THE FLOWER QUEEN'S DAUGHTER
A
young Prince was riding one day through a meadow that stretched for miles in
front of him, when he came to a deep open ditch. He was turning aside to avoid it, when he
heard the sound of someone crying in the ditch.
He dismounted from his horse, and stepped along in the direction the
sound came from. To his astonishment he
found an old woman, who begged him to help her out of the ditch. The Prince bent down and lifted her out of
her living grave, asking her at the same time how she had managed to get there.
'My
son,' answered the old woman, 'I am a very poor woman, and soon after midnight
I set out for the neighbouring town in order to sell my eggs in the market on
the following morning; but I lost my way in the dark, and fell into this deep
ditch, where I might have remained for ever but for your kindness.'
Then
the Prince said to her, 'You can hardly walk; I will put you on my horse and
lead you home. Where do you live?'
'Over
there, at the edge of the forest in the little hut you see in the distance,'
replied the old woman.
The
Prince lifted her on to his horse, and soon they reached the hut, where the old
woman got down, and turning to the Prince said, 'Just wait a moment, and I will
give you something.' And she disappeared
into her hut, but returned very soon and said, 'You are a mighty Prince, but at
the same time you have a kind heart, which deserves to be rewarded. Would you like to have the most beautiful
woman in the world for your wife?'
'Most
certainly I would,' replied the Prince.
So
the old woman continued, 'The most beautiful woman in the whole world is the
daughter of the Queen of the Flowers, who has been captured by a dragon. If you wish to marry her, you must first set
her free, and this I will help you to do.
I will give you this little bell: if you ring it once, the King of the
Eagles will appear; if you ring it twice, the King of the Foxes will come to
you; and if you ring it three times, you will see the King of the Fishes by
your side. These will help you if you
are in any difficulty. Now farewell, and
heaven prosper your undertaking.' She
handed him the little bell, and there disappeared hut and all, as though the
earth had swallowed her up.
Then
it dawned on the Prince that he had been speaking to a good fairy, and putting
the little bell carefully in his pocket, he rode home and told his father that
he meant to set the daughter of the Flower Queen free, and intended setting out
on the following day into the wide world in search of the maid.
So
the next morning the Prince mounted his fine horse and left his home. He had roamed round the world for a whole
year, and his horse had died of exhaustion, while he himself had suffered much
from want and misery, but still he had come on no trace of her he was in search
of. At last one day he came to a hut, in
front of which sat a very old man. The
Prince asked him, 'Do you not know where the Dragon lives who keeps the
daughter of the Flower Queen prisoner?'
'No,
I do not,' answered the old man. 'But if
you go straight along this road for a year, you will reach a hut where my
father lives, and possibly he may be able to tell you.'
The
Prince thanked him for his information, and continued his journey for a whole
year along the same road, and at the end of it came to the little hut, where he
found a very old man. He asked him the
same question, and the old man answered, 'No, I do not know where the Dragon
lives. But go straight along this road
for another year, and you will come to a hut in which my father lives. I know he can tell you.'
And
so the Prince wandered on for another year, always on the same road, and at
last reached the hut where he found the third old man. He put the same question to him as he had put
to his son and grandson; but this time the old man answered, 'The Dragon lives
up there on the mountain, and he has just begun his year of sleep. For one whole year he is always awake, and
the next he sleeps. But if you wish to
see the Flower Queen's daughter go up the second mountain: the Dragon's old
mother lives there, and she has a ball every night, to which the Flower Queen's
daughter goes regularly.'
So
the Prince went up the second mountain, where he found a castle all made of
gold with diamond windows. He opened the
big gate leading into the courtyard, and was just going to walk in, when seven
dragons rushed on him and asked him what he wanted?
The
Prince replied, 'I have heard so much of the beauty and kindness of the
Dragon's Mother, and would like to enter her service.'
This
flattering speech pleased the dragons, and the eldest of them said, 'Well, you
may come with me, and I will take you to the Mother Dragon.' They entered the castle and walked through
twelve splendid halls, all made of gold and diamonds. In the twelfth room they found the Mother
Dragon seated on a diamond throne. She
was the ugliest woman under the sun, and, added to it all, she had three
heads. Her appearance was a great shock
to the Prince, and so was her voice, which was like the croaking of many
ravens. She asked him, 'Why have you
come here?'
The
Prince answered at once, 'I have heard so much of your beauty and kindness,
that I would very much like to enter your service.'
'Very
well,' said the Mother Dragon; 'but if you wish to enter my service, you must
first lead my mare out to the meadow and look after her for three days; but if
you don't bring her home safely every evening, we will eat you up.'
