The Escape of the Mouse
Manawyddan the prince and his friend Pryderi were wanderers,
for the brother of Manawyddan had been slain, and his throne taken from him. Very
sorrowful was Manawyddan, but Pryderi was stout of heart, and bade him be of
good cheer, as he knew a way out of his trouble.
'And what may that be?' asked Manawyddan.
'It is that thou marry my mother Rhiannon and become lord of
the fair lands that I will give her for dowry. Never did any lady have more wit
than she, and in her youth none was more lovely; even yet she is good to look
upon.'
'Thou art the best friend that ever a man had,' said
Manawyddan. 'Let us go now to seek Rhiannon, and the lands where she dwells.'
Then they set forth, but the news of their coming ran swifter
still, and Rhiannon and Kieva, wife of Pryderi, made haste to prepare a feast
for them. And Manawyddan found that Pryderi had spoken the truth concerning his
mother, and asked if she would take him for her husband. Right gladly did she
consent, and without delay they were married, and rode away to the hunt,
Rhiannon and Manawyddan, Kieva and Pryderi, and they would not be parted from
each other by night or by day, so great was the love between them.
One day, when they were returned, they were sitting out in a
green place, and suddenly the crash of thunder struck loudly on their ears, and
a wall of mist fell between them, so that they were hidden one from the other.
Trembling they sat till the darkness fled and the light shone again upon them,
but in the place where they were wont to see cattle, and herds, and dwellings,
they beheld neither house nor beast, nor man nor smoke; neither was any one remaining
in the green place save these four only.
'Whither have they gone, and my host also?' cried Manawyddan,
and they searched the hall, and there was no man, and the castle, and there was
none, and in the dwellings that were left was nothing save wild beasts. For a
year these four fed on the meat that Manawyddan and Pryderi killed out hunting,
and the honey of the bees that sucked the mountain heather. For a time they
desired nothing more, but when the next year began they grew weary.
'We cannot spend our lives thus,' said Manawyddan at last,
'let us go into England and learn some trade by which we may live.' So they
left Wales, and went to Hereford, and there they made saddles, while Manawyddan
fashioned blue enamel ornaments to put on their trappings. And so greatly did
the townsfolk love these saddles, that no others were bought throughout the
whole of Hereford, till the saddlers banded together and resolved to slay
Manawyddan and his companions.
When Pryderi heard of it, he was very wroth, and wished to
stay and fight. But the counsels of Manawyddan prevailed, and they moved by
night to another city.
'What craft shall we follow?' asked Pryderi.
'We will make shields,' answered Manawyddan.
'But do we know anything of that craft?' answered Pryderi.
'We will try it,' said Manawyddan, and they began to make
shields, and fashioned them after the shape of the shields they had seen; and
these likewise they enamelled. And so greatly did they prosper that no man in
the town bought a shield except they had made it, till at length the
shield-makers banded together as the saddlers had done, and resolved to slay
them. But of this they had warning, and by night betook themselves to another
town.
'Let us take to making shoes,' said Manawyddan, 'for there
are not any among the shoemakers bold enough to fight us.'
'I know nothing of making shoes,' answered Pryderi, who in
truth despised so peaceful a craft.
'But I know,' replied Manawyddan, 'and I will teach thee to
stitch. We will buy the leather ready dressed, and will make the shoes from it.
Then straightway he sought the town for the best leather, and
for a goldsmith to fashion the clasps, and he himself watched till it was done,
so that he might learn for himself. Soon he became known as 'The Maker of Gold
Shoes,' and prospered so greatly, that as long as one could be bought from him
not a shoe was purchased from the shoemakers of the town. And the craftsmen
were wroth, and banded together to slay them.
'Pryderi,' said Manawyddan, when he had received news of it,
'we will not remain in England any longer. Let us set forth to Dyved.'
So they journeyed until they came to their lands at Narberth.
There they gathered their dogs round them, and hunted for a year as before.
After that a strange thing happened. One morning Pryderi and
Manawyddan rose up to hunt, and loosened their dogs, which ran before them,
till they came to a small bush. At the bush, the dogs shrank away as if
frightened, and returned to their masters, their hair brisling on their backs.
'We must see what is in that bush,' said Pryderi, and what
was in it was a boar, with a skin as white as the snow on the mountains. And he
came out, and made a stand as the dogs rushed on him, driven on by the men.
Long he stood at bay; then at last he betook himself to flight, and fled to a
castle which was newly built, in a place where no building had ever been known.
Into the castle he ran, and the dogs after him, and long though their masters looked
and listened, they neither saw nor heard aught concerning dogs or boar.
'I will go into the castle and get tidings of the dogs,' said
Pryderi at last.
'Truly,' answered Manawyddan, 'thou wouldst do unwisely, for
whosoever has cast a spell over this land has set this castle here.'
