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<h2> THE NINE PEA-HENS AND THE GOLDEN APPLES </h2>
<p>Once upon a time there stood before the palace of an emperor a golden
apple tree, which blossomed and bore fruit each night. But every morning
the fruit was gone, and the boughs were bare of blossom, without anyone
being able to discover who was the thief.</p>
<p>At last the emperor said to his eldest son, ‘If only I could prevent those
robbers from stealing my fruit, how happy I should be!’</p>
<p>And his son replied, ‘I will sit up to-night and watch the tree, and I
shall soon see who it is!’</p>
<p>So directly it grew dark the young man went and hid himself near the apple
tree to begin his watch, but the apples had scarcely begun to ripen before
he fell asleep, and when he awoke at sunrise the apples were gone. He felt
very much ashamed of himself, and went with lagging feet to tell his
father!</p>
<p>Of course, though the eldest son had failed, the second made sure that he
would do better, and set out gaily at nightfall to watch the apple tree.
But no sooner had he lain himself down than his eyes grew heavy, and when
the sunbeams roused him from his slumbers there was not an apple left on
the tree.</p>
<p>Next came the turn of the youngest son, who made himself a comfortable bed
under the apple tree, and prepared himself to sleep. Towards midnight he
awoke, and sat up to look at the tree. And behold! the apples were
beginning to ripen, and lit up the whole palace with their brightness. At
the same moment nine golden pea-hens flew swiftly through the air, and
while eight alighted upon the boughs laden with fruit, the ninth fluttered
to the ground where the prince lay, and instantly was changed into a
beautiful maiden, more beautiful far than any lady in the emperor’s court.
The prince at once fell in love with her, and they talked together for
some time, till the maiden said her sisters had finished plucking the
apples, and now they must all go home again. The prince, however, begged
her so hard to leave him a little of the fruit that the maiden gave him
two apples, one for himself and one for his father. Then she changed
herself back into a pea-hen, and the whole nine flew away.</p>
<p>As soon as the sun rose the prince entered the palace, and held out the
apple to his father, who was rejoiced to see it, and praised his youngest
son heartily for his cleverness. That evening the prince returned to the
apple tree, and everything passed as before, and so it happened for
several nights. At length the other brothers grew angry at seeing that he
never came back without bringing two golden apples with him, and they went
to consult an old witch, who promised to spy after him, and discover how
he managed to get the apples. So, when the evening came, the old woman hid
herself under the tree and waited for the prince. Before long he arrived
and laid down on his bed, and was soon fast asleep. Towards midnight there
was a rush of wings, and the eight pea-hens settled on the tree, while the
ninth became a maiden, and ran to greet the prince. Then the witch
stretched out her hand, and cut off a lock of the maiden’s hair, and in an
instant the girl sprang up, a pea-hen once more, spread her wings and flew
away, while her sisters, who were busily stripping the boughs, flew after
her.</p>
<p>When he had recovered from his surprise at the unexpected disappearance of
the maiden, the prince exclaimed, ‘What can be the matter?’ and, looking
about him, discovered the old witch hidden under the bed. He dragged her
out, and in his fury called his guards, and ordered them to put her to
death as fast as possible. But that did no good as far as the pea-hens
went. They never came back any more, though the prince returned to the
tree every night, and wept his heart out for his lost love. This went on
for some time, till the prince could bear it no longer, and made up his
mind he would search the world through for her. In vain his father tried
to persuade him that his task was hopeless, and that other girls were to
be found as beautiful as this one. The prince would listen to nothing,
and, accompanied by only one servant, set out on his quest.</p>
<p>After travelling for many days, he arrived at length before a large gate,
and through the bars he could see the streets of a town, and even the
palace. The prince tried to pass in, but the way was barred by the keeper
of the gate, who wanted to know who he was, why he was there, and how he
had learnt the way, and he was not allowed to enter unless the empress
herself came and gave him leave. A message was sent to her, and when she
stood at the gate the prince thought he had lost his wits, for there was
the maiden he had left his home to seek. And she hastened to him, and took
his hand, and drew him into the palace. In a few days they were married,
and the prince forgot his father and his brothers, and made up his mind
that he would live and die in the castle.</p>
<p>One morning the empress told him that she was going to take a walk by
herself, and that she would leave the keys of twelve cellars to his care.
