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Once upon
a time...
Two young men living in a small village fell in love with the
same girl. During the winter, it was all night except for an hour or
so about noon, when the darkness seemed a little less dark, and then
they used to see which of them could tempt her out for a sleigh ride
with the Northern Lights flashing above them, or which could
persuade her to come to a dance in some neighbouring barn. But when
the spring began, and the light grew longer, the hearts of the
villagers leapt at the sight of the sun, and a day was fixed for the
boats to be brought out, and the great nets to be spread in the bays
of some islands that lay a few miles to the north. Everybody went on
this expedition, and the two young men and the girl went with them.
They all sailed merrily across the sea chattering like a flock of
magpies, or singing their favourite songs. And when they reached the
shore, what an unpacking there was! For this was a noted fishing
ground, and here they would live, in little wooden huts, till autumn
and bad weather came round again.
The maiden and the two young men happened to share the same hut with
some friends, and fished daily from the same boat. And as time went
on, one of the youths remarked that the girl took less notice of him
than she did of his companion. At first he tried to think that he
was dreaming, and for a long while he kept his eyes shut very tight
to what he did not want to see, but in spite of his efforts, the
truth managed to wriggle through, and then the young man gave up
trying to deceive himself, and set about finding some way to get the
better of his rival.
The plan that he hit upon could not be carried out for some months;
but the longer the young man thought of it, the more pleased he was
with it, so he made no sign of his feelings, and waited patiently
till the moment came. This was the very day that they were all going
to leave the islands, and sail back to the mainland for the winter.
In the bustle and hurry of departure, the cunning fisherman
contrived that their boat should be the last to put off, and when
everything was ready, and the sails about to be set, he suddenly
called out:
'Oh, dear, what shall I do! I have left my best knife behind in the
hut. Run, like a good fellow, and get it for me, while I raise the
anchor and loosen the tiller.'
Not thinking any harm, the youth jumped back on shore and made his
way up the steep hank. At the door of the hut he stopped and looked
back, then started and gazed in horror. The head of the boat stood
out to sea, and he was left alone on the island.
Yes, there was no doubt of it--he was quite alone; and he had
nothing to help him except the knife which his comrade had purposely
dropped on the ledge of the window. For some minutes he was too
stunned by the treachery of his friend to think about anything at
all, but after a while he shook himself awake, and determined that
he would manage to keep alive somehow, if it were only to revenge
himself.
So he put the knife in his pocket and went off to a part of the
island which was not so bare as the rest, and had a small grove of
trees. :From one of these he cut himself a bow, which he strung with
a piece of cord that had been left lying about the huts.
When this was ready the young man ran down to the shore and shot one
or two sea-birds, which he plucked and cooked for supper.
In this way the months slipped by, and Christmas came round again.
The evening before, the youth went down to the rocks and into the
copse, collecting all the drift wood the sea had washed up or the
gale had blown down, and he piled it up in a great stack outside the
door, so that he might not have to fetch any all the next day. As
soon as his task was done, he paused and looked out towards the
mainland, thinking of Christmas Eve last year, and the merry dance
they had had. The night was still and cold, and by the help of the
Northern Lights he could almost sea across to the opposite coast,
when, suddenly, he noticed a boat, which seemed steering straight
for the island. At first he could hardly stand for joy, the chance
of speaking to another man was so delightful; but as the boat drew
near there was something, he could not tell what, that was different
from the boats which he had been used to all his life, and when it
touched the shore he saw that the people that filled it were beings
of another world than ours. Then he hastily stepped behind the wood
stack, and waited for what might happen next.
The strange folk one by one jumped on to the rocks, each bearing a
load of something that they wanted. Among the women he remarked two
young girls, more beautiful and better dressed than any of the rest,
carrying between them two great baskets full of provisions. The
young man peeped out cautiously to see what all this crowd could be
doing inside the tiny hut, but in a moment he drew back again, as
the girls returned, and looked about as if they wanted to find out
what sort of a place the island was.
Their sharp eyes soon discovered the form of a man crouching behind
the bundles of sticks, and at first they felt a little frightened,
and started as if they would run away. But the youth remained so
still, that they took courage and laughed gaily to each other. 'What
a strange creature, let us try what he is made of,' said one, and
she stooped down and gave him a pinch.
Now the young man had a pin sticking in the sleeve of his jacket,
and the moment the girl's hand touched him she pricked it so sharply
that the blood came. The girl screamed so loudly that the people all
ran out of their huts to see what was the matter. But directly they
caught sight of the man they turned and fled in the other direction,
and picking up the goods they had brought with them scampered as
fast as they could down to the shore. In an instant, boat, people,
and goods had vanished completely.
