<h3><SPAN name="chap126"></SPAN>126 Ferdinand the Faithful</h3>
<p>Once on a time lived a man and a woman who so long as they were rich had no
children, but when they were poor they had a little boy. They could, however,
find no godfather for him, so the man said he would just go to another place to
see if he could get one there. As he went, a poor man met him, who asked him
where he was going. He said he was going to see if he could get a godfather,
that he was poor, so no one would stand as godfather for him. “Oh,”
said the poor man, “you are poor, and I am poor; I will be godfather for
you, but I am so ill off I can give the child nothing. Go home and tell the
nurse that she is to come to the church with the child.”</p>
<p>When they all got to the church together, the beggar was already there, and he
gave the child the name of Ferdinand the Faithful.</p>
<p>When he was going out of the church, the beggar said, “Now go home, I can
give you nothing, and you likewise ought to give me nothing.” But he gave
a key to the nurse, and told her when she got home she was to give it to the
father, who was to take care of it until the child was fourteen years old, and
then he was to go on the heath where there was a castle which the key would
fit, and that all which was therein should belong to him. Now when the child
was seven years old and had grown very big, he once went to play with some
other boys, and each of them boasted that he had got more from his godfather
than the other; but the child could say nothing, and was vexed, and went home
and said to his father, “Did I get nothing at all, then, from my
godfather?” “Oh, yes,” said the father, “thou hadst a
key if there is a castle standing on the heath, just go to it and open
it.” Then the boy went thither, but no castle was to be seen, or heard
of.</p>
<p>After seven years more, when he was fourteen years old, he again went thither,
and there stood the castle. When he had opened it, there was nothing within but
a horse, a white one. Then the boy was so full of joy because he had a horse,
that he mounted on it and galloped back to his father. “Now I have a
white horse, and I will travel,” said he. So he set out, and as he was on
his way, a pen was lying on the road. At first he thought he would pick it up,
but then again he thought to himself, “Thou shouldst leave it lying
there; thou wilt easily find a pen where thou art going, if thou hast need of
one.” As he was thus riding away, a voice called after him,
“Ferdinand the Faithful, take it with thee.” He looked around, but
saw no one, then he went back again and picked it up. When he had ridden a
little way farther, he passed by a lake, and a fish was lying on the bank,
gasping and panting for breath, so he said, “Wait, my dear fish, I will
help thee get into the water,” and he took hold of it by the tail, and
threw it into the lake. Then the fish put its head out of the water and said,
“As thou hast helped me out of the mud I will give thee a flute; when
thou art in any need, play on it, and then I will help thee, and if ever thou
lettest anything fall in the water, just play and I will reach it out to
thee.” Then he rode away, and there came to him a man who asked him where
he was going. “Oh, to the next place.” Then what his name was?
“Ferdinand the Faithful.” “So! then we have got almost the
same name, I am called Ferdinand the Unfaithful.” And they both set out
to the inn in the nearest place.</p>
<p>Now it was unfortunate that Ferdinand the Unfaithful knew everything that the
other had ever thought and everything he was about to do; he knew it by means
of all kinds of wicked arts. There was, however, in the inn an honest girl, who
had a bright face and behaved very prettily. She fell in love with Ferdinand
the Faithful because he was a handsome man, and she asked him whither he was
going. “Oh, I am just travelling round about,” said he. Then she
said he ought to stay there, for the King of that country wanted an attendant
or an outrider, and he ought to enter his service. He answered he could not
very well go to any one like that and offer himself. Then said the maiden,
“Oh, but I will soon do that for you.” And so she went straight to
the King, and told him that she knew of an excellent servant for him. He was
well pleased with that, and had Ferdinand the Faithful brought to him, and
wanted to make him his servant. He, however, liked better to be an outrider,
for where his horse was, there he also wanted to be, so the King made him an
outrider. When Ferdinand the Unfaithful learnt that, he said to the girl,
“What! Dost thou help him and not me?” “Oh,” said the
girl, “I will help thee too.” She thought, “I must keep
friends with that man, for he is not to be trusted.” She went to the
King, and offered him as a servant, and the King was willing.</p>
<p>Now when the King met his lords in the morning, he always lamented and said,
“Oh, if I had but my love with me.” Ferdinand the Unfaithful was,
however, always hostile to Ferdinand the Faithful. So once, when the King was
complaining thus, he said, “You have the outrider, send him away to get
her, and if he does not do it, his head must be struck off.” Then the
King sent for Ferdinand the Faithful, and told him that there was, in this
place or in that place, a girl he loved, and that he was to bring her to him,
and if he did not do it he should die.</p>
<p>Ferdinand the Faithful went into the stable to his white horse, and complained
and lamented, “Oh, what an unhappy man I am!” Then someone behind
him cried, “Ferdinand the Faithful, why weepest thou?” He looked
round but saw no one, and went on lamenting; “Oh, my dear little white
horse, now must I leave thee; now must I die.” Then some one cried once
more, “Ferdinand the Faithful, why weepest thou?” Then for the
first time he was aware that it was his little white horse who was putting that
question. “Dost thou speak, my little white horse; canst thou do
that?” And again, he said, “I am to go to this place and to that,
and am to bring the bride; canst thou tell me how I am to set about it?”