‘If you wish to enter the first eleven cellars,’ said she, ‘you can; but
beware of even unlocking the door of the twelfth, or it will be the worse
for you.’</p>
<p>The prince, who was left alone in the castle, soon got tired of being by
himself, and began to look about for something to amuse him.</p>
<p>‘What CAN there be in that twelfth cellar,’ he thought to himself, ‘which
I must not see?’ And he went downstairs and unlocked the doors, one after
the other. When he got to the twelfth he paused, but his curiosity was too
much for him, and in another instant the key was turned and the cellar lay
open before him. It was empty, save for a large cask, bound with iron
hoops, and out of the cask a voice was saying entreatingly, ‘For goodness’
sake, brother, fetch me some water; I am dying of thirst!’</p>
<p>The prince, who was very tender-hearted, brought some water at once, and
pushed it through a hole in the barrel; and as he did so one of the iron
hoops burst.</p>
<p>He was turning away, when a voice cried the second time, ‘Brother, for
pity’s sake fetch me some water; I’m dying of thirst!’</p>
<p>So the prince went back, and brought some more water, and again a hoop
sprang.</p>
<p>And for the third time the voice still called for water; and when water
was given it the last hoop was rent, the cask fell in pieces, and out flew
a dragon, who snatched up the empress just as she was returning from her
walk, and carried her off. Some servants who saw what had happened came
rushing to the prince, and the poor young man went nearly mad when he
heard the result of his own folly, and could only cry out that he would
follow the dragon to the ends of the earth, until he got his wife again.</p>
<p>For months and months he wandered about, first in this direction and then
in that, without finding any traces of the dragon or his captive. At last
he came to a stream, and as he stopped for a moment to look at it he
noticed a little fish lying on the bank, beating its tail convulsively, in
a vain effort to get back into the water.</p>
<p>‘Oh, for pity’s sake, my brother,’ shrieked the little creature, ‘help me,
and put me back into the river, and I will repay you some day. Take one of
my scales, and when you are in danger twist it in your fingers, and I will
come!’</p>
<p>The prince picked up the fish and threw it into the water; then he took
off one of its scales, as he had been told, and put it in his pocket,
carefully wrapped in a cloth. Then he went on his way till, some miles
further down the road, he found a fox caught in a trap.</p>
<p>‘Oh! be a brother to me!’ called the fox, ‘and free me from this trap, and
I will help you when you are in need. Pull out one of my hairs, and when
you are in danger twist it in your fingers, and I will come.’</p>
<p>So the prince unfastened the trap, pulled out one of the fox’s hairs, and
continued his journey. And as he was going over the mountain he passed a
wolf entangled in a snare, who begged to be set at liberty.</p>
<p>‘Only deliver me from death,’ he said, ‘and you will never be sorry for
it. Take a lock of my fur, and when you need me twist it in your fingers.’
And the prince undid the snare and let the wolf go.</p>
<p>For a long time he walked on, without having any more adventures, till at
length he met a man travelling on the same road.</p>
<p>‘Oh, brother!’ asked the prince, ‘tell me, if you can, where the
dragon-emperor lives?’</p>
<p>The man told him where he would find the palace, and how long it would
take him to get there, and the prince thanked him, and followed his
directions, till that same evening he reached the town where the
dragon-emperor lived. When he entered the palace, to his great joy he
found his wife sitting alone in a vast hall, and they began hastily to
invent plans for her escape.</p>
<p>There was no time to waste, as the dragon might return directly, so they
took two horses out of the stable, and rode away at lightning speed.