'I cannot give up my dogs,' replied Pryderi, and to the
castle he went.
But within was neither man nor beast; neither boar nor dogs,
but only a fountain with marble round it, and on the edge a golden bowl, richly
wrought, which pleased Pryderi greatly. In a moment he forgot about his dogs,
and went up to the bowl and took hold of it, and his hands stuck to the bowl,
and his feet to the marble slab, and despair took possession of him.
Till the close of day Manawyddan waited for him, and when the
sun was fast sinking, he went home, thinking that he had strayed far.
'Where are thy friend and thy dogs?' said Rhiannon, and he
told her what had befallen Pryderi.
'A good friend hast thou lost,' answered Rhiannon, and she
went up to the castle and through the gate, which was open. There, in the
centre of the courtyard, she beheld Pryderi standing, and hastened towards him.
'What dost thou here?' she asked, laying her hand on the
bowl, and as she spoke she too stuck fast, and was not able to utter a word.
Then thunder was heard and a veil of darkness descended upon them, and the
castle vanished and they with it.
When Kieva, the wife of Pryderi, found that neither her
husband nor his mother returned to her, she was in such sorrow that she cared
not whether she lived or died. Manawyddan was grieved also in his heart, and
said to her:
'It is not fitting that we should stay here, for he have lost
our dogs and cannot get food. Let us go into England--it is easier for us to
live there.' So they set forth.
'What craft wilt thou follow?' asked Kieva as they went
along.
'I shall make shoes as once I did,' replied he; and he got
all the finest leather in the town and caused gilded clasps to be made for the
shoes, till everyone flocked to buy, and all the shoemakers in the town were
idle and banded together in anger to kill him. But luckily Manawyddan got word
of it, and he and Kieva left the town one night and proceeded to Narberth,
taking with him a sheaf of wheat, which he sowed in three plots of ground. And
while the wheat was growing up, he hunted and fished, and they had food enough
and to spare. Thus the months passed until the harvest; and one evening
Manawyddan visited the furthest of his fields of wheat; and saw that it was
ripe.
'To-morrow I will reap this,' said he; but on the morrow when
he went to reap the wheat he found nothing but the bare straw.
Filled with dismay he hastened to the second field, and there
the corn was ripe and golden.
'To-morrow I will reap this,' he said, but on the morrow the
ears had gone, and there was nothing but the bare straw.
'Well, there is still one field left,' he said, and when he
looked at it, it was still fairer than the other two. 'To-night I will watch
here,' thought he, 'for whosoever carried off the other corn will in like
manner take this, and I will know who it is.' So he hid himself and waited.
The hours slid by, and all was still, so still that
Manawyddan well-nigh dropped asleep. But at midnight there arose the loudest
tumult in the world, and peeping out he beheld a mighty host of mice, which
could neither be numbered nor measured. Each mouse climbed up a straw till it
bent down with its weight, and then it bit off one of the ears, and carried it
away, and there was not one of the straws that had not got a mouse to it.
Full of wrath he rushed at the mice, but he could no more
come up with them than if they had been gnats, or birds of the air, save one
only which lingered behind the rest, and this mouse Manawyddan came up with.
Stooping down he seized it by the tail, and put it in his glove, and tied a
piece of string across the opening of the glove, so that the mouse could not
escape. When he entered the hall where Kieva was sitting, he lighted a fire,
and hung the glove up on a peg.
'What hast thou there?' asked she.
'A thief,' he answered, 'that I caught robbing me.'
'What kind of a thief may it be which thou couldst put in thy
glove?' said Kieva.
'That I will tell thee,' he replied, and then he showed her
how his fields of corn had been wasted, and how he had watched for the
mice. 'And one was less nimble than the
rest, and is now in my glove. To-morrow I will hang it, and I only wish I had
them all.'
'It is a marvel, truly,' said she, 'yet it would be unseemly
for a man of thy dignity to hang a reptile such as this. Do not meddle with it,
but let it go.'
'Woe betide me,' he cried, 'if I would not hang them all if I
could catch them, and such as I have I will hang.'
'Verily,' said she, 'there is no reason I should succour this
reptile, except to prevent discredit unto thee.'
'If I knew any cause that I should succour it, I would take
thy counsel,' answered Manawyddan, 'but as I know of none, I am minded to
destroy it.'
'Do so then,' said Kieva.
So he went up a hill and set up two forks on the top, and
while he was doing this he saw a scholar coming towards him, whose clothes were
tattered. Now it was seven years since Manawyddan had seen man or beast in that
place, and the sight amazed him.
'Good day to thee, my lord,' said the scholar.
'Good greeting to thee, scholar. Whence dost thou come?'
'From singing in England; but wherefore dost thou ask?'
'Because for seven years no man hath visited this place.'
'I wander where I will,' answered the scholar. 'And what work
art thou upon?'
