BLOCKHEAD-HANS
Far
away in the country lay an old manor-house where lived an old squire who had
two sons. They thought themselves so
clever, that if they had known only half of what they did know, it would have
been quite enough. They both wanted to
marry the King's daughter, for she had proclaimed that she would have for her
husband the man who knew best how to choose his words.
Both
prepared for the wooing a whole week, which was the longest time allowed them;
but, after all, it was quite long enough, for they both had preparatory
knowledge, and everyone knows how useful that is. One knew the whole Latin dictionary and also
three years' issue of the daily paper of the town off by heart, so that he
could repeat it all backwards or forwards as you pleased. The other had worked at the laws of
corporation, and knew by heart what every member of the corporation ought to
know, so that he thought he could quite well speak on State matters and give
his opinion. He understood, besides
this, how to embroider braces with roses and other flowers, and scrolls, for he
was very ready with his fingers.
'I
shall win the king's daughter!' they both cried.
Their
old father gave each of them a fine horse; the one who knew the dictionary and
the daily paper by heart had a black horse, while the other who was so clever
at corporation law had a milk-white one.
Then they oiled the corners of their mouths so that they might be able
to speak more fluently. All the servants
stood in the courtyard and saw them mount their steeds, and here by chance came
the third brother; for the squire had three sons, but nobody counted him with
his brothers, for he was not so learned as they were, and he was generally
called 'Blockhead-Hans.'
'Oh,
oh!' said Blockhead-Hans. 'Where are you
off to? You are in your Sunday-best
clothes!'
'We
are going to Court, to woo the Princess!
Don't you know what is known throughout all the country side?' And they
told him all about it.
'Hurrah! I'll go to!' cried Blockhead-Hans; and the
brothers laughed at him and rode off.
'Dear
father!' cried Blockhead-Hans, 'I must have a horse too. What a desire for marriage has seized
me! If she will have me, she WILL have
me, and if she won't have me, I will have her.'
'Stop
that nonsense!' said the old man. 'I
will not give you a horse. YOU can't
speak; YOU don't know how to choose your words.
Your brothers! Ah! they are very different lads!'
'Well,'
said Blockhead-Hans, 'if I can't have a horse, I will take the goat which is
mine; he can carry me!'
And
he did so. He sat astride on the goat,
struck his heels into its side, and went rattling down the high-road like a
hurricane.
'Hoppetty
hop! what a ride!' Here I come!' shouted Blockhead-Hans, singing so that the
echoes were roused far and near. But his
brothers were riding slowly in front.
They were not speaking, but they were thinking over all the good things
they were going to say, for everything had to be thought out.
'Hullo!'
bawled Blockhead-Hans, 'here I am! Just
look what
I
found on the road!'--and he showed them a dead crow which he had picked up.
'Blockhead!'
said his brothers, 'what are you going to do with it?'
'With
the crow? I shall give it to the
Princess!'
'Do
so, certainly!' they said, laughing loudly and riding on.
'Slap!
bang! here I am again! Look what I have
just found! You don't find such things
every day on the road!' And the brothers
turned round to see what in the world he could have found.
'Blockhead!'
said they, 'that is an old wooden shoe without the top! Are you going to send that, too, to the
Princess?'
'Of
course I shall!' returned Blockhead-Hans; and the brothers laughed and rode on
a good way.
'Slap!
bang! here I am!' cried Blockhead-Hans; 'better and better--it is really
famous!'
'What
have you found now?' asked the brothers.
'Oh,'
said Blockhead-Hans, 'it is really too good!
How pleased the Princess will be!'
'Why!'
said the brothers, 'this is pure mud, straight from the ditch.'
'Of
course it is!' said Blockhead-Hans, 'and it is the best kind! Look how it runs through one's fingers!' and,
so saying, he filled his pocket with the mud.
But
the brothers rode on so fast that dust and sparks flew all around, and they
reached the gate of the town a good hour before Blockhead-Hans. Here came the suitors numbered according to
their arrival, and they were ranged in rows, six in each row, and they were so
tightly packed that they could not move their arms. This was a very good thing, for otherwise
they would have torn each other in pieces, merely because the one was in front
of the other.
All
the country people were standing round the King's throne, and were crowded
together in thick masses almost out of the windows to see the Princess receive
the suitors; and as each one came into the room all his fine phrases went out
like a candle!
'It
doesn't matter!' said the Princess.
'Away! out with him!'
At
last she came to the row in which the brother who knew the dictionary by heart
was, but he did not know it any longer; he had quite forgotten it in the rank
and file. And the floor creaked, and the
ceiling was all made of glass mirrors, so that he saw himself standing on his
head, and by each window were standing three reporters and an editor; and each
of them was writing down what was said, to publish it in the paper that came
out and was sold at the street corners for a penny. It was fearful, and they had made up the fire
so hot that it was grilling.
'It
is hot in here, isn't it!' said the suitor.
'Of
course it is! My father is roasting
young chickens to-day!' said the Princess.
'Ahem!'
There he stood like an idiot. He was not
prepared for such a speech; he did not know what to say, although he wanted to
say something witty. 'Ahem!'
'It
doesn't matter!' said the Princess.
'Take him out!' and out he had to go.
Now
the other brother entered.
'How
hot it is!' he said.
'Of
course! We are roasting young chickens
to-day!' remarked the Princess.
'How
do you--um!' he said, and the reporters wrote down. 'How do you--um.'
'It
doesn't matter!' said the Princess.
'Take him out!'
Now
Blockhead-Hans came in; he rode his goat right into the hall.
'I
say! How roasting hot it is here!' said
he.
'Of
course! I am roasting young chickens
to-day!' said the Princess.
'That's
good!' replied Blockhead-Hans; 'then can I roast a crow with them?'
'With
the greatest of pleasure!' said the Princess; 'but have you anything you can
roast them in? for I have neither pot
nor saucepan.'
'Oh,
rather!' said Blockhead-Hans. 'Here is a
cooking implement with tin rings,' and he drew out the old wooden shoe, and
laid the crow in it.
'That
is quite a meal!' said the Princess; 'but where shall we get the soup from?'
'I've
got that in my pocket!' said Blockhead-Hans.
'I have so much that I can quite well throw some away!' and he poured
some mud out of his pocket.
'I
like you!' said the Princess. 'You can
answer, and you can
speak,
and I will marry you; but do you know that every word which we are saying and
have said has been taken down and will be in the paper to-morrow? By each window do you see there are standing
three reporters and an old editor, and this old editor is the worst, for he
doesn't understand anything!' but she only said this to tease
Blockhead-Hans. And the reporters
giggled, and each dropped a blot of ink on the floor.
'Ah!
are those the great people?' said Blockhead-Hans. 'Then I will give the editor the best!' So
saying, he turned his pockets inside out, and threw the mud right in his face.
'That
was neatly done!' said the Princess. 'I
couldn't have done it; but I will soon learn how to!'
Blockhead-Hans
became King, got a wife and a crown, and sat on the throne; and this we have
still damp from the newspaper of the editor and the reporters--and they are not
to be believed for a moment.
The Yellow Fairy Book, by Andrew Lang
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