The Gold-Bearded Man
Once upon a time there lived a great king who had a wife and
one son whom he loved very much. The boy was still young when, one day, the
king said to his wife: 'I feel that the hour of my death draws near, and I want
you to promise that you will never take another husband but will give up your
life to the care of our son.'
The queen burst into tears at these words, and sobbed out
that she would never, never marry again, and that her son's welfare should be
her first thought as long as she lived. Her promise comforted the troubled
heart of the king, and a few days after he died, at peace with himself and with
the world.
But no sooner was the breath out of his body, than the queen
said to herself, 'To promise is one thing, and to keep is quite another.' And hardly was the last spadeful of earth
flung over the coffin than she married a noble from a neighbouring country, and
got him made king instead of the young prince. Her new husband was a cruel,
wicked man, who treated his stepson very badly, and gave him scarcely anything
to eat, and only rags to wear; and he would certainly have killed the boy but
for fear of the people.
Now by the palace grounds there ran a brook, but instead of
being a water-brook it was a milk-brook, and both rich and poor flocked to it
daily and drew as much milk as they chose. The first thing the new king did
when he was seated on the throne, was to forbid anyone to go near the brook, on
pain of being seized by the watchmen. And this was purely spite, for there was
plenty of milk for everybody.
For some days no one dared venture near the banks of the
stream, but at length some of the watchmen noticed that early in the mornings,
just at dawn, a man with a gold beard came down to the brook with a pail, which
he filled up to the brim with milk, and then vanished like smoke before they
could get near enough to see who he was. So they went and told the king what
they had seen.
At first the king would not believe their story, but as they persisted
it was quite true, he said that he would go and watch the stream that night
himself. With the earliest streaks of dawn the gold-bearded man appeared, and
filled his pail as before. Then in an instant he had vanished, as if the earth
had swallowed him up.
The king stood staring with eyes and mouth open at the place
where the man had disappeared. He had never seen him before, that was certain;
but what mattered much more was how to catch him, and what should be done with
him when he was caught? He would have a cage built as a prison for him, and
everyone would talk of it, for in other countries thieves were put in prison,
and it was long indeed since any king had used a cage. It was all very well to
plan, and even to station a watchman behind every bush, but it was of no use,
for the man was never caught. They would creep up to him softly on the grass,
as he was stooping to fill his pail, and just as they stretched out their hands
to seize him, he vanished before their eyes. Time after time this happened,
till the king grew mad with rage, and offered a large reward to anyone who
could tell him how to capture his enemy.
The first person that came with a scheme was an old soldier
who promised the king that if he would only put some bread and bacon and a
flask of wine on the bank of the stream, the gold-bearded man would be sure to
eat and drink, and they could shake some powder into the wine, which would send
him to sleep at once. After that there was nothing to do but to shut him in the
cage.
This idea pleased the king, and he ordered bread and bacon
and a flask of drugged wine to be placed on the bank of the stream, and the
watchers to be redoubled. Then, full of hope, he awaited the result.
Everything turned out just as the soldier had said. Early
next morning the gold-bearded man came down to the brook, ate, drank, and fell
sound asleep, so that the watchers easily bound him, and carried him off to the
palace. In a moment the king had him fast in the golden cage, and showed him,
with ferocious joy, to the strangers who were visiting his court. The poor
captive, when he awoke from his drunken sleep, tried to talk to them, but no
one would listen to him, so he shut himself up altogether, and the people who
came to stare took him for a dumb man of the woods. He wept and moaned to himself all day, and
would hardly touch food, though, in dread that he should die and escape his
tormentors, the king ordered his head cook to send him dishes from the royal table.
The gold-bearded man had been in captivity about a month,
when the king was forced to make war upon a neighbouring country, and left the
palace, to take command of his army. But before he went he called his stepson
to him and said:
'Listen, boy, to what I tell you. While I am away I trust the
care of my prisoner to you. See that he has plenty to eat and drink, but he
careful that he does not escape, or even walk about the room. If I return and
find him gone, you will pay for it by a terrible death.'
The young prince was thankful that his stepfather was going
to the war, and secretly hoped he might never come back. Directly he had ridden
off the boy went to the room where the cage was kept, and never left it night
and day. He even played his games beside it.
One day he was shooting at a mark with a silver bow; one of
his arrows fell into the golden cage.
'Please give me my arrow,' said the prince, running up to
him; but the gold-bearded man answered:
'No, I shall not give it to you unless you let me out of my
cage.'
'I may not let you out,' replied the boy, 'for if I do my
stepfather says that I shall have to die a horrible death when he returns from
the war. My arrow can be of no use to you, so give it to me.'
The man handed the arrow through the bars, but when he had
done so he begged harder than ever that the prince would open the door and set
him free. Indeed, he prayed so earnestly that the prince's heart was touched,
for he was a tender-hearted boy who pitied the sorrows of other people. So he
shot back the bolt, and the gold-bearded man stepped out into the world. 'I will repay you a thousand fold for that
good deed.' said the man, and then he vanished. The prince began to think what
he should say to the king when he came back; then he wondered whether it would
be wise to wait for his stepfather's return and run the risk of the dreadful
death which had been promised him. 'No,' he said to himself, 'I am afraid to
stay. Perhaps the world will be kinder to me than he has been.'