'I am about to hang a thief that I caught robbing me!'
'What manner of thief is that?' inquired the scholar. 'I see
a creature in thy hand like upon a mouse, and ill does it become a man of thy
rank to touch a reptile like this. Let it go free.'
'I will not let it go free,' cried Manawyddan. 'I caught it
robbing me, and it shall suffer the doom of a thief.'
'Lord!' said the scholar, 'sooner than see a man like thee at
such a work, I would give thee a pound which I have received as alms to let it
go free.'
'I will not let it go free, neither will I sell it.'
'As thou wilt, lord,' answered the scholar, and he went his
way.
Manawyddan was placing the cross-beam on the two forked
sticks, where the mouse was to hang, when a priest rode past.
'Good-day to thee, lord; and what art thou doing?'
'I am hanging a thief that I caught robbing me.'
'What manner of thief, lord?'
'A creature in the form of a mouse. It has been robbing me,
and it shall suffer the doom of a thief.'
'Lord,' said the priest, 'sooner than see thee touch this
reptile, I would purchase its freedom.'
'I will neither sell it nor set it free.'
'It is true that a mouse is worth nothing, but rather than
see thee defile thyself with touching such a reptile as this, I will give thee
three pounds for it.'
'I will not take any price for it. It shall be hanged as it
deserves.'
'Willingly, my lord, if it is thy pleasure.' And the priest
went his way.
Then Manawyddan noosed the string about the mouse's neck, and
was about to draw it tight when a bishop, with a great following and horses
bearing huge packs, came by.
'What work art thou upon?' asked the bishop, drawing rein.
'Hanging a thief that I caught robbing me.'
'But is not that a mouse that I see in thine hand?' asked the
bishop.
'Yes; that is the thief,' answered Manawyddan.
'Well, since I have come at the doom of this reptile, I will
ransom it of thee for seven pounds, rather than see a man of thy rank touch it.
Loose it, and let it go.'
'I will not let it loose.'
'I will give thee four and twenty pounds to set it free,'
said the bishop.
'I will not set it free for as much again.'
'If thou wilt not set it free for this, I will give thee all
the horses thou seest and the seven loads of baggage.'
'I will not set it free.'
'Then tell me at what price thou wilt loose it, and I will
give it.'
'The spell must be taken off Rhiannon and Pryderi,' said
Manawyddan.
'That shall be done.'
'But not yet will I loose the mouse. The charm that has been
cast over all my lands must be taken off likewise.'
'This shall be done also.'
'But not yet will I loose the mouse till I know who she is.'
'She is my wife,' answered the bishop.
'And wherefore came she to me?' asked Manawyddan.
'To despoil thee,' replied the bishop, 'for it is I who cast
the charm over thy lands, to avenge Gwawl the son of Clud my friend. And it was
I who threw the spell upon Pryderi to avenge Gwawl for the trick that had been
played on him in the game of Badger in the Bag. And not only was I wroth, but
my people likewise, and when it was known that thou wast come to dwell in the
land, they besought me much to change them into mice, that they might eat thy
corn. The first and the second nights it was the men of my own house that
destroyed thy two fields, but on the third night my wife and her ladies came to
me and begged me to change them also into the shape of mice, that they might
take part in avenging Gwawl. Therefore I changed them. Yet had she not been ill
and slow of foot, thou couldst not have overtaken her. Still, since she was
caught, I will restore thee Pryderi and Rhiannon, and will take the charm from
off thy lands. I have told thee who she is; so now set her free.'
'I will not set her free,' answered Manawyddan, 'till thou
swear that no vengeance shall be taken for his, either upon Pryderi, or upon
Rhiannon, or on me.'
'I will grant thee this boon; and thou hast done wisely to
ask it, for on thy head would have lit all the trouble. Set now my wife free.'
'I will not set her free till Pryderi and Rhiannon are with
me.'
'Behold, here they come,' said the bishop.
Then Manawyddan held out his hands and greeted Pryderi and
Rhiannon, and they seated themselves joyfully on the grass.
'Ah, lord, hast thou not received all thou didst ask?' said
the bishop. 'Set now my wife free!'
'That I will gladly,' answered Manawyddan, unloosing the cord
from her neck, and as he did so the bishop struck her with his staff, and she
turned into a young woman, the fairest that ever was seen.
'Look around upon thy land,' said he, 'and thou wilt see it
all tilled and peopled, as it was long ago.' And Manawyddan looked, and saw
corn growing in the fields, and cows and sheep grazing on the hill-side, and
huts for the people to dwell in. And he was satisfied in his soul, but one more
question he put to the bishop.
'What spell didst thou lay upon Pryderi and Rhiannon?'
'Pryderi has had the knockers of the gate of my palace hung
about him, and Rhiannon has carried the collars of my asses around her neck,'
said the bishop with a smile.
From the 'Mabinogion.'
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