<h2><SPAN name="SYBILLA_MYRTILLO_AND_FURIOSO" id="SYBILLA_MYRTILLO_AND_FURIOSO"></SPAN>SYBILLA, MYRTILLO, AND FURIOSO.</h2>
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<p class="minus"><span class="hide">A</span><b>CERTAIN</b>
king had a beautiful golden-haired
daughter named Sybilla, whose suitors came
from every country, though with small success,
since the princess had vowed to remain single
until one proving to be the mightiest hero of the world
should appear.</p>
<p>At no great distance from her father's country lived
a horrible giant, every hair of whose head could
change, at will, into a fiery serpent. He had one eye,
the size of a mill-wheel, and his teeth looked like rocks
in a mighty cavern. His name was Furioso, and his
strength was known to surpass that of an army of ordinary
men. What was the dismay of Sybilla's father
when this monster sent to request the lovely princess
for his wife! The king turned pale, and walked up
and down his palace floor all night, for he knew what<span class="pagenum">[70]</span>
it meant to refuse the request of Furioso, who, up to
this time, had lived at peace with his neighbor's country.
The queen-mother, hearing of the giant's offer,
took to her royal bed in kicking hysterics. As to the
proud little princess, she curled her pretty red lips
scornfully and tossed her head. "I'd like to see him
do it, the fright!" was what she said.</p>
<p>In a few days what the king feared had come to
pass. The giant Furioso, on receiving the beautiful
diplomatic letter the king's secretary had written him
(after consultation with all the lords and lawyers of the
realm), frowned, scratched his head, which instantly
bristled all over with flaming serpents, and opening his
mouth sent forth a blood-curdling yell of defiance that
resounded in the farthest part of the king's dominions.
Without a moment's delay he changed himself into a
fearful hurricane, and swept over the country and the
palace of the Princess Sybilla. Fences and iron gates,
stone walls and marble palaces fell to the ground
like card-houses. Forests were uprooted, suspension
bridges snapped like cobwebs, villages entire rose up
into the clouds and disappeared, with their inhabitants
looking in astonishment out of the windows! Cows
and horses, dogs and elephants were seen whirling<span class="pagenum">[71]</span>
about in the air like Japanese day-fireworks. The
king and queen found the roof lifted from above their
heads, and went sailing out the open space in their
nightcaps. They met all the court blowing wildly about
up there, and for some time it was like a mad dance
without any bottom to it. Dizzy and terrified, the
royal couple at last fell down to earth again, the
queen lighting on the fat cook, so that she was not
seriously injured—the king falling on a tennis net,
which the force of the wind kept suspended like a
hammock without any ropes.</p>
<p>Picking themselves up, the first thought of the royal
couple was for their beloved princess. As fast as different
members of the court and household fell down
from the clouds, which they continued to do all the
evening and night, the king sent them in search of the
princess. Nobody remembered having seen Sybilla
anywhere in the air, and her waiting-maid, who dropped
somewhere about nine o'clock <span class="smcap">A.M.</span>, next day, wept
as she told how she was combing the princess' golden
hair with the ivory comb she still held in her hand,
when the breeze came which separated them. One
thing was certain, the princess had disappeared. When
things settled down a little, and people began taking<span class="pagenum">[72]</span>
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their breath, a peasant
turned up who reported
seeing the princess flying
along at a fearful rate of
speed in the arms of a
tall, white-haired man
wrapped in a mantle, who
hid his face as he passed.
"It were just at that moment,
your honors," said
the peasant, overwhelmed
by the questions that
rained on him, "I were
myself tooken, unexpected-like,
and turned upside
down by the wind; and
when I cum to, there I
were atop a haystack in
Farmer Grimes' field, five
miles from home as the
crow flies, a-standing on
my head."</p>
<p>The king and queen exchanged
horrified glances.<span class="pagenum">[73]</span></p>
<p>Each remembered to have heard that one of the tricks
of Giant Furioso, when he wished to be particularly
wicked, was to change to the semblance of a venerable
white-haired man. No doubt about it, the whole
calamity to court and nation was the work of Furioso,
and <i>he</i> had got the princess.</p>
<p>The distracted king set out at the head of his army
to visit Furioso's castle. To his surprise, under the
giant's name, upon a visiting card inserted above the
speaking-trumpet at the gate, were pencilled these
words: "Out of town till further notice." The windows
were closed, and green shades hung behind them.
