it could possibly take any longer. Yet, to his surprise, the door which
stood so widely open that he could see the colour of the hangings within never
appeared to grow any nearer, while each moment the sun burned more hotly, and
his tongue was parched with thirst.
'I don't understand! What can be the matter with me--and why
haven't I reached the castle long ago?' he murmured to himself, as his knees
began to knock under him with fatigue, and his head to swim. For a few more
paces he staggered on blindly, when, suddenly, the sound of rushing water smote
upon his ears; and in a little wood that bordered the path he beheld a stream
falling over a rock. At this sight his promise to Geirlaug was forgotten. Fighting
his way through the brambles that tore his clothes, he cast himself down beside
the fountain, and seizing the golden cup that hung from a tree, he drank a deep
draught.
When he rose up the remembrance of Geirlaug and of his past
life had vanished, and, instead, something stirred dimly within him at the
vision of the white-haired man and woman who stood in the open door with
outstretched hands.
'Grethari! Grethari! So you have come home at last,' cried
they.
* * * * *
For three hours Geirlaug waited in the spot where Grethari
had left her, and then she began to understand what had happened. Her heart was
heavy, but she soon made up her mind what to do, and pushing her way out of the
wood, she skirted the high wall that enclosed the royal park and gardens, till
she reached a small house where the forester lived with his two daughters.
'Do you want a girl to sweep, and to milk the cows?' asked
she, when one of the sisters answered her knock.
'Yes, we do, very badly; and as you look strong and clean, we
will take you for a servant if you like to come,' replied the young woman.
'But, first, what is your name?'
'Lauphertha,' said Geirlaug quickly, for she did not wish
anyone to know who she was; and following her new mistress into the house, she
begged to be taught her work without delay. And so clever was she, that,
by-and-by, it began to be noised abroad that the strange girl who had come to
live in the forester's house had not her equal in the whole kingdom for skill
as well as beauty. Thus the years slipped away, during which Geirlaug grew to
be a woman. Now and then she caught glimpses of Grethari as he rode out to hunt
in the forest, but when she saw him coming she hid herself behind the great
trees, for her heart was still sore at his forgetfulness. One day, however,
when she was gathering herbs, he came upon her suddenly, before she had time to
escape, though as she had stained her face and hands brown, and covered her
beautiful hair with a scarlet cap, he did not guess her to be his
foster-sister.
'What is your name, pretty maiden?' asked he.
'Lauphertha,' answered the girl with a low curtesy.
'Ah! it is you, then, of whom I have heard so much,' said he;
'you are too beautiful to spend your life serving the forester's daughters.
Come with me to the palace, and my mother the queen will make you one of her
ladies in waiting.'
'Truly, that would be a great fortune,' replied the maiden.
'And, if you really mean it, I will go with you. But how shall I know that you
are not jesting?'
'Give me something to do for you, and I will do it, whatever
it is,' cried the young man eagerly. And she cast down her eyes, and answered:
'Go to the stable, and bind the calf that is there so that it
shall not break loose in the night and wander away, for the forester and his
daughters have treated me well, and I would not leave them with aught of my
work still undone.'
So Grethari set out for the stable where the calf stood, and
wound the rope about its horns. But when he had made it fast to the wall, he
found that a coil of the rope had twisted itself round his wrist, and, pull as
he might, he could not get free. All night he wriggled and struggled till he
was half dead with fatigue. But when the sun rose the rope suddenly fell away
from him, and, very angry with the maiden he dragged himself back to the
palace. 'She is a witch,' he muttered crossly to himself, 'and I will have no
more to do with her.' And he flung himself on his bed and slept all day.
Not long after this adventure the king and queen sent their
beloved son on an embassy to a neighbouring country to seek a bride from
amongst the seven princesses. The most beautiful of all was, of course, the one
chosen, and the young pair took ship without delay for the kingdom of the
prince's parents. The wind was fair and the vessel so swift that, in less time
than could have been expected, the harbour nearest the castle was reached. A
splendid carriage had been left in readiness close to the beach, but no horses
were to be found, for every one had been carried off to take part in a great
review which the king was to hold that day in honour of his son's marriage.
