THE
DEATH OF THE SUN-HERO
Many,
many thousand years ago there lived a mighty King whom heaven had blessed with
a clever and beautiful son. When he was
only ten years old the boy was cleverer than all the King's counsellors put
together, and when he was twenty he was the greatest hero in the whole
kingdom. His father could not make
enough of his son, and always had him clothed in golden garments which shone
and sparkled like the sun; and his mother gave him a white horse, which never
slept, and which flew like the wind. All
the people in the land loved him dearly, and called him the Sun-Hero, for they
did not think his like existed under the sun.
Now it happened one night that both his parents had the same
extraordinary dream. They dreamt that a
girl all dressed in red had come to them and said: 'If you wish that your son
should really become the Sun-Hero in deed and not only in name, let him go out
into the world and search for the Tree of the Sun, and when he has found it,
let him pluck a golden apple from it and bring it home.'
When
the King and Queen had each related their dreams to the other, they were much
amazed that they should both have dreamt exactly the same about their son, and
the King said to his wife, 'This is clearly a sign from heaven that we should
send our son out into the world in order that he may come home the great
Sun-Hero, as the Red Girl said, not only in name but in deed.'
The
Queen consented with many tears, and the King at once bade his son set forth in
search of the Tree of the Sun, from which he was to pluck a golden apple. The Prince was delighted at the prospect, and
set out on his travels that very day.
For
a long time he wandered all through the world, and it was not till the ninety-ninth
day after he started that he found an old man who was able to tell him where
the Tree of the Sun grew. He followed
his directions, and rode on his way, and after another ninety-nine days he
arrived at a golden castle, which stood in the middle of a vast
wilderness. He knocked at the door,
which was opened noiselessly and by invisible hands. Finding no one about, the Prince rode on, and
came to a great meadow, where the Sun-Tree grew. When he reached the tree he put out his hand
to pick a golden apple; but all of a sudden the tree grew higher, so that he
could not reach its fruit. Then he heard
some one behind him laughing. Turning
round, he saw the girl in red walking towards him, who addressed him in these
words:
'Do
you really imagine, brave son of the earth, that you can pluck an apple so
easily from the Tree of the Sun? Before
you can do that, you have a difficult task before you. You must guard the tree for nine days and
nine nights from the ravages of two wild black wolves, who will try to harm
it. Do you think you can undertake
this?'
'Yes,'
answered the Sun-Hero, 'I will guard the Tree of the Sun nine days and nine
nights.'
Then
the girl continued: 'Remember, though, if you do not succeed the Sun will kill
you. Now begin your watch.'
With
these words the Red Girl went back into the golden castle. She had hardly left him when the two black
wolves appeared: but the Sun-Hero beat them off with his sword, and they
retired, only, however, to reappear in a very short time. The Sun-Hero chased them away once more, but
he had hardly sat down to rest when the two black wolves were on the scene
again. This went on for seven days and
nights, when the white horse, who had never done such a thing before, turned to
the Sun-Hero and said in a human voice: 'Listen to what I am going to say. A Fairy gave me to your mother in order that
I might be of service to you; so let me tell you, that if you go to sleep and
let the wolves harm the tree, the Sun will surely kill you. The Fairy, foreseeing this, put everyone in
the world under a spell, which prevents their obeying the Sun's command to take
your life. But all the same, she has
forgotten one person, who will certainly kill you if you fall asleep and let the
wolves damage the tree. So watch and
keep the wolves away.'
Then
the Sun-Hero strove with all his might and kept the black wolves at bay, and
conquered his desire to sleep; but on the eighth night his strength failed him,
and he fell fast asleep. When he awoke a
woman in black stood beside him, who said: 'You have fulfilled your task very
badly, for you have let the two black wolves damage the Tree of the Sun. I am the mother of the Sun, and I command you
to ride away from here at once, and I pronounce sentence of death upon you, for
you proudly let yourself be called the Sun-Hero without having done anything to
deserve the name.'
The
youth mounted his horse sadly, and rode home.
The people all thronged round him on his return, anxious to hear his
adventures, but he told them nothing, and only to his mother did he confide
what had befallen him. But the old Queen
laughed, and said to her son: 'Don't worry, my child; you see, the Fairy has
protected you so far, and the Sun has found no one to kill you. So cheer up and be happy.'
After
a time the Prince forgot all about his adventure, and married a beautiful
Princess, with whom he lived very happily for some time. But one day when he was out hunting he felt
very thirsty, and coming to a stream he stooped down to drink from it, and this
caused his death, for a crab came swimming up, and with its claws tore out his
tongue. He was carried home in a dying
condition, and as he lay on his death-bed the black woman appeared and said:
'So the Sun has, after all, found someone, who was not under the Fairy's spell,
who has caused your death. And a similar
fate will overtake everyone under the Sun who wrongfully assumes a title to
which he has no right.'
From
the Bukowinaer Tales and Legends. Von Wliolocki.
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