THE
SNOW-DAUGHTER AND THE FIRE-SON
There
was once upon a time a man and his wife, and they had no children, which was a
great grief to them. One winter's day,
when the sun was shining brightly, the couple were standing outside their
cottage, and the woman was looking at all the little icicles which hung from
the roof. She sighed, and turning to her
husband said, 'I wish I had as many children as there are icicles hanging
there.' 'Nothing would please me more
either,' replied her husband. Then a
tiny icicle detached itself from the roof, and dropped into the woman's mouth,
who swallowed it with a smile, and said, 'Perhaps I shall give birth to a snow
child now!' Her husband laughed at his wife's strange idea, and they went back
into the house.
But
after a short time the woman gave birth to a little girl, who was as white as
snow and as cold as ice. If they brought
the child anywhere near the fire, it screamed loudly till they put it back into
some cool place. The little maid throve
wonderfully, and in a few months she could run about and speak. But she was not altogether easy to bring up,
and gave her parents much trouble and anxiety, for all summer she insisted on
spending in the cellar, and in the winter she would sleep outside in the snow,
and the colder it was the happier she seemed to be. Her father and mother called her simply 'Our
Snow-daughter,' and this name stuck to her all her life.
One
day her parents sat by the fire, talking over the extraordinary behaviour of
their daughter, who was disporting herself in the snowstorm that raged
outside. The woman sighed deeply and
said, 'I wish I had given birth to a Fire-son!' As she said these words, a
spark from the big wood fire flew into the woman's lap, and she said with a
laugh, 'Now perhaps I shall give birth to a Fire-son!'
The
man laughed at his wife's words, and thought it was a good joke. But he ceased to think it a joke when his
wife shortly afterwards gave birth to a boy, who screamed lustily till he was
put quite close to the fire, and who nearly yelled himself into a fit if the
Snow-daughter came anywhere near him.
The Snow-daughter herself avoided him as much as she could, and always
crept into a corner as far away from him as possible. The parents called the boy simply 'Our
Fire-son,' a name which stuck to him all his life. They had a great deal of trouble and worry
with him too; but he throve and grew very quickly, and before he was a year old
he could run about and talk. He was as
red as fire, and as hot to touch, and he always sat on the hearth quite close
to the fire, and complained of the cold; if his sister were in the room he
almost crept into the flames, while the girl on her part always complained of
the great heat if her brother were anywhere near. In summer the boy always lay out in the sun,
while the girl hid herself in the cellar: so it happened that the brother and
sister came very little into contact with each other--in fact, they carefully
avoided it.
Just
as the girl grew up into a beautiful woman, her father and mother both died one
after the other. Then the Fire-son, who
had grown up in the meantime into a fine, strong young man, said to his sister,
'I am going out into the world, for what is the use of remaining on here?'
'I
shall go with you,' she answered, 'for, except you, I have no one in the world,
and I have a feeling that if we set out together we shall be lucky.'
The
Fire-son said, 'I love you with all my heart, but at the same time I always
freeze if you are near me, and you nearly die of heat if I approach you! How shall we travel about together without
being odious the one to the other?'
'Don't
worry about that,' replied the girl, 'for I've thought it all over, and have
settled on a plan which will make us each able to bear with the other! See, I have had a fur cloak made for each of
us, and if we put them on I shall not feel the heat so much nor you the
cold.' So they put on the fur cloaks,
and set out cheerfully on their way, and for the first time in their lives
quite happy in each other's company.
For
a long time the Fire-son and the Snow-daughter wandered through the world, and
when at the beginning of winter they came to a big wood they determined to stay
there till spring. The Fire-son built
himself a hut where he always kept up a huge fire, while his sister with very
few clothes on stayed outside night and day.
Now it happened one day that the King of the land held a hunt in this
wood, and saw the Snow-daughter wandering about in the open air. He wondered very much who the beautiful girl
clad in such garments could be, and he stopped and spoke to her. He soon learnt that she could not stand heat,
and that her brother could not endure cold.
The King was so charmed by the Snow-daughter, that he asked her to be
his wife. The girl consented, and the
wedding was held with much state. The
King had a huge house of ice made for his wife underground, so that even in
summer it did not melt. But for his
brother-in-law he had a house built with huge ovens all round it, that were
kept heated all day and night. The
Fire-son was delighted, but the perpetual heat in which he lived made his body
so hot, that it was dangerous to go too close to him.
One
day the King gave a great feast, and asked his brother-in-law among the other
guests. The Fire-son did not appear till
everyone had assembled, and when he did, everyone fled outside to the open air,
so intense was the heat he gave forth.
Then the King was very angry and said, 'If I had known what a lot of
trouble you would have been, I would never have taken you into my house.' Then the Fire-son replied with a laugh,
'Don't be angry, dear brother! I love
heat and my sister loves cold--come here and let me embrace you, and then I'll
go home at once.' And before the King
had time to reply, the Fire-son seized him in a tight embrace. The King screamed aloud in agony, and when
his wife, the Snow-daughter, who had taken refuge from her brother in the next
room, hurried to him, the King lay dead on the ground burnt to a cinder. When the Snow-daughter saw this she turned on
her brother and flew at him. Then a
fight began, the like of which had never been seen on earth. When the people, attracted by the noise,
hurried to the spot, they saw the Snow-daughter melting into water and the
Fire-son burn to a cinder. And so ended
the unhappy brother and sister.
From
the Bukowinaer Tales and Legends. Von Wliolocki.
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