THE SNAKE PRINCE
Once upon a time there lived by herself, in a city, an old
woman who was desperately poor. One day she found that she had only a handful
of flour left in the house, and no money to buy more nor hope of earning it.
Carrying her little brass pot, very sadly she made her way down to the river to
bathe and to obtain some water, thinking afterwards to come home and to make
herself an unleavened cake of what flour she had left; and after that she did
not know what was to become of her.
Whilst she was bathing she left her little brass pot on the
river bank covered with a cloth, to keep the inside nice and clean; but when
she came up out of the river and took the cloth off to fill the pot with water,
she saw inside it the glittering folds of a deadly snake. At once she popped
the cloth again into the mouth of the pot and held it there; and then she said
to herself:
'Ah, kind death! I will take thee home to my house, and there
I will shake thee out of my pot and thou shalt bite me and I will die, and then
all my troubles will be ended.'
With these sad thoughts in her mind the poor old woman
hurried home, holding her cloth carefully in the mouth of the pot; and when she
got home she shut all the doors and windows, and took away the cloth, and
turned the pot upside down upon her hearthstone. What was her surprise to find
that, instead of the deadly snake which she expected to see fall out of it,
there fell out with a rattle and a clang a most magnificent necklace of
flashing jewels!
For a few minutes she could hardly think or speak, but stood
staring; and then with trembling hands she picked the necklace up, and folding
it in the corner of her veil, she hurried off to the king's hall of public
audience.
'A petition, O king!' she said. 'A petition for thy private
ear alone!' And when her prayer had been granted, and she found herself alone
with the king, she shook out her veil at his feet, and there fell from it in
glittering coils the splendid necklace. As soon as the king saw it he was
filled with amazement and delight, and the more he looked at it the more he
felt that he must possess it at once. So he gave the old woman five hundred
silver pieces for it, and put it straightway into his pocket. Away she went
full of happiness; for the money that the king had given her was enough to keep
her for the rest of her life.
As soon as he could leave his business the king hurried off
and showed his wife his prize, with which she was as pleased as he, if not more
so; and, as soon as they had finished admiring the wonderful necklace, they
locked it up in the great chest where the queen's jewellery was kept, the key
of which hung always round the king's neck.
A short while afterwards, a neighbouring king sent a message
to say that a most lovely girl baby had been born to him; and he invited his
neighbours to come to a great feast in honour of the occasion. The queen told
her husband that of course they must be present at the banquet, and she would
wear the new necklace which he had given her. They had only a short time to
prepare for the journey, and at the last moment the king went to the jewel
chest to take out the necklace for his wife to wear, but he could see no
necklace at all, only, in its place, a fat little boy baby crowing and
shouting. The king was so astonished that he nearly fell backwards, but
presently he found his voice, and called for his wife so loudly that she came
running, thinking that the necklace must at least have been stolen.
'Look here! look!' cried the king, 'haven't we always longed
for a son? And now heaven has sent us one!'
'What do you mean?' cried the queen. 'Are you mad?'
'Mad? no, I hope not,' shouted the king, dancing in
excitement round the open chest. 'Come here, and look! Look what we've got
instead of that necklace!'
Just then the baby let out a great crow of joy, as though he
would like to jump up and dance with the king; and the queen gave a cry of
surprise, and ran up and looked into the chest.
'Oh!' she gasped, as she looked at the baby, 'what a darling!
Where could he have come from?'
'I'm sure I can't say,' said the king; 'all I know is that we
locked up a necklace in the chest, and when I unlocked it just now there was no
necklace, but a baby, and as fine a baby as ever was seen.'
By this time the queen had the baby in her arms. 'Oh, the
blessed one!' she cried, 'fairer ornament for the bosom of a queen than any
necklace that ever was wrought. Write,' she continued, 'write to our neighbour
and say that we cannot come to his feast, for we have a feast of our own, and a
baby of our own! Oh, happy day!'
So the visit was given up; and, in honour of the new baby,
the bells of the city, and its guns, and its trumpets, and its people, small
and great, had hardly any rest for a week; there was such a ringing, and
banging, and blaring, and such fireworks, and feasting, and rejoicing, and
merry-making, as had never been seen before.
