The Rogue And The Herdsman
In a tiny cottage near the king's palace there once lived an
old man, his wife, and his son, a very lazy fellow, who would never do a stroke
of work. He could not be got even to look after their one cow, but left her to
look after herself, while he lay on a bank and went to sleep in the sun. For a
long time his father bore with him, hoping that as he grew older he might gain
more sense; but at last the old man's patience was worn out, and he told his
son that he should not stay at house in idleness, and must go out into the
world to seek his fortune.
The young man saw that there was no help for it, and he set
out with a wallet full of food over his shoulder. At length he came to a large
house, at the door of which he knocked.
'What do you want?' asked the old man who opened it. And the
youth told him how his father had turned him out of his house because he was so
lazy and stupid, and he needed shelter for the night.
'That you shall have,' replied the man; 'but to-morrow I
shall give you some work to do, for you must know that I am the chief herdsman
of the king.'
The youth made no answer to this. He felt, if he was to be
made to work after all, that he might as well have stayed where he was. But as
he did not see any other way of getting a bed, he went slowly in.
The herdsman's two daughters and their mother were sitting at
supper, and invited him to join them. Nothing more was said about work, and
when the meal was over they all went to bed.
In the morning, when the young man was dressed, the herdsman
called to him and said:
'Now listen, and I will tell you what you have to do.'
'What is it?' asked the youth, sulkily.
'Nothing less than to look after two hundred pigs,' was the
reply.
'Oh, I am used to that,' answered the youth.
'Yes; but this time you will have to do it properly,' said
the herdsman; and he took the youth to the place where the pigs were feeding,
and told him to drive them to the woods on the side of the mountain. This the
young man did, but as soon as they reached the outskirts of the mountain they
grew quite wild, and would have run away altogether, had they not luckily gone
towards a narrow ravine, from which the youth easily drove them home to his
father's cottage.
'Where do all these pigs come from, and how did you get
them?' asked the old man in surprise, when his son knocked at the door of the
hut he had left only the day before.
'They belong to the king's chief herdsman,' answered his son.
'He gave them to me to look after, but I knew I could not do it, so I drove
them straight to you. Now make the best of your good fortune, and kill them and
hang them up at once.'
'What are you talking about?' cried the father, pale with
horror. 'We should certainly both be put
to death if I did any such thing.'
'No, no; do as I tell you, and I will get out of it somehow,'
replied the young man. And in the end he had his way. The pigs were killed, and
laid side by side in a row. Then he cut off the tails and tied them together
with a piece of cord, and swinging the bundle over his back, he returned to the
place where they should have been feeding. Here there was a small swamp, which
was just what he wanted, and finding a large stone, he fastened the rope to it,
and sank it in the swamp, after which he arranged the tails carefully one by
one, so that only their points were seen sticking out of the water. When everything was in order, he hastened
home to his master with such a sorrowful face that the herdsman saw at once
that something dreadful had happened.
'Where are the pigs?' asked he.
'Oh, don't speak of them!' answered the young man; 'I really
can hardly tell you. The moment they got into the field they became quite mad,
and each ran in a different direction. I ran too, hither and thither, but as
fast as I caught one, another was off, till I was in despair. At last, however,
I collected them all and was about to drive them back, when suddenly they
rushed down the hill into the swamp, where they vanished completely, leaving
only the points of their tails, which you can see for yourself.'
'You have made up that story very well,' replied the
herdsman.
'No, it is the real truth; come with me and I'll prove it.'
And they went together to the spot, and there sure enough were the points of
the tails sticking up out of the water. The herdsman laid hold of the nearest,
and pulled at it with all his might, but it was no use, for the stone and the
rope held them all fast. He called to the young man to help him, but the two
did not succeed any better than the one had done.
'Yes, your story was true after all; it is a wonderful
thing,' said the herdsman. 'But I see it is no fault of yours. and I must put
up with my loss as well as I can. Now let us return home, for it is time for
supper.
Next morning the herdsman said to the young man: 'I have got
some other work for you to do. To-day you must take a hundred sheep to graze;
but be careful that no harm befalls them.'
