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Once upon
a time...
A poor man and his wife lived in a little cottage, where they
supported themselves by catching fish in the nearest river, and got
on as best they could, living from hand to mouth. One day it
happened that when the fisherman drew in his net he found in it a
remarkable fish, for it was entirely of gold. As he was inspecting
it with some surprise, the fish opened its mouth and said: 'Listen
to me, fisher; if you will just throw me back into the water I'll
turn your poor little cottage into a splendid castle.'
The fisher replied: 'What good, pray, will a castle be to me if I
have nothing to eat in it?'
'Oh,' said the gold fish, 'I'll take care of that. There will be a
cupboard in the castle, in which you will find dishes of every kind
of food you can wish for most.'
'If that's the case,' said the man, 'I've no objection to oblige
you.'
'Yes,' observed the fish, 'but there is one condition attached to my
offer, and that is that you are not to reveal to a soul where your
good fortune comes from. If you say a word about it, it will all
vanish.'
The man threw the fish back into the water, and went home. But on
the spot where his cottage used to stand he found a spacious castle.
He opened his eyes wide, went in and found his wife dressed out in
smart clothes, sitting in a splendidly furnished drawing-room. She
was in high spirits, and cried out: 'Oh husband! how can this all
have happened? I am so pleased!'
'Yes,' said her husband, 'so am I pleased; but I'm uncommonly
hungry, and I want something to eat at once.'
Said his wife, 'I've got nothing, and I don't know where anything is
in this new house.'
'Never mind,' replied the man. 'I see a big cupboard there. Suppose
you unlock it.'
When the cupboard was opened they found meat, cakes, fruit, and
wine, all spread out in the most tempting fashions. The wife clapped
her hands with joy, and cried: 'Dear heart! what more can one wish
for?' and they sat down and ate and drank.
When they had finished the wife asked, 'But husband, where do all
these riches come from?'
'Ah!' said he, 'don't ask me. I dare not tell you. If I reveal the
secret to anyone, it will be all up with us.'
'Very well,' she replied, 'if I'm not to be told, of course I don't
want to know anything about it.'
But she was not really in earnest, for her curiosity never left her
a moment's peace by day or night, and she teazed and worried her
husband to such a pitch, that at length he quite lost patience and
blurted out that it all came from a wonderful golden fish which he
had caught and set free again. Hardly were the words well out of his
mouth, when castle, cupboard, and all vanished, and there they were
sitting in their poor little fishing hut once more.
The man had to betake himself to his former trade, and set to
fishing again. As luck would have it, he caught the golden fish a
second time.
'Now listen,' said the fish, 'if you'll throw me back into the
water, I'll give you back the castle and the cupboard with all its
good things; but now take care, and don't for your life betray where
you got them, or you'll just lose them again.'
'I'll be very careful,' promised the fisher, and threw the fish back
into the water. When he went home he found all their former
splendour restored, and his wife overjoyed at their good fortune.
But her curiosity still continued to torment her, and after
restraining it with a great effort for a couple of days, she began
questioning her husband again, as to what had happened, and how he
had managed.
The man kept silence for some time, but at last she irritated him so
much that he burst out with the secret, and in one moment the castle
was gone, and they sat once more in their wretched old hut.
'There!' exclaimed the man, 'you _would_ have it--now we may just go
on short commons.'
'Ah!' said his wife, 'after all I'd rather not have all the riches
in the world if I can't know where they come from--I shall not have
a moment's peace.'
The man took to his fishing again, and one day fate brought the gold
fish into his net for the third time. 'Well,' said the fish, 'I see
that I am evidently destined to fall into your hands. Now take me
home, and cut me into six pieces. Give two bits to your wife to eat,
two to your horse, and plant the remaining two in your garden, and
they will bring you a blessing.'
The man carried the fish home, and did exactly as he had been told.
After a time, it came to pass that from the two pieces he had
planted in the garden two golden lilies grew up, and that his horse
had two golden foals, whilst his wife gave birth to twin boys who
were all golden.
The children grew up both tall and handsome, and the foals and the
lilies grew with them.
One day the children came to their father and said, 'Father, we want
to mount on golden steeds, and ride forth to see the world.'
Their father answered sadly, 'How can I bear it if, when you are far
away, I know nothing about you?' and they said, 'The golden lilies
will tell you all about us if you look at them. If they seem to
droop, you will know we are ill, and if they fall down and fade
away, it will be a sign we are dead.'
