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<h2> THE RAVEN </h2>
<p>There was once a queen who had a little daughter, still too young to run
alone. One day the child was very troublesome, and the mother could not
quiet it, do what she would. She grew impatient, and seeing the ravens
flying round the castle, she opened the window, and said: 'I wish you were
a raven and would fly away, then I should have a little peace.' Scarcely
were the words out of her mouth, when the child in her arms was turned
into a raven, and flew away from her through the open window. The bird
took its flight to a dark wood and remained there for a long time, and
meanwhile the parents could hear nothing of their child.</p>
<p>Long after this, a man was making his way through the wood when he heard a
raven calling, and he followed the sound of the voice. As he drew near,
the raven said, 'I am by birth a king's daughter, but am now under the
spell of some enchantment; you can, however, set me free.' 'What am I to
do?' he asked. She replied, 'Go farther into the wood until you come to a
house, wherein lives an old woman; she will offer you food and drink, but
you must not take of either; if you do, you will fall into a deep sleep,
and will not be able to help me. In the garden behind the house is a large
tan-heap, and on that you must stand and watch for me. I shall drive there
in my carriage at two o'clock in the afternoon for three successive days;
the first day it will be drawn by four white, the second by four chestnut,
and the last by four black horses; but if you fail to keep awake and I
find you sleeping, I shall not be set free.'</p>
<p>The man promised to do all that she wished, but the raven said, 'Alas! I
know even now that you will take something from the woman and be unable to
save me.' The man assured her again that he would on no account touch a
thing to eat or drink.</p>
<p>When he came to the house and went inside, the old woman met him, and
said, 'Poor man! how tired you are! Come in and rest and let me give you
something to eat and drink.'</p>
<p>'No,' answered the man, 'I will neither eat not drink.'</p>
<p>But she would not leave him alone, and urged him saying, 'If you will not
eat anything, at least you might take a draught of wine; one drink counts
for nothing,' and at last he allowed himself to be persuaded, and drank.</p>
<p>As it drew towards the appointed hour, he went outside into the garden and
mounted the tan-heap to await the raven. Suddenly a feeling of fatigue
came over him, and unable to resist it, he lay down for a little while,
fully determined, however, to keep awake; but in another minute his eyes
closed of their own accord, and he fell into such a deep sleep, that all
the noises in the world would not have awakened him. At two o'clock the
raven came driving along, drawn by her four white horses; but even before
she reached the spot, she said to herself, sighing, 'I know he has fallen
asleep.' When she entered the garden, there she found him as she had
feared, lying on the tan-heap, fast asleep. She got out of her carriage
and went to him; she called him and shook him, but it was all in vain, he
still continued sleeping.</p>
<p>The next day at noon, the old woman came to him again with food and drink
which he at first refused. At last, overcome by her persistent entreaties
that he would take something, he lifted the glass and drank again.</p>
<p>Towards two o'clock he went into the garden and on to the tan-heap to
watch for the raven. He had not been there long before he began to feel so
tired that his limbs seemed hardly able to support him, and he could not
stand upright any longer; so again he lay down and fell fast asleep. As
the raven drove along her four chestnut horses, she said sorrowfully to
herself, 'I know he has fallen asleep.' She went as before to look for
him, but he slept, and it was impossible to awaken him.</p>
<p>The following day the old woman said to him, 'What is this? You are not
eating or drinking anything, do you want to kill yourself?'</p>
<p>He answered, 'I may not and will not either eat or drink.'</p>
<p>But she put down the dish of food and the glass of wine in front of him,
and when he smelt the wine, he was unable to resist the temptation, and
took a deep draught.</p>
<p>When the hour came round again he went as usual on to the tan-heap in the
garden to await the king's daughter, but he felt even more overcome with
weariness than on the two previous days, and throwing himself down, he
slept like a log. At two o'clock the raven could be seen approaching, and
this time her coachman and everything about her, as well as her horses,
were black.</p>
<p>She was sadder than ever as she drove along, and said mournfully, 'I know
he has fallen asleep, and will not be able to set me free.' She found him
sleeping heavily, and all her efforts to awaken him were of no avail. Then
she placed beside him a loaf, and some meat, and a flask of wine, of such
a kind, that however much he took of them, they would never grow less.
