HOW SIX MEN TRAVELLED THROUGH THE WIDE WORLD
There
was once upon a time a man who understood all sorts of arts; he served in the
war, and bore himself bravely and well; but when the war was over, he got his
discharge, and set out on his travels with three farthings of his pay in his
pocket. 'Wait,' he said; 'that does not
please me; only let me find the right people, and the King shall yet give me
all the treasures of his kingdom.' He
strode angrily into the forest, and there he saw a man standing who had
uprooted six trees as if they were straws.
He said to him, 'Will you be my servant and travel with me?'
'Yes,'
he answered; 'but first of all I will take this little bundle of sticks home to
my mother,' and he took one of the trees and wound it round the other five,
raised the bundle on his shoulders and bore it off. Then he came back and went with his master,
who said, 'We two ought to be able to travel through the wide world!' And when they had gone a little way they came
upon a hunter, who was on his knees, his gun on his shoulder, aiming at
something. The master said to him,
'Hunter, what are you aiming at?'
He
answered, 'Two miles from this place sits a fly on a branch of an oak; I want
to shoot out its left eye.'
'Oh,
go with me,' said the man; 'if we three are together we shall easily travel
through the wide world.'
The
hunter agreed and went with him, and they came to seven windmills whose sails
were going round quite fast, and yet there was not a breath of wind, nor was a
leaf moving. The man said, 'I don't know
what is turning those windmills; there is not the slightest breeze
blowing.' So he walked on with his
servants, and when they had gone two miles they saw a man sitting on a tree,
holding one of his nostrils and blowing out of the other.
'Fellow,
what are you puffing at up there?' asked the man.
He
replied, 'Two miles from this place are standing seven windmills; see, I am
blowing to drive them round.'
'Oh,
go with me,' said the man; 'if we four are together we shall easily travel
through the wide world.'
So
the blower got down and went with him, and after a time they saw a man who was
standing on one leg, and had unstrapped the other and laid it near him. Then said the master, 'You have made yourself
very comfortable to rest!'
'I
am a runner,' answered he; 'and so that I shall not go too quickly, I have
unstrapped one leg; when I run with two legs, I go faster than a bird flies.'
'Oh,
go with me; if we five are together, we shall easily travel through the wide
world.' So he went with him, and, not
long afterwards, they met a man who wore a little hat, but he had it slouched
over one ear.
'Manners,
manners!' said the master to him; 'don't hang your hat over one ear; you look
like a madman!'
'I
dare not,' said the other, 'for if I were to put my hat on straight, there
would come such a frost that the very birds in the sky would freeze and fall
dead on the earth.'
'Oh,
go with me,' said the master; 'if we six are together, we shall easily travel
through the wide world.
Now
the Six came to a town in which the King had proclaimed that whoever should run
with his daughter in a race, and win, should become her husband; but if he
lost, he must lose his head. This was
reported to the man who declared he would compete, 'but,' he said, 'I shall let
my servant run for me.'
The
King replied, 'Then both your heads must be staked, and your head and his must
be guaranteed for the winner.'
When
this was agreed upon and settled, the man strapped on the runner's other leg,
saying to him, 'Now be nimble, and see that we win!' It was arranged that whoever should first
bring water out of a stream a long way off, should be the victor. Then the runner got a pitcher, and the King's
daughter another, and they began to run at the same time; but in a moment, when
the King's daughter was only just a little way off, no spectator could see the
runner, and it seemed as if the wind had whistled past. In a short time he reached the stream, filled
his pitcher with water, and turned round again.
But, half way home, a great drowsiness came over him; he put down his
pitcher, lay down, and fell asleep. He
had, however, put a horse's skull which was lying on the ground, for his
pillow, so that he should not be too comfortable and might soon wake up.
In
the meantime the King's daughter, who could also run well, as well as an
ordinary man could, reached the stream, and hastened back with her pitcher full
of water. When she saw the runner lying
there asleep, she was delighted, and said, 'My enemy is given into my hands!'
She emptied his pitcher and ran on.
Everything
now would have been lost, if by good luck the hunter had not been standing on
the castle tower and had seen everything with his sharp eyes.
'Ah,'
said he, 'the King's daughter shall not overreach us;' and, loading his gun, he
shot so cleverly, that he shot away the horse's skull from under the runner's
head, without its hurting him. Then the
runner awoke, jumped up, and saw that his pitcher was empty and the King's
daughter far ahead. But he did not lose
courage, and ran back to the stream with his pitcher, filled it once more with
water, and was home ten minutes before the King's daughter arrived.
