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<h2> THE MAIDEN WITH THE WOODEN HELMET </h2>
<p>In a little village in the country of Japan there lived long, long ago a
man and his wife. For many years they were happy and prosperous, but bad
times came, and at last nothing was left them but their daughter, who was
as beautiful as the morning. The neighbours were very kind, and would have
done anything they could to help their poor friends, but the old couple
felt that since everything had changed they would rather go elsewhere, so
one day they set off to bury themselves in the country, taking their
daughter with them.</p>
<p>Now the mother and daughter had plenty to do in keeping the house clean
and looking after the garden, but the man would sit for hours together
gazing straight in front of him, and thinking of the riches that once were
his. Each day he grew more and more wretched, till at length he took to
his bed and never got up again.</p>
<p>His wife and daughter wept bitterly for his loss, and it was many months
before they could take pleasure in anything. Then one morning the mother
suddenly looked at the girl, and found that she had grown still more
lovely than before. Once her heart would have been glad at the sight, but
now that they two were alone in the world she feared some harm might come
of it. So, like a good mother, she tried to teach her daughter all she
knew, and to bring her up to be always busy, so that she would never have
time to think about herself. And the girl was a good girl, and listened to
all her mother’s lessons, and so the years passed away.</p>
<p>At last one wet spring the mother caught cold, and though in the beginning
she did not pay much attention to it, she gradually grew more and more
ill, and knew that she had not long to live. Then she called her daughter
and told her that very soon she would be alone in the world; that she must
take care of herself, as there would be no one to take care of her. And
because it was more difficult for beautiful women to pass unheeded than
for others, she bade her fetch a wooden helmet out of the next room, and
put it on her head, and pull it low down over her brows, so that nearly
the whole of her face should lie in its shadow. The girl did as she was
bid, and her beauty was so hidden beneath the wooden cap, which covered up
all her hair, that she might have gone through any crowd, and no one would
have looked twice at her. And when she saw this the heart of the mother
was at rest, and she lay back in her bed and died.</p>
<p>The girl wept for many days, but by-and-by she felt that, being alone in
the world, she must go and get work, for she had only herself to depend
upon. There was none to be got by staying where she was, so she made her
clothes into a bundle, and walked over the hills till she reached the
house of the man who owned the fields in that part of the country. And she
took service with him and laboured for him early and late, and every night
when she went to bed she was at peace, for she had not forgotten one thing
that she had promised her mother; and, however hot the sun might be, she
always kept the wooden helmet on her head, and the people gave her the
nickname of Hatschihime.</p>
<p>In spite, however, of all her care the fame of her beauty spread abroad:
many of the impudent young men that are always to be found in the world
stole softly up behind her while she was at work, and tried to lift off
the wooden helmet. But the girl would have nothing to say to them, and
only bade them be off; then they began to talk to her, but she never
answered them, and went on with what she was doing, though her wages were
low and food not very plentiful. Still she could manage to live, and that
was enough.</p>
<p>One day her master happened to pass through the field where she was
working, and was struck by her industry and stopped to watch her. After a
while he put one or two questions to her, and then led her into his house,
and told her that henceforward her only duty should be to tend his sick
wife. From this time the girl felt as if all her troubles were ended, but
the worst of them was yet to come.</p>
<p>Not very long after Hatschihime had become maid to the sick woman, the
eldest son of the house returned home from Kioto, where he had been
studying all sorts of things. He was tired of the splendours of the town
and its pleasures, and was glad enough to be back in the green country,
among the peach-blossoms and sweet flowers. Strolling about in the early
morning, he caught sight of the girl with the odd wooden helmet on her
head, and immediately he went to his mother to ask who she was, and where
she came from, and why she wore that strange thing over her face.</p>
<p>His mother answered that it was a whim, and nobody could persuade her to
lay it aside; whereat the young man laughed, but kept his thoughts to
himself.</p>
<p>One hot day, however, he happened to be going towards home when he caught
sight of his mother’s waiting maid kneeling by a little stream that flowed
through the garden, splashing some water over her face. The helmet was
pushed on one side, and as the youth stood watching from behind a tree he
had a glimpse of the girl’s great beauty; and he determined that no one
else should be his wife. But when he told his family of his resolve to
marry her they were very angry, and made up all sorts of wicked stories
about her. However, they might have spared themselves the trouble, as he
knew it was only idle talk. ‘I have merely to remain firm,’ thought he,
‘and they will have to give in.’ It was such a good match for the girl
that it never occurred to anyone that she would refuse the young man, but
so it was. It would not be right, she felt, to make a quarrel in the
house, and though in secret she wept bitterly, for a long while, nothing
would make her change her mind. At length one night her mother appeared to
her in a dream, and bade her marry the young man. So the next time he
asked her—as he did nearly every day—to his surprise and joy
she consented. The parents then saw they had better make the best of a bad
business, and set about making the grand preparations suitable to the
occasion. Of course the neighbours said a great many ill-natured things
about the wooden helmet, but the bridegroom was too happy to care, and
only laughed at them.</p>
<p>When everything was ready for the feast, and the bride was dressed in the
most beautiful embroidered dress to be found in Japan, the maids took hold
of the helmet to lift it off her head, so that they might do her hair in
the latest fashion. But the helmet would not come, and the harder they
pulled, the faster it seemed to be, till the poor girl yelled with pain.
Hearing her cries the bridegroom ran in and soothed her, and declared that
she should be married in the helmet, as she could not be married without.
Then the ceremonies began, and the bridal pair sat together, and the cup
of wine was brought them, out of which they had to drink. And when they
had drunk it all, and the cup was empty, a wonderful thing happened. The
helmet suddenly burst with a loud noise, and fell in pieces on the ground;
and as they all turned to look they found the floor covered with precious
stones which had fallen out of it. But the guests were less astonished at
the brilliancy of the diamonds than at the beauty of the bride, which was
beyond anything they had ever seen or heard of. The night was passed in
singing and dancing, and then the bride and bridegroom went to their own
house, where they lived till they died, and had many children, who were
famous throughout Japan for their goodness and beauty.</p>
<p>(Japanische Marchen.)</p>
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