No smoke came out of the chimneys, and the doors
were chained. Evidently the giant had retired to
some one of his retreats, where he could not be followed.
The king and his army marched back again
in gloomy silence.</p>
<p>For six months nothing was heard of the unfortunate
Sybilla, till one day three young princes, travelling
from a distant country in search of adventure, found a
wounded carrier-pigeon on the road. Under its wing
was a note, written in pale red ink, on a bit of torn
linen cambric. The note gave them considerable trouble
to read it, but, at last, the youngest prince, Myrtillo,<span class="pagenum">[74]</span>
who had always been the cleverest at school, managed
to decipher these words:</p>
<blockquote><p>"I write this with blood taken from my finger, on
a fragment of my only pocket-handkerchief. I am the
wretched Princess Sybilla, daughter of the King Rolando,
and I pray any kind mortal who finds this to come
to my aid, in the dungeon of Furioso, under the fifth
mountain of the Impassable Range. Once in twenty-four
hours this mountain cleaves asunder to let my
oppressor take the air. Watch, and rescue me, in the
name of humanity."</p>
</blockquote>
<p>The Impassable Range was far away, but the princes
journeyed thither without delay. They found the fifth
mountain easily, and hid under the rocks at its base,
to await developments. Exactly at sunrise a rumbling
sound was heard, and the cliffs shook. The
mountain split apart from summit to base, and between
two yawning jaws of rock issued forth, first, a
head covered with flaming serpents, then a frightful
purple face, and lastly, the gigantic form of Furioso.
Following him came the wails and shrieks of his captives
within the mountain, to which Furioso paid no
attention; he only turned his back and shouted:<span class="pagenum">[75]</span></p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">"Close you, mountain, fierce and grim,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Open but to Banbedrim!"<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>The princes fancied that this last was the password,
and when the giant had disappeared they tried to
make the mountain open by repeating it; but in his
excitement each one forgot how to pronounce the
magic syllables. So there they stayed till sunset, when
the giant came home from his hunting expedition. He
had a pouch slung over his shoulder, and in it were
crowded the new men, women, and children he had
caught. The poor creatures were half dead with terror
and rough treatment. The princes watched the
giant, and listened with all their ears for the password.
"Banbedrim!" thundered Furioso, and instantly the
mountain yawned to let him and his miserable prisoners
pass in, when it closed, as before.</p>
<p>The three princes laid each his hand on his sword,
and swore to be avenged of the brutal treatment of their
fellow-beings. Next morning when the giant issued
forth, hurling the password at the mountain, then disappeared
from sight, the oldest prince declared that
he should be the first to enter the mountain, that his
brothers should wait twenty-four hours for his reappearance,<span class="pagenum">[76]</span>
and that should he fail to come back the
second brother might come to his assistance.</p>
<p>Bravely the young man sprang up the mountain-side,
and called aloud the password. Instantly amid thunderings
and lightnings the ground split at his feet and
swallowed him from sight. They could see the tip of
his bright sword held aloft, as he sank into the gloomy
abyss.</p>
<p>Twenty-four hours passed, and the oldest prince
failed to return. Then the second brother set forth,
and he, too, vanished from sight. A long day and night
of waiting had the youngest prince. Then he ascended
the mountain where there was every reason to
fear his brothers had found a horrible fate. Uttering
the password, Myrtillo saw, through the opening earth
at his feet, a pit whence came fire and smoke; and he
plainly heard the cries for help of many human voices.</p>
<p>Myrtillo fell a great distance, landing on his feet in
a desolate cavern. The smoke cleared away and he
beheld a huge iron door before which were four trumpets—one
of copper, one of silver, one of gold, and
one of brass. Over them these words: "He who
would enter here, choose between us four."</p>
<p>At the foot of the golden trumpet lay the mangled<span class="pagenum">[77]</span>
remains of his oldest brother, who had perished in
trying to blow it. At the foot of the silver trumpet
the corpse of the second prince had fallen; and now
Myrtillo must choose between the two remaining trumpets!
Without a moment's hesitation he put his lips
to the copper trumpet, and gave a loud, clear blast.