After that she drew a gold ring, on which her name was engraved, off her
finger, and put it upon one of his. Finally, she laid a letter near him,
in which, after giving him particulars of the food and drink she had left
for him, she finished with the following words: 'I see that as long as you
remain here you will never be able to set me free; if, however, you still
wish to do so, come to the golden castle of Stromberg; this is well within
your power to accomplish.' She then returned to her carriage and drove to
the golden castle of Stromberg.</p>
<p>When the man awoke and found that he had been sleeping, he was grieved at
heart, and said, 'She has no doubt been here and driven away again, and it
is now too late for me to save her.' Then his eyes fell on the things
which were lying beside him; he read the letter, and knew from it all that
had happened. He rose up without delay, eager to start on his way and to
reach the castle of Stromberg, but he had no idea in which direction he
ought to go. He travelled about a long time in search of it and came at
last to a dark forest, through which he went on walking for fourteen days
and still could not find a way out. Once more the night came on, and worn
out he lay down under a bush and fell asleep. Again the next day he
pursued his way through the forest, and that evening, thinking to rest
again, he lay down as before, but he heard such a howling and wailing that
he found it impossible to sleep. He waited till it was darker and people
had begun to light up their houses, and then seeing a little glimmer ahead
of him, he went towards it.</p>
<p>He found that the light came from a house which looked smaller than it
really was, from the contrast of its height with that of an immense giant
who stood in front of it. He thought to himself, 'If the giant sees me
going in, my life will not be worth much.' However, after a while he
summoned up courage and went forward. When the giant saw him, he called
out, 'It is lucky for that you have come, for I have not had anything to
eat for a long time. I can have you now for my supper.' 'I would rather
you let that alone,' said the man, 'for I do not willingly give myself up
to be eaten; if you are wanting food I have enough to satisfy your
hunger.' 'If that is so,' replied the giant, 'I will leave you in peace; I
only thought of eating you because I had nothing else.'</p>
<p>So they went indoors together and sat down, and the man brought out the
bread, meat, and wine, which although he had eaten and drunk of them, were
still unconsumed. The giant was pleased with the good cheer, and ate and
drank to his heart's content. When he had finished his supper the man
asked him if he could direct him to the castle of Stromberg. The giant
said, 'I will look on my map; on it are marked all the towns, villages,
and houses.' So he fetched his map, and looked for the castle, but could
not find it. 'Never mind,' he said, 'I have larger maps upstairs in the
cupboard, we will look on those,' but they searched in vain, for the
castle was not marked even on these. The man now thought he should like to
continue his journey, but the giant begged him to remain for a day or two
longer until the return of his brother, who was away in search of
provisions. When the brother came home, they asked him about the castle of
Stromberg, and he told them he would look on his own maps as soon as he
had eaten and appeased his hunger. Accordingly, when he had finished his
supper, they all went up together to his room and looked through his maps,
but the castle was not to be found. Then he fetched other older maps, and
they went on looking for the castle until at last they found it, but it
was many thousand miles away. 'How shall I be able to get there?' asked
the man. 'I have two hours to spare,' said the giant, 'and I will carry
you into the neighbourhood of the castle; I must then return to look after
the child who is in our care.'</p>
<p>The giant, thereupon, carried the man to within about a hundred leagues of
the castle, where he left him, saying, 'You will be able to walk the
remainder of the way yourself.' The man journeyed on day and night till he
reached the golden castle of Stromberg. He found it situated, however, on
a glass mountain, and looking up from the foot he saw the enchanted maiden
drive round her castle and then go inside. He was overjoyed to see her,
and longed to get to the top of the mountain, but the sides were so
slippery that every time he attempted to climb he fell back again. When he
saw that it was impossible to reach her, he was greatly grieved, and said
to himself, 'I will remain here and wait for her,' so he built himself a
little hut, and there he sat and watched for a whole year, and every day
he saw the king's daughter driving round her castle, but still was unable
to get nearer to her.</p>
<p>Looking out from his hut one day he saw three robbers fighting and he
called out to them, 'God be with you.' They stopped when they heard the
call, but looking round and seeing nobody, they went on again with their
fighting, which now became more furious. 'God be with you,' he cried
again, and again they paused and looked about, but seeing no one went back
to their fighting. A third time he called out, 'God be with you,' and then
thinking he should like to know the cause of dispute between the three
men, he went out and asked them why they were fighting so angrily with one
another. One of them said that he had found a stick, and that he had but
to strike it against any door through which he wished to pass, and it
immediately flew open. Another told him that he had found a cloak which
rendered its wearer invisible; and the third had caught a horse which
would carry its rider over any obstacle, and even up the glass mountain.
They had been unable to decide whether they would keep together and have
the things in common, or whether they would separate. On hearing this, the
man said, 'I will give you something in exchange for those three things;
not money, for that I have not got, but something that is of far more
value. I must first, however, prove whether all you have told me about
your three things is true.' The robbers, therefore, made him get on the
horse, and handed him the stick and the cloak, and when he had put this
round him he was no longer visible. Then he fell upon them with the stick
and beat them one after another, crying, 'There, you idle vagabonds, you
have got what you deserve; are you satisfied now!'</p>
<p>After this he rode up the glass mountain. When he reached the gate of the
castle, he found it closed, but he gave it a blow with his stick, and it
flew wide open at once and he passed through. He mounted the steps and
entered the room where the maiden was sitting, with a golden goblet full
of wine in front of her. She could not see him for he still wore his
cloak. He took the ring which she had given him off his finger, and threw
it into the goblet, so that it rang as it touched the bottom. 'That is my
own ring,' she exclaimed, 'and if that is so the man must also be here who
is coming to set me free.'</p>
<p>She sought for him about the castle, but could find him nowhere. Meanwhile
he had gone outside again and mounted his horse and thrown off the cloak.
When therefore she came to the castle gate she saw him, and cried aloud
for joy. Then he dismounted and took her in his arms; and she kissed him,
and said, 'Now you have indeed set me free, and tomorrow we will celebrate
our marriage.'</p>
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