So off they rode, and came to an inn where were a number of people
who, as soon as they saw the two golden lads, began to laugh and
jeer at them. When one of them heard this, his heart failed him, and
he thought he would go no further into the world, so he turned back
and rode home to his father, but his brother rode on till he reached
the outskirts of a huge forest. Here he was told, 'It will never do
for you to ride through the forest, it is full of robbers, and
you're sure to come to grief, especially when they see that you and
your horse are golden. They will certainly fall on you and kill
you.' However, he was not to be intimidated, but said, 'I must and
will ride on.'
So he procured some bears' skins, and covered himself and his horse
with them, so that not a particle of gold could be seen, and then
rode bravely on into the heart of the forest.
When he had got some way he heard a rustling through the bushes and
presently a sound of voices. Someone whispered on one side of him:
'There goes someone,' and was answered from the other side: 'Oh, let
him pass. He's only a bear-keeper, and as poor as any church mouse.'
So golden lad rode through the forest and no harm befell him.
One day he came to a village, where he saw a girl who struck him as
being the loveliest creature in the whole world, and as he felt a
great love for her, he went up to her and said: 'I love you with all
my heart; will you be my wife?' And the girl liked him so much that
she put her hand in his and replied: 'Yes, I will be your wife, and
will be true to you as long as I live.'
So they were married, and in the middle of all the festivities and
rejoicings the bride's father came home and was not a little
surprised at finding his daughter celebrating her wedding. He
enquired: 'And who is the bridegroom?'
Then someone pointed out to him the golden lad, who was still
wrapped up in the bear's skin, and the father exclaimed angrily:
'Never shall a mere bear-keeper have my daughter,' and tried to rush
at him and kill him. But the bride did all she could to pacify him,
and begged hard, saying: 'After all he is my husband, and I love him
with all my heart,' so that at length he gave in.
However, he could not dismiss the thought from his mind, and next
morning he rose very early, for he felt he must go and look at his
daughter's husband and see whether he really was nothing better than
a mere ragged beggar. So he went to his son-in-law's room, and who
should he see lying in the bed but a splendid golden man, and the
rough bearskin thrown on the ground close by. Then he slipped
quietly away, and thought to himself, 'How lucky that I managed to
control my rage! I should certainly have committed a great crime.'
Meantime the golden lad dreamt that he was out hunting and was
giving chase to a noble stag, and when he woke he said to his bride:
'I must go off and hunt.' She felt very anxious, and begged he would
stay at home, adding: 'Some mishap might so easily befall you,' but
he answered, 'I must and will go.'
So he went off into the forest, and before long a fine stag, such as
he had seen in his dream, stopped just in front of him. He took aim,
and was about to fire when the stag bounded away. Then he started
off in pursuit, making his way through bushes and briars, and never
stopped all day; but in the evening the stag entirely disappeared,
and when golden lad came to look about him he found himself just
opposite a hut in which lived a witch. He knocked at the door, which
was opened by a little old woman who asked, 'What do you want at
this late hour in the midst of this great forest?'
He said, 'Haven't you seen a stag about here?'
'Yes,' said she, 'I know the stag well,' and as she spoke a little
dog ran out of the house and began barking and snapping at the
stranger.
'Be quiet, you little toad,' he cried, 'or I'll shoot you dead.'
Then the witch flew into a great rage, and screamed out, 'What!
you'll kill my dog, will you?' and the next moment he was turned to
stone and lay there immovable, whilst his bride waited for him in
vain and thought to herself, 'Alas! no doubt the evil I feared, and
which has made my heart so heavy, has befallen him.'
Meantime, the other brother was standing near the golden lilies at
home, when suddenly one of them bent over and fell to the ground.
'Good heavens!' cried he, 'some great misfortune has befallen my
brother. I must set off at once; perhaps I may still be in time to
save him.'
His father entreated him, 'Stay at home. If I should lose you too,
what would become of me?'
But his son replied, 'I must and will go.'
Then he mounted his golden horse, and rode off till he reached the
forest where his brother lay transformed to stone. The old witch
came out of her house and called to him, for she would gladly have
cast her spells on him too, but he took care not to go near her, and
called out: 'Restore my brother to life at once, or I'll shoot you
down on the spot.'
Reluctantly she touched the stone with her finger, and in a moment
it resumed its human shape. The two golden lads fell into each
other's arms and kissed each other with joy, and then rode off
together to the edge of the forest, where they parted, one to return
to his old father, and the other to his bride.
When the former got home his father said, 'I knew you had delivered
your brother, for all of a sudden the golden lily reared itself up
and burst into blossom.'
Then they all lived happily to their lives' ends, and all things
went well with them.
The Golden Lads
from the Green Fairy Book
Story Edited
by Andrew Lang |