Unseen he stole out when twilight fell, and for many days he
wandered over mountains and through forests and valleys without knowing where
he was going or what he should do. He had only the berries for food, when, one
morning, he saw a wood-pigeon sitting on a bough. In an instant he had fitted
an arrow to his bow, and was taking aim at the bird, thinking what a good meal
he would make off him, when his weapon fell to the ground at the sound of the
pigeon's voice:
'Do not shoot, I implore you, noble prince! I have two little sons at home, and they will
die of hunger if I am not there to bring them food.'
And the young prince had pity, and unstrung his bow.
'Oh, prince, I will repay your deed of mercy, said the
grateful wood-pigeon.
'Poor thing! how can you repay me?' asked the prince.
'You have forgotten,' answered the wood-pigeon, 'the proverb
that runs, "mountain and mountain can never meet, but one living creature
can always come across another."'
The boy laughed at this speech and went his way.
By-and-by he reached the edge of a lake, and flying towards
some rushes which grew near the shore he beheld a wild duck. Now, in the days
that the king, his father, was alive, and he had everything to eat he could
possibly wish for, the prince always had wild duck for his birthday dinner, so
he quickly fitted an arrow to his bow and took a careful aim.
'Do not shoot, I pray you, noble prince!' cried the wild
duck; 'I have two little sons at home; they will die of hunger if I am not
there to bring them food.'
And the prince had pity, and let fall his arrow and unstrung
his bow.
'Oh, prince! I will repay your deed of mercy,' exclaimed the
grateful wild duck.
'You poor thing! how can you repay me?' asked the prince.
'You have forgotten,' answered the wild duck, 'the proverb
that runs, "mountain and mountain can never meet, but one living creature
can always come across another."' The boy laughed at this speech and went
his way.
He had not wandered far from the shores of the lake, when he
noticed a stork standing on one leg, and again he raised his bow and prepared
to take aim.
'Do not shoot, I pray you, noble prince,' cried the stork; 'I
have two little sons at home; they will die of hunger if I am not there to
bring them food.'
Again the prince was filled with pity, and this time also he
did not shoot.
'Oh, prince, I will repay your deed of mercy,' cried the
stork.
'You poor stork! how can you repay me?' asked the prince.
'You have forgotten,' answered the stork, 'the proverb that
runs, "mountain and mountain can never meet, but one living creature can
always come across another."'
The boy laughed at hearing these words again, and walked
slowly on. He had not gone far, when he fell in with two discharged soldiers.
'Where are you going, little brother?' asked one.
'I am seeking work,' answered the prince.
'So are we,' replied the soldier. 'We can all go together.'
The boy was glad of company and they went on, and on, and on,
through seven kingdoms, without finding anything they were able to do. At
length they reached a palace, and there was the king standing on the steps.
'You seem to be looking for something,' said he.
'It is work we want,' they all answered.
So the king told the soldiers that they might become his
coachmen; but he made the boy his companion, and gave him rooms near his own.
The soldiers were dreadfully angry when they heard this, for of course they did
not know that the boy was really a prince; and they soon began to lay their
heads together to plot his ruin.
Then they went to the king.
'Your Majesty,' they said, 'we think it our duty to tell you
that your new companion has boasted to us that if he were only your steward he
would not lose a single grain of corn out of the storehouses. Now, if your Majesty would give orders that a
sack of wheat should be mixed with one of barley, and would send for the youth,
and command him to separate the grains one from another, in two hours' time,
you would soon see what his talk was worth.'
The king, who was weak, listened to what these wicked men had
told him, and desired the prince to have the contents of the sack piled into
two heaps by the time that he returned from his council. 'If you succeed,' he added, 'you shall be my
steward, but if you fail, I will put you to death on the spot.'
The unfortunate prince declared that he had never made any
such boast as was reported; but it was all in vain. The king did not believe
him, and turning him into an empty room, bade his servants carry in the huge
sack filled with wheat and barley, and scatter them in a heap on the floor.
The prince hardly knew where to begin, and indeed if he had
had a thousand people to help him, and a week to do it in, he could never have
finished his task. So he flung himself on the ground in despair, and covered
his face with his hands.
While he lay thus, a wood-pigeon flew in through the window.
'Why are you weeping, noble prince?' asked the wood-pigeon.
'How can I help weeping at the task set me by the king. For
he says, if I fail to do it, I shall die a horrible death.'
'Oh, there is really nothing to cry about,' answered the
wood-pigeon soothingly. 'I am the king of the wood-pigeons, whose life you spared
when you were hungry. And now I will repay my debt, as I promised.' So saying he flew out of the window, leaving
the prince with some hope in his heart.
In a few minutes he returned, followed by a cloud of
wood-pigeons, so dense that it seemed to fill the room. Their king showed them
what they had to do, and they set to work so hard that the grain was sorted
into two heaps long before the council was over. When the king came back he
could not believe his eyes; but search as he might through the two heaps, he
could not find any barley among the wheat, or any wheat amongst the barley. So
he praised the prince for his industry and cleverness, and made him his steward
at once.