'I will do my best,' replied the youth. And he opened the
gate of the fold, where the sheep had been all night, and drove them out into
the meadow. But in a short time they grew as wild as the pigs had done, and
scattered in all directions. The young man could not collect them, try as he
would, and he thought to himself that this was the punishment for his laziness
in refusing to look after his father's one cow.
At last, however, the sheep seemed tired of running about,
and then the youth managed to gather them together, and drove them, as before,
straight to his father's house.
'Whose sheep are these, and what are they doing here?' asked
the old man in wonder, and his son told him. But when the tale was ended the
father shook his head.
'Give up these bad ways and take them back to your master,'
said he.
'No, no,' answered the youth; 'I am not so stupid as
that! We will kill them and have them
for dinner.'
'You will lose your life if you do,' replied the father.
'Oh, I am not sure of that!' said the son, 'and, anyway, I
will have my will for once.' And he
killed all the sheep and laid them on the grass. But he cut off the head of the
ram which always led the flock and had bells round its horns. This he took back
to the place where they should have been feeding, for here he had noticed a
high rock, with a patch of green grass in the middle and two or three thick
bushes growing on the edge. Up this rock he climbed with great difficulty, and
fastened the ram's head to the bushes with a cord, leaving only the tips of the
horns with the bells visible. As there was a soft breeze blowing, the bushes to
which the head was tied moved gently, and the bells rang. When all was done to
his liking he hastened quickly back to his master.
'Where are the sheep?' asked the herdsman as the young man
ran panting up the steps.
'Oh! don't speak of them,' answered he. 'It is only by a
miracle that I am here myself.'
'Tell me at once what has happened,' said the herdsman
sternly.
The youth began to sob, and stammered out: 'I--I hardly know
how to tell you! They--they--they were so--so troublesome--that I could not
manage them at all. They--ran about in--in all directions, and I- -I--ran after
them and nearly died of fatigue. Then I heard a--a noise, which I--I thought
was the wind. But--but--it was the sheep, which, be--before my very eyes, were
carried straight up--up into the air. I stood watching them as if I was turned
to stone, but there kept ringing in my ears the sound of the bells on the ram
which led them.'
'That is nothing but a lie from beginning to end,' said the
herdsman.
'No, it is as true as that there is a sun in heaven,'
answered the young man.
'Then give me a proof of it,' cried his master.
'Well, come with me,' said the youth. By this time it was
evening and the dusk was falling. The young man brought the herdsman to the
foot of the great rock, but it was so dark you could hardly see. Still the sound of sheep bells rang softly
from above, and the herdsman knew them to be those he had hung on the horns of
his ram.
'Do you hear?' asked the youth.
'Yes, I hear; you have spoken the truth, and I cannot blame
you for what has happened. I must bear the loss as best as I can.'
He turned and went home, followed by the young man, who felt
highly pleased with his own cleverness.
'I should not be surprised if the tasks I set you were too
difficult, and that you were tired of them,' said the herdsman next morning;
'but to-day I have something quite easy for you to do. You must look after
forty oxen, and be sure you are very careful, for one of them has gold-tipped
horns and hoofs, and the king reckons it among his greatest treasures.'
The young man drove out the oxen into the meadow, and no
sooner had they got there than, like the sheep and the pigs, they began to
scamper in all directions, the precious bull being the wildest of all. As the youth stood watching them, not knowing
what to do next, it came into his head that his father's cow was put out to
grass at no great distance; and he forthwith made such a noise that he quite
frightened the oxen, who were easily persuaded to take the path he wished. When
they heard the cow lowing they galloped all the faster, and soon they all
arrived at his father's house.
The old man was standing before the door of his hut when the
great herd of animals dashed round a corner of the road, with his son and his
own cow at their head.
'Whose cattle are these, and why are they here?' he asked;
and his son told him the story.
'Take them back to your master as soon as you can,' said the
old man; but the son only laughed, and said:
'No, no; they are a present to you! They will make you fat!'
For a long while the old man refused to have anything to do
with such a wicked scheme; but his son talked him over in the end, and they
killed the oxen as they had killed the sheep and the pigs. Last of all they
came to the king's cherished ox.