A few years went by; and, as the king's boy baby and his
neighbour's girl baby grew and throve, the two kings arranged that as soon as
they were old enough they should marry; and so, with much signing of papers and
agreements, and wagging of wise heads, and stroking of grey beards, the compact
was made, and signed, and sealed, and lay waiting for its fulfilment. And this
too came to pass; for, as soon as the prince and princess were eighteen years
of age, the kings agreed that it was time for the wedding; and the young prince
journeyed away to the neighbouring kingdom for his bride, and was there married
to her with great and renewed rejoicings.
Now, I must tell you that the old woman who had sold the king
the necklace had been called in by him to be the nurse of the young prince; and
although she loved her charge dearly, and was a most faithful servant, she
could not help talking just a little, and so, by-and-by, it began to be
rumoured that there was some magic about the young prince's birth; and the
rumour of course had come in due time to the ears of the parents of the
princess. So now that she was going to be the wife of the prince, her mother
(who was curious, as many other people are) said to her daughter on the eve of
the ceremony:
'Remember that the first thing you must do is to find out
what this story is about the prince. And in order to do it, you must not speak
a word to him whatever he says until he asks you why you are silent; then you
must ask him what the truth is about his magic birth; and until he tells you,
you must not speak to him again.'
And the princess promised that she would follow her mother's
advice.
Therefore when they were married, and the prince spoke to his
bride, she did not answer him. He could not think what was the matter, but even
about her old home she would not utter a word. At last he asked why she would
not speak; and then she said:
'Tell me the secret of your birth.'
Then the prince was very sad and displeased, and although she
pressed him sorely he would not tell her, but always reply:
'If I tell you, you will repent that ever you asked me.'
For several months they lived together; and it was not such a
happy time for either as it ought to have been, for the secret was still a
secret, and lay between them like a cloud between the sun and the earth, making
what should be fair, dull and sad.
At length the prince could bear it no longer; so he said to
his wife one day: 'At midnight I will tell you my secret if you still wish it;
but you will repent it all your life.' However, the princess was overjoyed that
she had succeeded, and paid no attention to his warnings.
That night the prince ordered horses to be ready for the
princess and himself a little before midnight. He placed her on one, and
mounted the other himself, and they rode together down to the river to the
place where the old woman had first found the snake in her brass pot. There the
prince drew rein and said sadly: 'Do you still insist that I should tell you my
secret?' And the princess answered 'Yes.' 'If I do,' answered the prince,
'remember that you will regret it all your life.' But the princess only replied
'Tell me!'
'Then,' said the prince, 'know that I am the son of the king
of a far country, but by enchantment I was turned into a snake.'
The word 'snake' was hardly out of his lips when he
disappeared, and the princess heard a rustle and saw a ripple on the water; and
in the faint moonlight she beheld a snake swimming into the river. Soon it
disappeared and she was left alone. In vain she waited with beating heart for
something to happen, and for the prince to come back to her. Nothing happened
and no one came; only the wind mourned through the trees on the river bank, and
the night birds cried, and a jackal howled in the distance, and the river
flowed black and silent beneath her.
In the morning they found her, weeping and dishevelled, on
the river bank; but no word could they learn from her or from anyone as to the
fate of her husband. At her wish they built on the river bank a little house of
black stone; and there she lived in mourning, with a few servants and guards to
watch over her.
A long, long time passed by, and still the princess lived in
mourning for her prince, and saw no one, and went nowhere away from her house
on the river bank and the garden that surrounded it. One morning, when she woke
up, she found a stain of fresh mud upon the carpet. She sent for the guards,
who watched outside the house day and night, and asked them who had entered her
room while she was asleep. They declared that no one could have entered, for
they kept such careful watch that not even a bird could fly in without their
knowledge; but none of them could explain the stain of mud. The next morning,
again, the princess found another stain of wet mud, and she questioned everyone
most carefully; but none could say how the mud came there. The third night the
princess determined to lie awake herself and watch; and, for fear that she
might fall asleep, she cut her finger with a penknife and rubbed salt into the
cut, that the pain of it might keep her from sleeping. So she lay awake, and at
midnight she saw a snake come wriggling along the ground with some mud from the
river in its mouth; and when it came near the bed, it reared up its head and
dropped its muddy head on the bedclothes. She was very frightened, but tried to
control her fear, and called out:
'Who are you, and what do you here?'
