THE
STORY OF HASSEBU
Once
upon a time there lived a poor woman who had only one child, and he was a
little boy called Hassebu. When he ceased to be a baby, and his mother thought
it was time for him to learn to read, she sent him to school. And, after he had
done with school, he was put into a shop to learn how to make clothes, and did
not learn; and he was put to do silversmith's work, and did not learn; and
whatsoever he was taught, he did not learn it. His mother never wished him to
do anything he did not like, so she said: 'Well, stay at home, my son.' And he
stayed at home, eating and sleeping.
One
day the boy said to his mother: 'What was my father's business?'
'He
was a very learned doctor,' answered she.
'Where,
then, are his books?' asked Hassebu.
'Many
days have passed, and I have thought nothing of them. But look inside and see
if they are there.' So Hassebu looked, and saw they were eaten by insects, all
but one book, which he took away and read.
He
was sitting at home one morning poring over the medicine book, when some
neighbours came by and said to his mother: 'Give us this boy, that we may go
together to cut wood.' For wood-cutting was their trade, and they loaded
several donkeys with the wood, and sold it in the town.
And
his mother answered, 'Very well; to-morrow I will buy him a donkey, and you can
all go together.'
So
the donkey was bought, and the neighbours came, and they worked hard all day,
and in the evening they brought the wood back into the town, and sold it for a
good sum of money. And for six days they went and did the like, but on the
seventh it rained, and the wood-cutters ran and hid in the rocks, all but
Hassebu, who did not mind wetting, and stayed where he was.
While
he was sitting in the place where the wood-cutters had left him, he took up a
stone that lay near him, and idly dropped it on the ground. It rang with a
hollow sound, and he called to his companions, and said, 'Come here and listen;
the ground seems hollow!'
'Knock
again!' cried they. And he knocked and listened.
'Let
us dig,' said the boy. And they dug, and found a large pit like a well, filled
with honey up to the brim.
'This
is better than firewood,' said they; 'it will bring us more money. And as you
have found it, Hassebu, it is you who must go inside and dip out the honey and
give to us, and we will take it to the town and sell it, and will divide the
money with you.'
The
following day each man brought every bowl and vessel he could find at home, and
Hassebu filled them all with honey. And this he did every day for three months.
At
the end of that time the honey was very nearly finished, and there was only a
little left, quite at the bottom, and that was very deep down, so deep that it
seemed as if it must be right in the middle of the earth. Seeing this, the men
said to Hassebu, 'We will put a rope under your arms, and let you down, so that
you may scrape up all the honey that is left, and when you have done we will
lower the rope again, and you shall make it fast, and we will draw you up.'
'Very
well,' answered the boy, and he went down, and he scraped and scraped till
there was not so much honey left as would cover the point of a needle. 'Now I
am ready!' he cried; but they consulted together and said, 'Let us leave him
there inside the pit, and take his share of the money, and we will tell his
mother, "Your son was caught by a lion and carried off into the forest,
and we tried to follow him, but could not." '
Then
they arose and went into the town and told his mother as they had agreed, and
she wept much and made her mourning for many months. And when the men were
dividing the money, one said, 'Let us send a little to our friend's mother,'
and they sent some to her; and every day one took her rice, and one oil; one
took her meat, and one took her cloth, every day.
It
did not take long for Hassebu to find out that his companions had left him to
die in the pit, but he had a brave heart, and hoped that he might be able to
find a way out for himself. So he at once began to explore the pit and found it
ran back a long way underground. And by night he slept, and by day he took a
little of the honey he had gathered and ate it; and so many days passed by.
One
morning, while he was sitting on a rock having his breakfast, a large scorpion
dropped down at his feet, and he took a stone and killed it, fearing it would
sting him. Then suddenly the thought darted into his head, 'This scorpion must
have come from somewhere! Perhaps there is a hole. I will go and look for it,' and
he felt all round the walls of the pit till he found a very little hole in the
roof of the pit, with a tiny glimmer of light at the far end of it. Then his
heart felt glad, and he took out his knife and dug and dug, till the little
hole became a big one, and he could wriggle himself through. And when he had
got outside, he saw a large open space in front of him, and a path leading out
of it.