'Look,'
said he, 'I have only just exercised my legs; that was nothing of a run.'
But
the King was angry, and his daughter even more so, that she should be carried
away by a common, discharged soldier.
They consulted together how they could destroy both him and his
companions.
'Then,'
said the King to her, 'I have found a way.
Don't be frightened; they shall not come home again.' He said to them, 'You must now make merry
together, and eat and drink,' and he led them into a room which had a floor of
iron; the doors were also of iron, and the windows were barred with iron. In the room was a table spread with delicious
food. The King said to them, 'Go in and
enjoy yourselves,' and as soon as they were inside he had the doors shut and
bolted. Then he made the cook come, and
ordered him to keep up a large fire under the room until the iron was
red-hot. The cook did so, and the Six
sitting round the table felt it grow very warm, and they thought this was because
of their good fare; but when the heat became still greater and they wanted to
go out, but found the doors and windows fastened, then they knew that the King
meant them harm and was trying to suffocate them.
'But
he shall not succeed,' cried he of the little hat, 'I will make a frost come which
shall make the fire ashamed and die out!' So he put his hat on straight, and at
once there came such a frost that all the heat disappeared and the food on the
dishes began to freeze. When a couple of
hours had passed, and the King thought they must be quite dead from the heat,
he had the doors opened and went in himself to see.
But
when the doors were opened, there stood all Six, alive and well, saying they
were glad they could come out to warm themselves, for the great cold in the
room had frozen all the food hard in the dishes. Then the King went angrily to the cook, and
scolded him, and asked him why he had not done what he was told.
But
the cook answered, 'There is heat enough there; see for yourself.' Then the King saw a huge fire burning under
the iron room, and understood that he could do no harm to the Six in this
way. The King now began again to think
how he could free himself from his unwelcome guests. He commanded the master to come before him,
and said, 'If you will take gold, and give up your right to my daughter, you
shall have as much as you like.'
'Oh,
yes, your Majesty,' answered he, 'give me as much as my servant can carry, and
I will give up your daughter.'
The
King was delighted, and the man said, 'I will come and fetch it in fourteen
days.'
Then
he called all the tailors in the kingdom together, and made them sit down for
fourteen days sewing at a sack. When it
was finished, he made the strong man who had uprooted the trees take the sack
on his shoulder and go with him to the King.
Then the King said, 'What a powerful fellow that is, carrying that bale
of linen as large as a house on his shoulder!' and he was much frightened, and
thought 'What a lot of gold he will make away with!' Then he had a ton of gold brought, which
sixteen of the strongest men had to carry; but the strong man seized it with
one hand, put it in the sack, saying, 'Why don't you bring me more? That scarcely covers the bottom!' Then the King had to send again and again to
fetch his treasures, which the strong man shoved into the sack, and the sack
was only half full.
'Bring
more,' he cried, 'these crumbs don't fill it.'
So seven thousand waggons of the gold of the whole kingdom were driven
up; these the strong man shoved into the sack, oxen and all.
'I
will no longer be particular,' he said, 'and will take what comes, so that the
sack shall be full.'
When
everything was put in and there was not yet enough, he said, 'I will make an
end of this; it is easy to fasten a sack when it is not full.' Then he threw it on his back and went with
his companions.
Now,
when the King saw how a single man was carrying away the wealth of the whole
country he was very angry, and made his cavalry mount and pursue the Six, and
bring back the strong man with the sack.
Two regiments soon overtook them, and called to them, 'You are
prisoners! lay down the sack of gold or you shall be cut down.'
'What
do you say?' said the blower, 'we are prisoners? Before that, you shall dance in the
air!' And he held one nostril and blew
with the other at the two regiments; they were separated and blown away in the
blue sky over the mountains, one this way, and the other that. A sergeant-major cried for mercy, saying he
had nine wounds, and was a brave fellow, and did not deserve this
disgrace. So the blower let him off, and
he came down without hurt. Then he said
to him, 'Now go home to the King, and say that if he sends any more cavalry I
will blow them all into the air.'
When
the King received the message, he said, 'Let the fellows go; they are
bewitched.' Then the Six brought the
treasure home, shared it among themselves, and lived contentedly till the end
of their days.
The Yellow Fairy Book, by Andrew Lang
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