At once the iron door flew open, and he was in a hall
surrounded by dungeons, through whose gratings he
could see prisoners in every stage of misery. They
called to him frantically, and hailed him as their deliverer.
Alas! what could the poor prince do to save
them. He looked about and saw a long tunnel, ending
in a massive gate of stone and iron. As he gazed
into the darkness of the tunnel something coiled up
at the end of it seemed to stir, and a hideous snake
darted toward him, opening a pair of jaws as wide
as an ordinary fireplace, and sending out a flaming
tongue. Myrtillo charged upon the beast, and after a
desperate fight drove his sword down its throat, the
point coming out at the back of the neck. As he
stooped to free his sword the serpent gave a convulsive
struggle and died. Myrtillo found a chain around its
neck on which was fastened a golden key. He took
the key and put it in the great key-hole of the iron<span class="pagenum">[78]</span>
door before him, and to his joy the door opened.
There, in a dismal dungeon within, lay a beautiful
maiden in chains. Myrtillo set her free, and found
that she was the Princess Sybilla, whom the giant
treated with especial cruelty because she persisted in
refusing his love. She told him that the little pigeon
was one of many kept for the serpent's food, and
that she had hidden it, and helped it to fly out one
day when the giant left her cell. "And now," said the
princess, when Myrtillo had in turn told her his story,
"let us be quick, and lose no time. In the court beyond
my cell are two fountains. One of them contains
the water of strength, the other the water of
weakness. From the former fountain Furioso gains
all his power. A little of its water sprinkled upon the
dead recalls them to life, and we may save your poor
brothers yet."</p>
<p>Myrtillo and the lady hastened to the fountains; but
to their dismay a roaring noise and the groans of the
wretched prisoners, who were chastised daily upon his
return, announced the arrival of the giant. "Quick!"
said the lady, pointing to the water of strength; "drink
once of this, and you will be strong enough to change
the fountains, putting each in the place of the other."<span class="pagenum">[79]</span></p>
<p>Myrtillo obeyed, and at once felt able to move a
mountain at command. He seized the solid stone
basins and changed them, and hardly had he done so
when the giant came rushing in. "Where is that insolent
whipper-snapper of a prince who has dared to
kill my faithful serpent?" roared he.</p>
<p>"Here he is, at your service," said Myrtillo, stepping
forth with a gallant bow, and holding his glittering
sword in hand.</p>
<p>"Just wait till I quench my thirst," said the giant
disdainfully, as he stooped down to what he supposed
to be his fountain of strength, and drank a long, deep
draught. Suddenly a strange trembling came over the
monster's huge bulk. His face turned pale, his eyes
stared, his jaw dropped, he sank to the ground.</p>
<p>"Why, this is the water of weakness my prisoners
drink," he cried. "What trick have you been playing
me, you scoundrel?"</p>
<p>Myrtillo again drank of the water of strength, and
now he felt as if he could defy an army, single-handed.
Swift as a lightning flash he descended upon the giant,
and severed his wicked head from his body. The
Princess Sybilla uttered a wild shriek of delight, which
was heard and understood by all her fellow-captives,<span class="pagenum">[80]</span>
and the dungeons echoed with sobs and cries of joy.
Myrtillo and the princess filled goblets with the water
of strength, and hastened to sprinkle all the prisoners,
who, paralyzed by their chains and wasted with hunger,
could in many cases barely stir upon the ground
where they lay. Soon, a host of strong men and women
filled the main hall of the dungeon, and then Myrtillo
had the joy of seeing his two brothers return to
life under the action of the magic water, in which he
bathed their limbs. As Myrtillo only had <i>drank</i> of
the water of strength, he remained the strongest champion
in the world; and when Sybilla was taken back
to her father and mother, she told them that she had
promised to take the Prince Myrtillo for her husband.
From the giant's stronghold Myrtillo brought away
gems and gold enough to enrich him for a lifetime,
even after all the giant's victims had been sent home
with a bag of gold apiece. His brothers found brides
in two lovely fellow-sufferers they had led out of the
giant's cavern to the light of day; and so all were satisfied,
and in a short time the Giant Furioso was forgotten.
No more hurricanes visited the kingdom of
Sybilla's father, where things continued to jog along in
the old-time peaceful fashion.</p>
<hr class="chapter">
<p><span class="pagenum">[81]</span></p>
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