And the snake answered:
'I am the prince, your husband, and I am come to visit you.'
Then the princess began to weep; and the snake continued:
'Alas! did I not say that if I told you my secret you would
repent it? and have you not repented?'
'Oh, indeed!' cried the poor princess, 'I have repented it,
and shall repent it all my life! Is there nothing I can do?'
And the snake answered:
'Yes, there is one thing, if you dared to do it.'
'Only tell me,' said the princess, 'and I will do anything!'
'Then,' replied the snake, 'on a certain night you must put a
large bowl of milk and sugar in each of the four corners of this room. All the
snakes in the river will come out to drink the milk, and the one that leads the
way will be the queen of the snakes. You must stand in her way at the door, and
say: "Oh, Queen of Snakes, Queen of Snakes, give me back my husband!"
and perhaps she will do it. But if you are frightened, and do not stop her, you
will never see me again.' And he glided away.
On the night of which the snake had told her, the princess
got four large bowls of milk and sugar, and put one in each corner of the room,
and stood in the doorway waiting. At midnight there was a great hissing and
rustling from the direction of the river, and presently the ground appeared to
be alive with horrible writhing forms of snakes, whose eyes glittered and
forked tongues quivered as they moved on in the direction of the princess's
house. Foremost among them was a huge, repulsive scaly creature that led the
dreadful procession. The guards were so terrified that they all ran away; but
the princess stood in the doorway, as white as death, and with her hands
clasped tight together for fear she should scream or faint, and fail to do her
part. As they came closer and saw her in the way, all the snakes raised their
horrid heads and swayed them to and fro, and looked at her with wicked beady
eyes, while their breath seemed to poison the very air. Still the princess
stood firm, and, when the leading snake was within a few feet of her, she
cried: 'Oh, Queen of Snakes, Queen of Snakes, give me back my husband!' Then
all the rustling, writhing crowd of snakes seemed to whisper to one another
'Her husband? her husband?' But the queen of snakes moved on until her head was
almost in the princess's face, and her little eyes seemed to flash fire. And
still the princess stood in the doorway and never moved, but cried again: 'Oh,
Queen of Snakes, Queen of Snakes, give me back my husband!' Then the queen of
snakes replied: 'To-morrow you shall have him--to-morrow!' When she heard these
words and knew that she had conquered, the princess staggered from the door,
and sank upon her bed and fainted. As in a dream, she saw that her room was
full of snakes, all jostling and squabbling over the bowls of milk until it was
finished. And then they went away.
In the morning the princess was up early, and took off the
mourning dress which she had worn for five whole years, and put on gay and
beautiful clothes. And she swept the house and cleaned it, and adorned it with
garlands and nosegays of sweet flowers and ferns, and prepared it as though she
were making ready for her wedding. And when night fell she lit up the woods and
gardens with lanterns, and spread a table as for a feast, and lit in the house
a thousand wax candles. Then she waited for her husband, not knowing in what
shape he would appear. And at midnight there came striding from the river the
prince, laughing, but with tears in his eyes; and she ran to meet him, and
threw herself into his arms, crying and laughing too.
So the prince came home; and the next day they two went back
to the palace, and the old king wept with joy to see them. And the bells, so
long silent, were set a-ringing again, and the guns firing, and the trumpets
blaring, and there was fresh feasting and rejoicing.
And the old woman who had been the prince's nurse became
nurse to the prince's children--at least she was called so; though she was far
too old to do anything for them but love them. Yet she still thought that she
was useful, and knew that she was happy. And happy, indeed, were the prince and
princess, who in due time became king and queen, and lived and ruled long and
prosperously.
(Major Campbell, Feroshepore.)
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