The White Wolf
Once upon a time there was a king who had three daughters;
they were all beautiful, but the youngest was the fairest of the three. Now it
happened that one day their father had to set out for a tour in a distant part
of his kingdom. Before he left, his youngest daughter made him promise to bring
her back a wreath of wild flowers. When the king was ready to return to his
palace, he bethought himself that he would like to take home presents to each
of his three daughters; so he went into a jeweller's shop and bought a
beautiful necklace for the eldest princess; then he went to a rich merchant's
and bought a dress embroidered in gold and silver thread for the second
princess, but in none of the flower shops nor in the market could he find the
wreath of wild flowers that his youngest daughter had set her heart on. So he
had to set out on his homeward way without it. Now his journey led him through
a thick forest. While he was still about four miles distant from his palace, he
noticed a white wolf squatting on the roadside, and, behold! on the head of the
wolf, there was a wreath of wild flowers.
Then the king called to the coachman, and ordered him to get
down from his seat and fetch him the wreath from the wolf's head. But the wolf
heard the order and said: 'My lord and king, I will let you have the wreath,
but I must have something in return.'
'What do you want?' answered the king. 'I will gladly give
you rich treasure in exchange for it.'
'I do not want rich treasure,' replied the wolf. 'Only promise
to give me the first thing that meets you on your way to your castle. In three
days I shall come and fetch it.'
And the king thought to himself: 'I am still a good long way
from home, I am sure to meet a wild animal or a bird on the road, it will be
quite safe to promise.' So he consented, and carried the wreath away with him.
But all along the road he met no living creature till he turned into the palace
gates, where his youngest daughter was waiting to welcome him home.
That evening the king was very sad, remembering his promise;
and when he told the queen what had happened, she too shed bitter tears. And
the youngest princess asked them why they both looked so sad, and why they
wept. Then her father told her what a price he would have to pay for the wreath
of wild flowers he had brought home to her, for in three days a white wolf
would come and claim her and carry her away, and they would never see her
again. But the queen thought and thought, and at last she hit upon a plan.
There was in the palace a servant maid the same age and the
same height as the princess, and the queen dressed her up in a beautiful dress
belonging to her daughter, and determined to give her to the white wolf, who
would never know the difference.
On the third day the wolf strode into the palace yard and up
the great stairs, to the room where the king and queen were seated.
'I have come to claim your promise,' he said. 'Give me your
youngest daughter.'
Then they led the servant maid up to him, and he said to her:
'You must mount on my back, and I will take you to my castle.' And with these
words he swung her on to his back and left the palace.
When they reached the place where he had met the king and
given him the wreath of wild flowers, he stopped, and told her to dismount that
they might rest a little.
So they sat down by the roadside.
'I wonder,' said the wolf, 'what your father would do if this
forest belonged to him?'
And the girl answered: 'My father is a poor man, so he would
cut down the trees, and saw them into planks, and he would sell the planks, and
we should never be poor again; but would always have enough to eat.'
Then the wolf knew that he had not got the real princess, and
he swung the servant-maid on to his back and carried her to the castle. And he
strode angrily into the king's chamber, and spoke.
'Give me the real princess at once. If you deceive me again I
will cause such a storm to burst over your palace that the walls will fall in,
and you will all be buried in the ruins.'
Then the king and the queen wept, but they saw there was no
escape. So they sent for their youngest daughter, and the king said to her:
'Dearest child, you must go with the white wolf, for I promised you to him, and
I must keep my word.'
So the princess got ready to leave her home; but first she
went to her room to fetch her wreath of wild flowers, which she took with her.
Then the white wolf swung her on his back and bore her away. But when they came
to the place where he had rested with the servant-maid, he told her to dismount
that they might rest for a little at the roadside. Then he turned to her and
said: 'I wonder what your father would do if this forest belonged to him?'
And the princess answered: 'My father would cut down the
trees and turn it into a beautiful park and gardens, and he and his courtiers
would come and wander among the glades in the summer time.'
'This is the real princess,' said the wolf to himself. But
aloud he said: 'Mount once more on my back, and I will bear you to my castle.'
And when she was seated on his back he set out through the
woods, and he ran, and ran, and ran, till at last he stopped in front of a
stately courtyard, with massive gates.
'This is a beautiful castle,' said the princess, as the gates
swung back and she stepped inside. 'If only I were not so far away from my
father and my mother!'
But the wolf answered: 'At the end of a year we will pay a
visit to your father and mother.'
And at these words the white furry skin slipped from his
back, and the princess saw that he was not a wolf at all, but a beautiful
youth, tall and stately; and he gave her his hand, and led her up the castle
stairs.
One day, at the end of half a year, he came into her room and
said: 'My dear one, you must get ready for a wedding. Your eldest sister is
going to be married, and I will take you to your father's palace. When the
wedding is over, I shall come and fetch you home. I will whistle outside the
gate, and when you hear me, pay no heed to what your father or mother say,
leave your dancing and feasting, and come to me at once; for if I have to leave
without you, you will never find your way back alone through the forests.'