This made the two soldiers more envious still, and they began
to hatch another plot.
'Your Majesty,' they said to the king, one day, as he was
standing on the steps of the palace, 'that fellow has been boasting again, that
if he had the care of your treasures not so much as a gold pin should ever be
lost. Put this vain fellow to the proof, we pray you, and throw the ring from
the princess's finger into the brook, and bid him find it. We shall soon see
what his talk is worth.'
And the foolish king listened to them, and ordered the prince
to be brought before him.
'My son,' he said, 'I have heard that you have declared that
if I made you keeper of my treasures you would never lose so much as a gold
pin. Now, in order to prove the truth of your words, I am going to throw the
ring from the princess's finger into the brook, and if you do not find it
before I come back from council, you will have to die a horrible death.'
It was no use denying that he had said anything of the kind.
The king did not believe him; in fact he paid no attention at all, and hurried
off, leaving the poor boy speechless with despair in the corner. However, he
soon remembered that though it was very unlikely that he should find the ring
in the brook, it was impossible that he should find it by staying in the
palace.
For some time the prince wandered up and down peering into
the bottom of the stream, but though the water was very clear, nothing could he
see of the ring. At length he gave it up in despair, and throwing himself down
at the foot of the tree, he wept bitterly.
'What is the matter, dear prince?' said a voice just above
him, and raising his head, he saw the wild duck.
'The king of this country declares I must die a horrible
death if I cannot find the princess's ring which he has thrown into the brook,'
answered the prince.
'Oh, you must not vex yourself about that, for I can help
you,' replied the bird. 'I am the king of the wild ducks, whose life you
spared, and now it is my turn to save yours.'
Then he flew away, and in a few minutes a great flock of wild ducks were
swimming all up and down the stream looking with all their might, and long
before the king came back from his council there it was, safe on the grass
beside the prince.
At this sight the king was yet more astonished at the
cleverness of his steward, and at once promoted him to be the keeper of his
jewels.
Now you would have thought that by this time the king would
have been satisfied with the prince, and would have left him alone; but
people's natures are very hard to change, and when the two envious soldiers
came to him with a new falsehood, he was as ready to listen to them as before.
'Gracious Majesty,' said they, 'the youth whom you have made
keeper of your jewels has declared to us that a child shall be born in the
palace this night, which will be able to speak every language in the world and
to play every instrument of music. Is he then become a prophet, or a magician,
that he should know things which have not yet come to pass?'
At these words the king became more angry than ever. He had
tried to learn magic himself, but somehow or other his spells would never work,
and he was furious to hear that the prince claimed a power that he did not
possess. Stammering with rage, he ordered the youth to be brought before him,
and vowed that unless this miracle was accomplished he would have the prince
dragged at a horse's tail until he was dead.
In spite of what the soldiers had said, the boy knew no more
magic than the king did, and his task seemed more hopeless than before. He lay weeping in the chamber which he was
forbidden to leave, when suddenly he heard a sharp tapping at the window, and,
looking up, he beheld a stork.
'What makes you so sad, prince?' asked he.
'Someone has told the king that I have prophesied that a child
shall be born this night in the palace, who can speak all the languages in the
world and play every musical instrument. I am no magician to bring these things
to pass, but he says that if it does not happen he will have me dragged through
the city at a horse's tail till I die.'
'Do not trouble yourself,' answered the stork. 'I will manage
to find such a child, for I am the king of the storks whose life you spared,
and now I can repay you for it.'
The stork flew away and soon returned carrying in his beak a
baby wrapped in swaddling clothes, and laid it down near a lute. In an instant
the baby stretched out its little hands and began to play a tune so beautiful
that even the prince forgot his sorrows as he listened. Then he was given a
flute and a zither, but he was just as well able to draw music from them; and
the prince, whose courage was gradually rising, spoke to him in all the
languages he knew. The baby answered him
in all, and no one could have told which was his native tongue!
The next morning the king went straight to the prince's room,
and saw with his own eyes the wonders that baby could do. 'If your magic can
produce such a baby,' he said, 'you must be greater than any wizard that ever
lived, and shall have my daughter in marriage.'
And, being a king, and therefore accustomed to have everything the
moment he wanted it, he commanded the ceremony to be performed without delay,
and a splendid feast to be made for the bride and bridegroom. When it was over,
he said to the prince:
'Now that you are really my son, tell me by what arts you
were able to fulfil the tasks I set you?'
'My noble father-in-law,' answered the prince, 'I am ignorant
of all spells and arts. But somehow I have always managed to escape the death
which has threatened me.' And he told
the king how he had been forced to run away from his stepfather, and how he had
spared the three birds, and had joined the two soldiers, who had from envy done
their utmost to ruin him.
The king was rejoiced in his heart that his daughter had
married a prince, and not a common man, and he chased the two soldiers away
with whips, and told them that if they ever dared to show their faces across
the borders of his kingdom, they should die the same death he had prepared for
the prince.
[From Ungarische Mahrchen]
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