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Once upon
a time...
A poor woodcutter lived with his wife and three daughters in
a little hut on the borders of a great forest.
One morning as he was going to his work, he said to his wife, 'Let
our eldest daughter bring me my lunch into the wood; and so that she
shall not lose her way, I will take a bag of millet with me, and
sprinkle the seed on the path.'
When the sun had risen high over the forest, the girl set out with a
basin of soup. But the field and wood sparrows, the larks and
finches, blackbirds and green finches had picked up the millet long
ago, and the girl could not find her way.
She went on and on, till the sun set and night came on. The trees
rustled in the darkness, the owls hooted, and she began to be very
much frightened. Then she saw in tile distance a light that twinkled
between the trees. 'There must be people living yonder,' she
thought, 'who will take me in for the night,' and she began walking
towards it.
Not long afterwards she came to a house with lights in the windows.
She knocked at the door, and a gruff voice called, 'Come in!'
The girl stepped into the dark entrance, and tapped at the door of
the room.
'Just walk in,' cried the voice, and when she opened the door there
sat an old gray-haired man at the table. His face was resting on his
hands, and his white beard flowed over the table almost down to the
ground.
By the stove lay three beasts, a hen, a cock, and a brindled cow.
The girl told the old man her story, and asked for a night's
lodging.
The man said:
Pretty cock, Pretty hen, And you, pretty brindled cow, What do you
say now?
'Duks,' answered the beasts; and that must have meant, 'We are quite
willing,' for the old man went on, 'Here is abundance; go into the
back kitchen and cook us a supper.'
The girl found plenty of everything in the kitchen, and cooked a
good meal, but she did not think of the beasts.
She placed the full dishes on the table, sat down opposite the gray-haired
man, and ate till her hunger was appeased.
When she was satisfied, she said, 'But now I am so tired, where is a
bed in which I can sleep? '
The beasts answered:
You have eaten with him, You have drunk with him, Of us you have not
thought, Sleep then as you ought!
Then the old man said, 'Go upstairs, and there you will find a
bedroom; shake the bed, and put clean sheets on, and go to sleep.'
The maiden went upstairs, and when she had made the bed, she lay
down.
After some time the gray-haired man came, looked at her by the light
of his candle, and shook his head. And when he saw that she was
sound asleep, he opened a trapdoor and let her fall into the cellar.
The woodcutter came home late in the evening, and reproached his
wife for leaving him all day without food.
'No, I did not,' she answered; 'the girl went off with your dinner.
She must have lost her way, but will no doubt come back to-morrow.'
But at daybreak the woodcutter started off into the wood, and this
time asked his second daughter to bring his food. 'I will take a bag
of lentils,' said he; 'they are larger than millet, and the girl
will see them better and be sure to find her way.'
At midday the maiden took the food, but the lentils had all gone; as
on the previous day, the wood birds had eaten them all.
The maiden wandered about the wood till nightfall, when she came in
the same way to the old man's house, and asked for food and a
night's lodging.
The man with the white hair again asked the beasts:
Pretty cock, Pretty hen, And you, pretty brindled cow, What do you
say now?
The beasts answered, 'Duks,' and everything happened as on the
former day.
The girl cooked a good meal, ate and drank with the old man, and did
not trouble herself about the animals.
And when she asked for a bed, they replied:
You have eaten with him You have drunk with him, Of us you have not
thought, Now sleep as you ought!
And when she was asleep, the old man shook his head over her, and
let her fall into the cellar.
On the third morning the woodcutter said to his wife, 'Send our
youngest child to-day with my dinner. She is always good and
obedient, and will keep to the right path, and not wander away like
her sisters, idle drones!'
But the mother said, 'Must I lose my dearest child too?'
'Do not fear,' he answered; 'she is too clever and intelligent to
lose her way. I will take plenty of peas with me and strew them
along; they are even larger than lentils, and will show her the
way.'
But when the maiden started off with the basket on her arm, the wood
pigeons had eaten up the peas, and she did not know which way to go.
She was much distressed, and thought constantly of her poor hungry
father and her anxious mother. At last, when it grew dark, she saw
the little light, and came to the house in the wood. She asked
prettily if she might stay there for the night, and the man with the
white beard asked his beasts again:
Pretty cock, Pretty hen, And you, pretty brindled cow, What do you
say now?
'Duks,' they said. Then the maiden stepped up to the stove where the
animals were lying, and stroked the cock and the hen, and scratched
the brindled cow between its horns.
And when at the bidding of the old man she had prepared a good
supper, and the dishes were standing on the table, she said, 'Shall
I have plenty while the good beasts have nothing? There is food to
spare outside; I will attend to them first.'
Then she went out and fetched barley and strewed it before the cock
and hen, and brought the cow an armful of sweet-smelling hay.
'Eat that, dear beasts,' she said,' and when you are thirsty you
shall have a good drink.'
Then she fetched a bowl of water, and the cock and hen flew on to
the edge, put their beaks in, and then held up their heads as birds
do when they drink, and the brindled cow also drank her fill. When
the beasts were satisfied, the maiden sat down beside the old man at
the table and ate what was left for her. Soon the cock and hen began
to tuck their heads under their wings, and the brindled cow blinked
its eyes, so the maiden said, 'Shall we not go to rest now?'
Pretty cock, Pretty hen, And you, pretty brindled cow, What do you
say now?
The animals said, 'Duks:
You have eaten with us, You have drunk with us, You have tended us
right, So we wish you good night.'
The maiden therefore went upstairs, made the bed and put on clean
sheets and fell asleep. She slept peacefully till midnight, when
there was such a noise in the house that she awoke. Everything
trembled and shook; the animals sprang up and dashed themselves in
terror against the wall; the beams swayed as if they would be torn
from their foundations, it seemed as if the stairs were tumbling
down, and then the roof fell in with a crash. Then all became still,
and as no harm came to the maiden she lay down again and fell
asleep. But when she awoke again in broad daylight, what a sight met
her eyes! She was lying in a splendid room furnished with royal
splendour; the walls were covered with golden flowers on a green
ground; the bed was of ivory and the counterpane of velvet, and on a
stool near by lay a pair of slippers studded with pearls. The maiden
thought she must be dreaming, but in came three servants richly
dressed, who asked what were her commands. 'Go,' said the maiden, 'I
will get up at once and cook the old man's supper for him, and then
I will feed the pretty cock and hen and the brindled cow.'
But the door opened and in came a handsome young man, who said, 'I
am a king's son, and was condemned by a wicked witch to live as an
old man in this wood with no company but that of my three servants,
who were transformed into a cock, a hen, and a brindled cow. The
spell could only be broken by the arrival of a maiden who should
show herself kind not only to men but to beasts. You are that
maiden, and last night at midnight we were freed, and this poor
house was again transformed into my royal palace.
As they stood there the king's son told his three servants to go and
fetch the maiden's parents to be present at the wedding feast.
'But where are my two sisters?' asked the maid.
'I shut them up in the cellar, but in the morning they shall be led
forth into the forest and shall serve a charcoal burner until they
have improved, and will never again suffer poor animals to go
hungry.'
The House in the Wood
from the Pink Fairy Book
Story Edited
by Andrew Lang |