When the princess was ready to start, she found that he had
put on his white fur skin, and was changed back into the wolf; and he swung her
on to his back, and set out with her to her father's palace, where he left her,
while he himself returned home alone. But, in the evening, he went back to
fetch her, and, standing outside the palace gate, he gave a long, loud whistle.
In the midst of her dancing the princess heard the sound, and at once she went
to him, and he swung her on his back and bore her away to his castle.
Again, at the end of half a year, the prince came into her
room, as the white wolf, and said: 'Dear heart, you must prepare for the
wedding of your second sister. I will take you to your father's palace to-day,
and we will remain there together till to-morrow morning.'
So they went together to the wedding. In the evening, when
the two were alone together, he dropped his fur skin, and, ceasing to be a
wolf, became a prince again. Now they did not know that the princess's mother
was hidden in the room. When she saw the white skin lying on the floor, she
crept out of the room, and sent a servant to fetch the skin and to burn it in
the kitchen fire. The moment the flames touched the skin there was a fearful
clap of thunder heard, and the prince disappeared out of the palace gate in a
whirlwind, and returned to his palace alone.
But the princess was heart-broken, and spent the night
weeping bitterly. Next morning she set out to find her way back to the castle,
but she wandered through the woods and forests, and she could find no path or track
to guide her. For fourteen days she roamed in the forest, sleeping under the
trees, and living upon wild berries and roots, and at last she reached a little
house. She opened the door and went in, and found the wind seated in the room
all by himself, and she spoke to the wind and said: 'Wind, have you seen the
white wolf?'
And the wind answered: 'All day and all night I have been
blowing round the world, and I have only just come home; but I have not seen
him.'
But he gave her a pair of shoes, in which, he told her, she
would be able to walk a hundred miles with every step. Then she walked through
the air till she reached a star, and she said: 'Tell me, star, have you seen
the white wolf?'
And the star answered: 'I have been shining all night, and I
have not seen him.'
But the star gave her a pair of shoes, and told her that if
she put them on she would be able to walk two hundred miles at a stride. So she
drew them on, and she walked to the moon, and she said: 'Dear moon, have you not
seen the white wolf?'
But the moon answered, 'All night long I have been sailing
through the heavens, and I have only just come home; but I did not see him.'
But he gave her a pair of shoes, in which she would be able
to cover four hundred miles with every stride. So she went to the sun, and
said: 'Dear sun, have you seen the white wolf?'
And the sun answered, 'Yes, I have seen him, and he has
chosen another bride, for he thought you had left him, and would never return,
and he is preparing for the wedding. But I will help you. Here are a pair of
shoes. If you put these on you will be able to walk on glass or ice, and to
climb the steepest places. And here is a spinning-wheel, with which you will be
able to spin moss into silk. When you leave me you will reach a glass mountain.
Put on the shoes that I have given you and with them you will be able to climb
it quite easily. At the summit you will find the palace of the white wolf.'
Then the princess set out, and before long she reached the glass
mountain, and at the summit she found the white wolf's palace, as the sun had
said.
But no one recognised her, as she had disguised herself as an
old woman, and had wound a shawl round her head. Great preparations were going
on in the palace for the wedding, which was to take place next day. Then the
princess, still disguised as an old woman, took out her spinning-wheel, and
began to spin moss into silk. And as she spun the new bride passed by, and
seeing the moss turn into silk, she said to the old woman: 'Little mother, I
wish you would give me that spinning-wheel.'
And the princess answered, 'I will give it to you if you will
allow me to sleep to-night on the mat outside the prince's door.'
And the bride replied, 'Yes, you may sleep on the mat outside
the door.'
So the princess gave her the spinning-wheel. And that night,
winding the shawl all round her, so that no one could recognise her, she lay
down on the mat outside the white wolf's door. And when everyone in the palace
was asleep she began to tell the whole of her story. She told how she had been
one of three sisters, and that she had been the youngest and the fairest of the
three, and that her father had betrothed her to a white wolf. And she told how
she had gone first to the wedding of one sister, and then with her husband to
the wedding of the other sister, and how her mother had ordered the servant to
throw the white fur skin into the kitchen fire. And then she told of her
wanderings through the forest; and of how she had sought the white wolf
weeping; and how the wind and star and moon and sun had befriended her, and had
helped her to reach his palace. And when the white wolf heard all the story, he
knew that it was his first wife, who had sought him, and had found him, after
such great dangers and difficulties.
But he said nothing, for he waited till the next day, when
many guests--kings and princes from far countries --were coming to his wedding.
Then, when all the guests were assembled in the banqueting hall, he spoke to
them and said: 'Hearken to me, ye kings and princes, for I have something to
tell you. I had lost the key of my treasure casket, so I ordered a new one to
be made; but I have since found the old one. Now, which of these keys is the
better?'
Then all the kings and royal guests answered: 'Certainly the
old key is better than the new one.'
'Then,' said the wolf, 'if that is so, my former bride is
better than my new one.'
And he sent for the new bride, and he gave her in marriage to
one of the princes who was present, and then he turned to his guests, and said:
'And here is my former bride'--and the beautiful princess was led into the room
and seated beside him on his throne. 'I thought she had forgotten me, and that
she would never return. But she has sought me everywhere, and now we are
together once more we shall never part again.'
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