<h3><SPAN name="chap71"></SPAN>71 How Six Men Got on in the World</h3>
<p>There was once a man who understood all kinds of arts; he served in war, and
behaved well and bravely, but when the war was over he received his dismissal,
and three farthings for his expenses on the way. “Stop,” said he,
“I shall not be content with this. If I can only meet with the right
people, the King will yet have to give me all the treasure of the
country.” Then full of anger he went into the forest, and saw a man
standing therein who had plucked up six trees as if they were blades of corn.
He said to him, “Wilt thou be my servant and go with me?”
“Yes,” he answered, “but, first, I will take this little
bundle of sticks home to my mother,” and he took one of the trees, and
wrapped it round the five others, lifted the bundle on his back, and carried it
away. Then he returned and went with his master, who said, “We two ought
to be able to get through the world very well,” and when they had walked
on for a short while they found a huntsman who was kneeling, had shouldered his
gun, and was about to fire. The master said to him, “Huntsman, what art
thou going to shoot?” He answered, “Two miles from here a fly is
sitting on the branch of an oak-tree, and I want to shoot its left eye
out.” “Oh, come with me,” said the man, “if we three
are together, we certainly ought to be able to get on in the world!” The
huntsman was ready, and went with him, and they came to seven windmills whose
sails were turning round with great speed, and yet no wind was blowing either
on the right or the left, and no leaf was stirring. Then said the man, “I
know not what is driving the windmills, not a breath of air is stirring,”
and he went onwards with his servants, and when they had walked two miles they
saw a man sitting on a tree who was shutting one nostril, and blowing out of
the other. “Good gracious! what are you doing up there?” He
answered, “Two miles from here are seven windmills; look, I am blowing
them till they turn round.” “Oh, come with me,” said the man.
“If we four are together, we shall carry the whole world before
us!” Then the blower came down and went with him, and after a while they
saw a man who was standing on one leg and had taken off the other, and laid it
beside him. Then the master said, “You have arranged things very
comfortably to have a rest.” “I am a runner,” he replied,
“and to stop myself running far too fast, I have taken off one of my
legs, for if I run with both, I go quicker than any bird can fly.”
“Oh, go with me. If we five are together, we shall carry the whole world
before us.” So he went with them, and it was not long before they met a
man who wore a cap, but had put it quite on one ear. Then the master said to
him, “Gracefully, gracefully, don’t stick your cap on one ear, you
look just like a tom-fool!” “I must not wear it otherwise,”
said he, “for if I set my hat straight, a terrible frost comes on, and
all the birds in the air are frozen, and drop dead on the ground.”
“Oh, come with me,” said the master. “If we six are together,
we can carry the whole world before us.”</p>
<p>Now the six came to a town where the King had proclaimed that whosoever ran a
race with his daughter and won the victory, should be her husband, but
whosoever lost it, must lose his head. Then the man presented himself and said,
“I will, however, let my servant run for me.” The King replied,
“Then his life also must be staked, so that his head and thine are both
set on the victory.” When that was settled and made secure, the man
buckled the other leg on the runner, and said to him, “Now be nimble, and
help us to win.” It was fixed that the one who was first to bring some
water from a far distant well was to be the victor. The runner received a
pitcher, and the King’s daughter one too, and they began to run at the
same time, but in an instant, when the King’s daughter had got a very
little way, the people who were looking on could see no more of the runner, and
it was just as if the wind had whistled by. In a short time he reached the
well, filled his pitcher with water, and turned back. Half-way home, however,
he was overcome with fatigue, and set his pitcher down, lay down himself, and
fell asleep. He had, however, made a pillow of a horse’s skull which was
lying on the ground, in order that he might lie uncomfortably, and soon wake up
again. In the meantime the King’s daughter, who could also run very well
quite as well as any ordinary mortal can had reached the well, and was hurrying
back with her pitcher full of water, and when she saw the runner lying there
asleep, she was glad and said, “My enemy is delivered over into my
hands,” emptied his pitcher, and ran on. And now all would have been lost
if by good luck the huntsman had not been standing at the top of the castle,
and had not seen everything with his sharp eyes. Then said he, “The
King’s daughter shall still not prevail against us;” and he loaded
his gun, and shot so cleverly, that he shot the horse’s skull away from
under the runner’s head without hurting him. Then the runner awoke, leapt
up, and saw that his pitcher was empty, and that the King’s daughter was
already far in advance. He did not lose heart, however, but ran back to the
well with his pitcher, again drew some water, and was at home again, ten
minutes before the King’s daughter. “Behold!” said he,
“I have not bestirred myself till now, it did not deserve to be called
running before.”</p>
<p>But it pained the King, and still more his daughter, that she should be carried
off by a common disbanded soldier like that; so they took counsel with each
other how to get rid of him and his companions. Then said the King to her,
“I have thought of a way; don’t be afraid, they shall not come back
again.” And he said to them, “You shall now make merry together,
and eat and drink,” and he conducted them to a room which had a floor of
iron, and the doors also were of iron, and the windows were guarded with iron
bars. There was a table in the room covered with delicious food, and the King
said to them, “Go in, and enjoy yourselves.” And when they were
inside, he ordered the doors to be shut and bolted. Then he sent for the cook,
and commanded him to make a fire under the room until the iron became red-hot.