Hardly were they out of sight of the palace than the dragon came home and
found that his prisoner had flown. He sent at once for his talking horse,
and said to him:</p>
<p>‘Give me your advice; what shall I do—have my supper as usual, or
set out in pursuit of them?’</p>
<p>‘Eat your supper with a free mind first,’ answered the horse, ‘and follow
them afterwards.’</p>
<p>So the dragon ate till it was past mid-day, and when he could eat no more
he mounted his horse and set out after the fugitives. In a short time he
had come up with them, and as he snatched the empress out of her saddle he
said to the prince:</p>
<p>‘This time I will forgive you, because you brought me the water when I was
in the cask; but beware how you return here, or you will pay for it with
your life.’</p>
<p>Half mad with grief, the prince rode sadly on a little further, hardly
knowing what he was doing. Then he could bear it no longer and turned back
to the palace, in spite of the dragon’s threats. Again the empress was
sitting alone, and once more they began to think of a scheme by which they
could escape the dragon’s power.</p>
<p>‘Ask the dragon when he comes home,’ said the prince, ‘where he got that
wonderful horse from, and then you can tell me, and I will try to find
another like it.’</p>
<p>Then, fearing to meet his enemy, he stole out of the castle.</p>
<p>Soon after the dragon came home, and the empress sat down near him, and
began to coax and flatter him into a good humour, and at last she said:</p>
<p>‘But tell me about that wonderful horse you were riding yesterday. There
cannot be another like it in the whole world. Where did you get it from?’</p>
<p>And he answered:</p>
<p>‘The way I got it is a way which no one else can take. On the top of a
high mountain dwells an old woman, who has in her stables twelve horses,
each one more beautiful than the other. And in one corner is a thin,
wretched-looking animal whom no one would glance at a second time, but he
is in reality the best of the lot. He is twin brother to my own horse, and
can fly as high as the clouds themselves. But no one can ever get this
horse without first serving the old woman for three whole days. And
besides the horses she has a foal and its mother, and the man who serves
her must look after them for three whole days, and if he does not let them
run away he will in the end get the choice of any horse as a present from
the old woman. But if he fails to keep the foal and its mother safe on any
one of the three nights his head will pay.’</p>
<p>The next day the prince watched till the dragon left the house, and then
he crept in to the empress, who told him all she had learnt from her
gaoler. The prince at once determined to seek the old woman on the top of
the mountain, and lost no time in setting out. It was a long and steep
climb, but at last he found her, and with a low bow he began:</p>
<p>‘Good greeting to you, little mother!’</p>
<p>‘Good greeting to you, my son! What are you doing here?’</p>
<p>‘I wish to become your servant,’ answered he.</p>
<p>‘So you shall,’ said the old woman. ‘If you can take care of my mare for
three days I will give you a horse for wages, but if you let her stray you
will lose your head’; and as she spoke she led him into a courtyard
surrounded with palings, and on every post a man’s head was stuck. One
post only was empty, and as they passed it cried out:</p>
<p>‘Woman, give me the head I am waiting for!’</p>
<p>The old woman made no answer, but turned to the prince and said:</p>
<p>‘Look! all those men took service with me, on the same conditions as you,
but not one was able to guard the mare!’</p>
<p>But the prince did not waver, and declared he would abide by his words.</p>
<p>When evening came he led the mare out of the stable and mounted her, and
the colt ran behind. He managed to keep his seat for a long time, in spite
of all her efforts to throw him, but at length he grew so weary that he
fell fast asleep, and when he woke he found himself sitting on a log, with
the halter in his hands. He jumped up in terror, but the mare was nowhere
to be seen, and he started with a beating heart in search of her. He had
gone some way without a single trace to guide him, when he came to a
little river. The sight of the water brought back to his mind the fish
whom he had saved from death, and he hastily drew the scale from his
pocket. It had hardly touched his fingers when the fish appeared in the
stream beside him.</p>
<p>‘What is it, my brother?’ asked the fish anxiously.</p>
<p>‘The old woman’s mare strayed last night, and I don’t know where to look
for her.’</p>
<p>‘Oh, I can tell you that: she has changed herself into a big fish, and her
foal into a little one. But strike the water with the halter and say,
“Come here, O mare of the mountain witch!” and she will come.’</p>
<p>The prince did as he was bid, and the mare and her foal stood before him.
Then he put the halter round her neck, and rode her home, the foal always
trotting behind them. The old woman was at the door to receive them, and
gave the prince some food while she led the mare back to the stable.</p>
<p>‘You should have gone among the fishes,’ cried the old woman, striking the
animal with a stick.</p>
<p>‘I did go among the fishes,’ replied the mare; ‘but they are no friends of
mine, for they betrayed me at once.’</p>
<p>‘Well, go among the foxes this time,’ said she, and returned to the house,
not knowing that the prince had overheard her.</p>
<p>So when it began to grow dark the prince mounted the mare for the second
time and rode into the meadows, and the foal trotted behind its mother.