He
went along the path, on and on, till he reached a large house, with a golden
door standing open. Inside was a great hall, and in the middle of the hall a
throne set with precious stones and a sofa spread with the softest cushions.
And he went in and lay down on it, and fell fast asleep, for he had wandered
far.
By-and-by
there was a sound of people coming through the courtyard, and the measured
tramp of soldiers. This was the King of the Snakes coming in state to his
palace.
They
entered the hall, but all stopped in surprise at finding a man lying on the
king's own bed. The soldiers wished to kill him at once, but the king said,
'Leave him alone, put me on a chair,' and the soldiers who were carrying him
knelt on the floor, and he slid from their shoulders on to a chair. When he was
comfortably seated, he turned to his soldiers, and bade them wake the stranger
gently. And they woke him, and he sat up and saw many snakes all round him, and
one of them very beautiful, decked in royal robes.
'Who
are you?' asked Hassebu.
'I
am the King of the Snakes,' was the reply, 'and this is my palace. And will you
tell me who you are, and where you come from?'
'My
name is Hassebu, but whence I come I know not, nor whither I go.'
'Then
stay for a little with me,' said the king, and he bade his soldiers bring water
from the spring and fruits from the forest, and to set them before the guest.
For
some days Hassebu rested and feasted in the palace of the King of the Snakes,
and then he began to long for his mother and his own country. So he said to the
King of the Snakes, 'Send me home, I pray.'
But
the King of the Snakes answered, 'When you go home, you will do me evil!'
'I
will do you no evil,' replied Hassebu; 'send me home, I pray.'
But
the king said, 'I know it. If I send you home, you will come back, and kill me.
I dare not do it.' But Hassebu begged so hard that at last the king said,
'Swear that when you get home you will not go to bathe where many people are
gathered.' And Hassebu swore, and the king ordered his soldiers to take Hassebu
in sight of his native city. Then he went straight to his mother's house, and
the heart of his mother was glad.
Now
the Sultan of the city was very ill, and all the wise men said that the only
thing to cure him was the flesh of the King of the Snakes, and that the only
man who could get it was a man with a strange mark on his chest. So the Vizir
had set people to watch at the public baths, to see if such a man came there.
For
three days Hassebu remembered his promise to the King of the Snakes, and did
not go near the baths; then came a morning so hot he could hardly breathe, and
he forgot all about it.
The
moment he had slipped off his robe he was taken before the Vizir, who said to
him, 'Lead us to the place where the King of the Snakes lives.'
'I
do not know it!' answered he, but the Vizir did not believe him, and had him
bound and beaten till his back was all torn.
Then
Hassebu cried, 'Loose me, that I may take you.'
They
went together a long, long way, till they reached the palace of the King of the
Snakes.
And
Hassebu said to the King: 'It was not I: look at my back and you will see how
they drove me to it.'
'Who
has beaten you like this?' asked the King.
'It
was the Vizir,' replied Hassebu.
'Then
I am already dead,' said the King sadly, 'but you must carry me there
yourself.'
So
Hassebu carried him. And on the way the King said, 'When I arrive, I shall be
killed, and my flesh will be cooked. But take some of the water that I am boiled
in, and put it in a bottle and lay it on one side. The Vizir will tell you to
drink it, but be careful not to do so. Then take some more of the water, and
drink it, and you will become a great physician, and the third supply you will
give to the Sultan. And when the Vizir comes to you and asks, "Did you
drink what I gave you?" you must answer, "I did, and this is for
you," and he will drink it and die! and your soul will rest.'
And
they went their way into the town, and all happened as the King of the Snakes
had said.
And
the Sultan loved Hassebu, who became a great physician, and cured many sick
people. But he was always sorry for the poor King of the Snakes.
[Adapted
from Swahili Tales,]
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