Then answered the little white horse, “Go thou to the King, and say if he
will give thou what thou must have, thou wilt get her for him. If he will give
thee a ship full of meat, and a ship full of bread, it will succeed. Great
giants dwell on the lake, and if thou takest no meat with thee for them, they
will tear thee to pieces, and there are the large birds which would pick the
eyes out of thy head if thou hadst no bread for them.” Then the King made
all the butchers in the land kill, and all the bakers bake, that the ships
might be filled. When they were full, the little white horse said to Ferdinand
the Faithful, “Now mount me, and go with me into the ship, and then when
the giants come, say,</p>
<p class="poem">
“Peace, peace, my dear little giants,<br/>
I have had thought of ye,<br/>
Something I have brought for ye;”</p>
<p>and when the birds come, thou shalt again say,</p>
<p class="poem">
“Peace, peace, my dear little birds,<br/>
I have had thought of ye,<br/>
Something I have brought for ye;”</p>
<p>then they will do nothing to thee, and when thou comest to the castle, the
giants will help thee. Then go up to the castle, and take a couple of giants
with thee. There the princess lies sleeping; thou must, however, not awaken
her, but the giants must lift her up, and carry her in her bed to the
ship.” And now everything took place as the little white horse had said,
and Ferdinand the Faithful gave the giants and the birds what he had brought
with him for them, and that made the giants willing, and they carried the
princess in her bed to the King. And when she came to the King, she said she
could not live, she must have her writings, they had been left in her castle.
Then by the instigation of Ferdinand the Unfaithful, Ferdinand the Faithful was
called, and the King told him he must fetch the writings from the castle, or he
should die. Then he went once more into the stable, and bemoaned himself and
said, “Oh, my dear little white horse, now I am to go away again, how am
I to do it?” Then the little white horse said he was just to load the
ships full again. So it happened again as it had happened before, and the
giants and the birds were satisfied, and made gentle by the meat. When they
came to the castle, the white horse told Ferdinand the Faithful that he must go
in, and that on the table in the princess’s bed-room lay the writings.
And Ferdinand the Faithful went in, and fetched them. When they were on the
lake, he let his pen fall into the water; then said the white horse, “Now
I cannot help thee at all.” But he remembered his flute, and began to
play on it, and the fish came with the pen in its mouth, and gave it to him. So
he took the writings to the castle, where the wedding was celebrated.</p>
<p>The Queen, however, did not love the King because he had no nose, but she would
have much liked to love Ferdinand the Faithful. Once, therefore, when all the
lords of the court were together, the Queen said she could do feats of magic,
that she could cut off any one’s head and put it on again, and that one
of them ought just to try it. But none of them would be the first, so Ferdinand
the Faithful, again at the instigation of Ferdinand the Unfaithful, undertook
it and she hewed off his head, and put it on again for him, and it healed
together directly, so that it looked as if he had a red thread round his
throat. Then the King said to her, “My child, and where hast thou learnt
that?” “Yes,” she said, “I understand the art; shall I
just try it on thee also?” “Oh, yes,” said he. But she cut
off his head, and did not put it on again; but pretended that she could not get
it on, and that it would not keep fixed. Then the King was buried, but she
married Ferdinand the Faithful.</p>
<p>He, however, always rode on his white horse, and once when he was seated on it,
it told him that he was to go on to the heath which he knew, and gallop three
times round it. And when he had done that, the white horse stood up on its hind
legs, and was changed into a King’s son.</p>
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