This the cook did, and the six who were sitting at table began to feel quite
warm, and they thought the heat was caused by the food; but as it became still
greater, and they wanted to get out, and found that the doors and windows were
bolted, they became aware that the King must have an evil intention, and wanted
to suffocate them. “He shall not succeed, however,” said the one
with the cap. “I will cause a frost to come, before which the fire shall
be ashamed, and creep away.” Then he put his cap on straight, and
immediately there came such a frost that all heat disappeared, and the food on
the dishes began to freeze. When an hour or two had passed by, and the King
believed that they had perished in the heat, he had the doors opened to behold
them himself. But when the doors were opened, all six were standing there,
alive and well, and said that they should very much like to get out to warm
themselves, for the very food was fast frozen to the dishes with the cold.
Then, full of anger, the King went down to the cook, scolded him, and asked why
he had not done what he had been ordered to do. But the cook replied,
“There is heat enough there, just look yourself.” Then the King saw
that a fierce fire was burning under the iron room, and perceived that there
was no getting the better of the six in this way.</p>
<p>Again the King considered how to get rid of his unpleasant guests, and caused
their chief to be brought and said, “If thou wilt take gold and renounce
my daughter, thou shalt have as much as thou wilt.”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes, Lord King,” he answered, “give me as much as my
servant can carry, and I will not ask for your daughter.”</p>
<p>On this the King was satisfied, and the other continued, “In fourteen
days, I will come and fetch it.” Thereupon he summoned together all the
tailors in the whole kingdom, and they were to sit for fourteen days and sew a
sack. And when it was ready, the strong one who could tear up trees had to take
it on his back, and go with it to the King. Then said the King, “Who can
that strong fellow be who is carrying a bundle of linen on his back that is as
big as a house?” and he was alarmed and said, “What a lot of gold
he can carry away!” Then he commanded a ton of gold to be brought; it
took sixteen of his strongest men to carry it, but the strong one snatched it
up in one hand, put it in his sack, and said, “Why don’t you bring
more at the same time? that hardly covers the bottom!” Then, little by
little, the King caused all his treasure to be brought thither, and the strong
one pushed it into the sack, and still the sack was not half full with it.
“Bring more,” cried he, “these few crumbs don’t fill
it.” Then seven thousand carts with gold had to be gathered together in
the whole kingdom, and the strong one thrust them and the oxen harnessed to
them into his sack. “I will examine it no longer,” said he,
“but will just take what comes, so long as the sack is but full.”
When all that was inside, there was still room for a great deal more; then he
said, “I will just make an end of the thing; people do sometimes tie up a
sack even when it is not full.” So he took it on his back, and went away
with his comrades. When the King now saw how one single man was carrying away
the entire wealth of the country, he became enraged, and bade his horsemen
mount and pursue the six, and ordered them to take the sack away from the
strong one. Two regiments speedily overtook the six, and called out, “You
are prisoners, put down the sack with the gold, or you will all be cut to
pieces!” “What say you?” cried the blower, “that we are
prisoners! Rather than that should happen, all of you shall dance about in the
air.” And he closed one nostril, and with the other blew on the two
regiments. Then they were driven away from each other, and carried into the
blue sky over all the mountains one here, the other there. One sergeant cried
for mercy; he had nine wounds, and was a brave fellow who did not deserve ill
treatment. The blower stopped a little so that he came down without injury, and
then the blower said to him, “Now go home to thy King, and tell him he
had better send some more horsemen, and I will blow them all into the
air.” When the King was informed of this he said, “Let the rascals
go. They have the best of it.” Then the six conveyed the riches home,
divided it amongst them, and lived in content until their death.</p>
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