'I can't stay here all day,' said the princess, crossly, when
Grethari told her of the plight they were in. 'I am perfectly worn out as it
is, and you will have to find something to draw the carriage, if it is only a
donkey. If you don't, I will sail back straight to my father.'
Poor Grethari was much troubled by the words of the princess.
Not that he felt so very much in love with her, for during the voyage she had
shown him several times how vain and bad tempered she was; but as a prince and
a bridegroom, he could not, of course, bear to think that any slight had been
put upon her. So he hastily bade his attendants to go in search of some animal,
and bring it at once to the place at which they were waiting.
During the long pause the princess sat in the beautiful
golden coach, her blue velvet mantle powdered with silver bees drawn closely
round her, so that not even the tip of her nose could be seen. At length a girl
appeared driving a young ox in front of her, followed by one of the prince's
messengers, who was talking eagerly.
'Will you lend me your ox, fair maiden?' asked Grethari,
jumping up and going to meet them. 'You shall fix your own price, and it shall
be paid ungrudgingly, for never before was king's son in such a plight.'
'My price is seats for me and my two friends behind you and
your bride at the wedding feast,' answered she. And to this Grethari joyfully
consented.
Six horses would not have drawn the coach at the speed of
this one ox. Trees and fields flew by so fast that the bride became quite
giddy, and expected, besides, that they would be upset every moment. But, in
spite of her fears, nothing happened, and they drew up in safety at the door of
the palace, to the great surprise of the king and queen. The marriage
preparations were hurried on, and by the end of the week everything was ready.
It was, perhaps, fortunate that the princess was too busy with her clothes and
her jewels during this period to pay much heed to Grethari, so that by the time
the wedding day came round he had almost forgotten how cross and rude she had
been on the journey.
The oldest men and women in the town agreed that nothing so
splendid had ever been seen as the bridal procession to the great hall, where
the banquet was to be held, before the ceremony was celebrated in the palace.
The princess was in high good humour, feeling that all eyes were upon her, and
bowed and smiled right and left. Taking the prince's hand, she sailed proudly
down the room, where the guests were already assembled, to her place at the
head of the table by the side of the bridegroom. As she did so, three strange
ladies in shining dresses of blue, green, and red, glided in and seated
themselves on a vacant bench immediately behind the young couple. The red lady
was Geirlaug, who had brought with her the forester's daughters, and in one
hand she held a wand of birch bark, and in the other a closed basket.
Silently they sat as the feast proceeded; hardly anyone
noticed their presence, or, if they did, supposed them to be attendants of
their future queen. Suddenly, when the merriment was at its height, Geirlaug
opened the basket, and out flew a cock and hen. To the astonishment of
everyone, the birds circled about in front of the royal pair, the cock plucking
the feathers out of the tail of the hen, who tried in vain to escape from him.
'Will you treat me as badly as Grethari treated Geirlaug?'
cried the hen at last. And Grethari heard, and started up wildly. In an instant
all the past rushed back to him; the princess by his side was forgotten, and he
only saw the face of the child with whom he had played long years ago.
'Where is Geirlaug?' he exclaimed, looking round the hall;
and his eyes fell upon the strange lady. With a smile she held out a ring which
he had given her on her twelfth birthday, when they were still children, without
a thought of the future. 'You and none other shall be my wife,' he said, taking
her hand, and leading her into the middle of the company.
It is not easy to describe the scene that followed. Of
course, nobody understood what had occurred, and the king and queen imagined
that their son had suddenly gone mad. As for the princess her rage and fury
were beyond belief. The guests left the hall as quickly as they could, so that
the royal family might arrange their own affairs, and in the end it was settled
that half the kingdom must be given to the despised princess, instead of a
husband. She sailed back at once to her country, where she was soon betrothed
to a young noble, whom, in reality, she liked much better than Grethari. That
evening Grethari was married to Geirlaug, and they lived happily till they
died, and made all their people happy also.
(From Neuislandischen Volksmarchen.)
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