The
Prince undertook the task and led the mare out to the meadow.
But
no sooner had they reached the grass than she vanished. The Prince sought for her in vain, and at
last in despair sat down on a big stone and contemplated his sad fate. As he sat thus lost in thought, he noticed an
eagle flying over his head. Then he
suddenly bethought him of his little bell, and taking it out of his pocket he
rang it once. In a moment he heard a
rustling sound in the air beside him, and the King of the Eagles sank at his
feet.
'I
know what you want of me,' the bird said.
'You are looking for the Mother Dragon's mare who is galloping about
among the clouds. I will summon all the
eagles of the air together, and order them to catch the mare and bring her to
you.' And with these words the King of
the Eagles flew away. Towards evening
the Prince heard a mighty rushing sound in the air, and when he looked up he
saw thousands of eagles driving the mare before them. They sank at his feet on to the ground and
gave the mare over to him. Then the
Prince rode home to the old Mother Dragon, who was full of wonder when she saw
him, and said, 'You have succeeded to-day in looking after my mare, and as a
reward you shall come to my ball to-night.'
She gave him at the same time a cloak made of copper, and led him to a
big room where several young he-dragons and she-dragons were dancing
together. Here, too, was the Flower
Queen's beautiful daughter. Her dress
was woven out of the most lovely flowers in the world, and her complexion was
like lilies and roses. As the Prince was
dancing with her he managed to whisper in her ear, 'I have come to set you
free!'
Then
the beautiful girl said to him, 'If you succeed in bringing the mare back
safely the third day, ask the Mother Dragon to give you a foal of the mare as a
reward.'
The
ball came to an end at midnight, and early next morning the Prince again led
the Mother Dragon's mare out into the meadow.
But again she vanished before his eyes.
Then he took out his little bell and rang it twice.
In
a moment the King of the Foxes stood before him and said: 'I know already what
you want, and will summon all the foxes of the world together to find the mare
who has hidden herself in a hill.'
With
these words the King of the Foxes disappeared, and in the evening many thousand
foxes brought the mare to the Prince.
Then
he rode home to the Mother-Dragon, from whom he received this time a cloak made
of silver, and again she led him to the ball-room.
The
Flower Queen's daughter was delighted to see him safe and sound, and when they
were dancing together she whispered in his ear: 'If you succeed again
to-morrow, wait for me with the foal in the meadow. After the ball we will fly away together.'
On
the third day the Prince led the mare to the meadow again; but once more she
vanished before his eyes. Then the
Prince took out his little bell and rang it three times.
In
a moment the King of the Fishes appeared, and said to him: 'I know quite well
what you want me to do, and I will summon all the fishes of the sea together,
and tell them to bring you back the mare, who is hiding herself in a river.'
Towards
evening the mare was returned to him, and when he led her home to the Mother
Dragon she said to him:
'You
are a brave youth, and I will make you my body-servant. But what shall I give you as a reward to
begin with?'
The
Prince begged for a foal of the mare, which the Mother Dragon at once gave him,
and over and above, a cloak made of gold, for she had fallen in love with him
because he had praised her beauty.
So
in the evening he appeared at the ball in his golden cloak; but before the
entertainment was over he slipped away, and went straight to the stables, where
he mounted his foal and rode out into the meadow to wait for the Flower Queen's
daughter. Towards midnight the beautiful
girl appeared, and placing her in front of him on his horse, the Prince and she
flew like the wind till they reached the Flower Queen's dwelling. But the dragons had noticed their flight, and
woke their brother out of his year's sleep.
He flew into a terrible rage when he heard what had happened, and
determined to lay siege to the Flower Queen's palace; but the
Queen
caused a forest of flowers as high as the sky to grow up round her dwelling,
through which no one could force a way.
When
the Flower Queen heard that her daughter wanted to marry the Prince, she said
to him: 'I will give my consent to your marriage gladly, but my daughter can
only stay with you in summer. In winter,
when everything is dead and the ground covered with snow, she must come and
live with me in my palace underground.'
The Prince consented to this, and led his beautiful bride home, where
the wedding was held with great pomp and magnificence. The young couple lived happily together till
winter came, when the Flower Queen's daughter departed and went home to her
mother. In summer she returned to her
husband, and their life of joy and happiness began again, and lasted till the
approach of winter, when the Flower Queen's daughter went back again to her
mother. This coming and going continued
all her life long, and in spite of it they always lived happily together.
From
the Bukowinaer. Von Wliolocki.
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