The son had a rope ready to cast round its horns, and throw
it to the ground, but the ox was stronger than the rope, and soon tore it in
pieces. Then it dashed away to the wood, the youth following; over hedges and
ditches they both went, till they reached the rocky pass which bordered the
herdsman's land. Here the ox, thinking itself safe, stopped to rest, and thus
gave the young man a chance to come up with it. Not knowing how to catch it, he
collected all the wood he could find and made a circle of fire round the ox,
who by this time had fallen asleep, and did not wake till the fire had caught
its head, and it was too late for it to escape. Then the young man, who had
been watching, ran home to his master.
'You have been away a long while,' said the herdsman. 'Where
are the cattle?'
The young man gasped, and seemed as if he was unable to
speak. At last he answered:
'It is always the same story! The oxen are--gone--gone!'
'G-g-gone?' cried the herdsman. 'Scoundrel, you lie!'
'I am telling you the exact truth,' answered the young
man. 'Directly we came to the meadow
they grew so wild that I could not keep them together. Then the big ox broke
away, and the others followed till they all disappeared down a deep hole into
the earth. It seemed to me that I heard
sounds of bellowing, and I thought I recognised the voice of the golden horned
ox; but when I got to the place from which the sounds had come, I could neither
see nor hear anything in the hole itself, though there were traces of a fire
all round it.'
'Wretch!' cried the herdsman, when he had heard this story,
'even if you did not lie before, you are lying now.'
'No, master, I am speaking the truth. Come and see for
yourself.' 'If I find you have deceived
me, you are a dead man, said the herdsman; and they went out together.
'What do you call that?' asked the youth. And the herdsman
looked and saw the traces of a fire, which seemed to have sprung up from under
the earth.
'Wonder upon wonder,' he exclaimed, 'so you really did speak
the truth after all! Well, I cannot
reproach you, though I shall have to pay heavily to my royal master for the
value of that ox. But come, let us go home!
I will never set you to herd cattle again, henceforward I will give you
something easier to do.'
'I have thought of exactly the thing for you,' said the
herdsman as they walked along, ' and it is so simple that you cannot make a
mistake. Just make me ten scythes, one for every man, for I want the grass mown
in one of my meadows to-morrow.'
At these words the youth's heart sank, for he had never been
trained either as a smith or a joiner. However, he dared not say no, but smiled
and nodded.
Slowly and sadly he went to bed, but he could not sleep, for
wondering how the scythes were to be made. All the skill and cunning he had
shown before was of no use to him now, and after thinking about the scythes for
many hours, there seemed only one way open to him. So, listening to make sure
that all was still, he stole away to his parents, and told them the whole
story. When they had heard everything, they hid him where no one could find
him.
Time passed away, and the young man stayed at home doing all
his parents bade him, and showing himself very different from what he had been
before he went out to see the world; but one day he said to his father that he
should like to marry, and have a house of his own.
'When I served the king's chief herdsman,' added he, 'I saw
his daughter, and I am resolved to try if I cannot win her for my wife.'
'It will cost you your life, if you do,' answered the father,
shaking his head.
'Well, I will do my best,' replied his son; 'but first give
me the sword which hangs over your bed!'
The old man did not understand what good the sword would do,
however he took it down, and the young man went his way.
Late in the evening he arrived at the house of the herdsman,
and knocked at the door, which was opened by a little boy.
'I want to speak to your master,' said he.
'So it is you?' cried the herdsman, when he had received the
message. 'Well, you can sleep here to-night if you wish.'
'I have come for something else besides a bed,' replied the
young man, drawing his sword, 'and if you do not promise to give me your
youngest daughter as my wife I will stab you through the heart.'
What could the poor man do but promise? And he fetched his
youngest daughter, who seemed quite pleased at the proposed match, and gave the
youth her hand.
Then the young man went home to his parents, and bade them
get ready to welcome his bride. And when the wedding was over he told his
father-in-law, the herdsman, what he had done with the sheep, and pigs, and
cattle. By-and-by the story came to the king's ears, and he thought that a man
who was so clever was just the man to govern the country; so he made him his
minister, and after the king himself there was no one so great as he.
[From Islandische Mahrchen.]
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