In their hurry they had, however, forgotten two things: a bundle of
keys which lay on the table, and the girl whom the pin had pricked,
and who now stood pale and helpless beside the wood stack.
'You will have to make me your wife,' she said at last, 'for you
have drawn my blood, and I belong to you.'
'Why not? I am quite willing,' answered he. 'But how do you suppose
we can manage to live till summer comes round again?'
'Do not be anxious about that,' said the girl; 'if you will only
marry me all will be well. I am very rich, and all my family are
rich also.'
Then the young man gave her his promise to make her his wife, and
the girl fulfilled her part of the bargain, and food was plentiful
on the island all through the long winter months, though he never
knew how it got there. And by-and-by it was spring once more, and
time for the fisher-folk to sail from the mainland.
'Where are we to go now?' asked the girl, one day, when the sun
seemed brighter and the wind softer than usual.
'I do not care where I go,' answered the young man; 'what do you
think?'
The girl replied that she would like to go somewhere right at the
other end of the island, and build a house, far away from the huts
of the fishing-folk. And he consented, and that very day they set
off in search of a sheltered spot on the banks of a stream, so that
it would be easy to get water.
In a tiny bay, on the opposite side of the island they found the
very thing, which seemed to have been made on purpose for them; and
as they were tired with their long walk, they laid themselves down
on a bank of moss among some birches and prepared to have a good
night's rest, so as to be fresh for work next day. But before she
went to sleep the girl turned to her husband, and said: 'If in your
dreams you fancy that you hear strange noises, be sure you do not
stir, or get up to see what it is.'
'Oh, it is not likely we shall hear any noises in such a quiet
place,' answered he, and fell sound asleep.
Suddenly he was awakened by a great clatter about his ears, as if
all the workmen in the world were sawing and hammering and building
close to him. He was just going to spring up and go to see what it
meant, when he luckily remembered his wife's words and lay still.
But the time till morning seemed very long, and with the first ray
of sun they both rose, and pushed aside the branches of the birch
trees. There, in the very place they had chosen, stood a beautiful
house--doors and windows, and everything all complete!
'Now you must fix on a spot for your cow-stalls,' said the girl,
when they had breakfasted off wild cherries; 'and take care it is
the proper size, neither too large nor too small.' And the husband
did as he was bid, though he wondered what use a cow-house could be,
as they had no cows to put in it. But as he was a little afraid of
his wife, who knew so much more than he, he asked no questions.
This night also he was awakened by the same sounds as before, and in
the morning they found, near the stream, the most beautiful
cow-house that ever was seen, with stalls and milk-pails and stools
all complete, indeed, everything that a cow-house could possibly
want, except the cows. Then the girl bade him measure out the ground
for a storehouse, and this, she said, might be as large as he
pleased; and when the storehouse was ready she proposed that they
should set off to pay her parents a visit.
The old people welcomed them heartily, and summoned their
neighbours, for many miles round, to a great feast in their honour.
In fact, for several weeks there was no work done on the farm at
all; and at length the young man and his wife grew tired of so much
play, and declared that they must return to their own home. But,
before they started on the journey, the wife whispered to her
husband: 'Take care to jump over the threshold as quick as you can,
or it will be the worse for you.'
The young man listened to her words, and sprang over the threshold
like an arrow from a bow; and it was well he did, for, no sooner was
he on the other side, than his father-in-law threw a great hammer at
him, which would have broken both his legs, if it had only touched
them.
When they had gone some distance on the road home, the girl turned
to her husband and said: 'Till you step inside the house, be sure
you do not look back, whatever you may hear or see.'
And the husband promised, and for a while all was still; and he
thought no more about the matter till he noticed at last that the
nearer he drew to the house the louder grew the noise of the
trampling of feet behind him. As he laid his hand upon the door he
thought he was safe, and turned to look. There, sure enough, was a
vast herd of cattle, which had been sent after him by his
father-in-law when he found that his daughter had been cleverer than
he. Half of the herd were already through the fence and cropping the
grass on the banks of the stream, but half still remained outside
and faded into nothing, even as he watched them.
However, enough cattle were left to make the young man rich, and he
and his wife lived happily together, except that every now and then
the girl vanished from his sight, and never told him where she had
been. For a long time he kept silence about it; but one day, when he
had been complaining of her absence, she said to him: 'Dear husband,
I am bound to go, even against my will, and there is only one way to
stop me. Drive a nail into the threshold, and then I can never pass
in or out.'
And so he did.
The Elf Maiden
from the Brown Fairy Book
Story Edited
by Andrew Lang |