Again he managed to stick on till midnight: then a sleep overtook him that
he could not battle against, and when he woke up he found himself, as
before, sitting on the log, with the halter in his hands. He gave a shriek
of dismay, and sprang up in search of the wanderers. As he went he
suddenly remembered the words that the old woman had said to the mare, and
he drew out the fox hair and twisted it in his fingers.</p>
<p>‘What is it, my brother?’ asked the fox, who instantly appeared before
him.</p>
<p>‘The old witch’s mare has run away from me, and I do not know where to
look for her.’</p>
<p>‘She is with us,’ replied the fox, ‘and has changed herself into a big
fox, and her foal into a little one, but strike the ground with a halter
and say, “Come here, O mare of the mountain witch!”’</p>
<p>The prince did so, and in a moment the fox became a mare and stood before
him, with the little foal at her heels. He mounted and rode back, and the
old woman placed food on the table, and led the mare back to the stable.</p>
<p>‘You should have gone to the foxes, as I told you,’ said she, striking the
mare with a stick.</p>
<p>‘I did go to the foxes,’ replied the mare, ‘but they are no friends of
mine and betrayed me.’</p>
<p>‘Well, this time you had better go to the wolves,’ said she, not knowing
that the prince had heard all she had been saying.</p>
<p>The third night the prince mounted the mare and rode her out to the
meadows, with the foal trotting after. He tried hard to keep awake, but it
was of no use, and in the morning there he was again on the log, grasping
the halter. He started to his feet, and then stopped, for he remembered
what the old woman had said, and pulled out the wolf’s grey lock.</p>
<p>‘What is it, my brother?’ asked the wolf as it stood before him.</p>
<p>‘The old witch’s mare has run away from me,’ replied the prince, ‘and I
don’t know where to find her.’</p>
<p>‘Oh, she is with us,’ answered the wolf, ‘and she has changed herself into
a she-wolf, and the foal into a cub; but strike the earth here with the
halter, and cry, “Come to me, O mare of the mountain witch.”’</p>
<p>The prince did as he was bid, and as the hair touched his fingers the wolf
changed back into a mare, with the foal beside her. And when he had
mounted and ridden her home the old woman was on the steps to receive
them, and she set some food before the prince, but led the mare back to
her stable.</p>
<p>‘You should have gone among the wolves,’ said she, striking her with a
stick.</p>
<p>‘So I did,’ replied the mare, ‘but they are no friends of mine and
betrayed me.’</p>
<p>The old woman made no answer, and left the stable, but the prince was at
the door waiting for her.</p>
<p>‘I have served you well,’ said he, ‘and now for my reward.’</p>
<p>‘What I promised that will I perform,’ answered she. ‘Choose one of these
twelve horses; you can have which you like.’</p>
<p>‘Give me, instead, that half-starved creature in the corner,’ asked the
prince. ‘I prefer him to all those beautiful animals.’</p>
<p>‘You can’t really mean what you say?’ replied the woman.</p>
<p>‘Yes, I do,’ said the prince, and the old woman was forced to let him have
his way. So he took leave of her, and put the halter round his horse’s
neck and led him into the forest, where he rubbed him down till his skin
was shining like gold. Then he mounted, and they flew straight through the
air to the dragon’s palace. The empress had been looking for him night and
day, and stole out to meet him, and he swung her on to his saddle, and the
horse flew off again.</p>
<p>Not long after the dragon came home, and when he found the empress was
missing he said to his horse, ‘What shall we do? Shall we eat and drink,
or shall we follow the runaways?’ and the horse replied, ‘Whether you eat
or don’t eat, drink or don’t drink, follow them or stay at home, matters
nothing now, for you can never, never catch them.’</p>
<p>But the dragon made no reply to the horse’s words, but sprang on his back
and set off in chase of the fugitives. And when they saw him coming they
were frightened, and urged the prince’s horse faster and faster, till he
said, ‘Fear nothing; no harm can happen to us,’ and their hearts grew
calm, for they trusted his wisdom.</p>
<p>Soon the dragon’s horse was heard panting behind, and he cried out, ‘Oh,
my brother, do not go so fast! I shall sink to the earth if I try to keep
up with you.’</p>
<p>And the prince’s horse answered, ‘Why do you serve a monster like that?
Kick him off, and let him break in pieces on the ground, and come and join
us.’</p>
<p>And the dragon’s horse plunged and reared, and the dragon fell on a rock,
which broke him in pieces. Then the empress mounted his horse, and rode
back with her husband to her kingdom, over which they ruled for many
years.</p>
<p>(Volksmarchen der Serben.)</p>
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