Andrew Lang_Fairy Book 03 (44 page)

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'Ah, wife!' said the fisherman, 'the cottage is quite good enough;
why do we choose to live in a castle?'

'Why?' said the wife. 'You go down; the flounder can quite well do
that.'

'No, wife,' said the man; 'the flounder gave us the cottage. I do
not like to go to him again; he might take it amiss.'

'Go,' said his wife. 'He can certainly give it us, and ought to do
so willingly. Go at once.'

The fisherman's heart was very heavy, and he did not like going.
He said to himself, 'It is not right.' Still, he went down.

When he came to the sea, the water was all violet and dark-blue,
and dull and thick, and no longer green and yellow, but it was
still smooth.

So he stood there and said:

'Once a prince, but changed you be
Into a flounder in the sea.
Come! for my wife, Ilsebel,
Wishes what I dare not tell.'

'What does she want now?' said the flounder.

'Ah!' said the fisherman, half-ashamed, 'she wants to live in a
great stone castle.'

'Go home; she is standing before the door,' said the flounder.

The fisherman went home and thought he would find no house. When
he came near, there stood a great stone palace, and his wife was
standing on the steps, about to enter. She took him by the hand
and said, 'Come inside.'

Then he went with her, and inside the castle was a large hall with
a marble floor, and there were heaps of servants who threw open
the great doors, and the walls were covered with beautiful
tapestry, and in the apartments were gilded chairs and tables, and
crystal chandeliers hung from the ceiling, and all the rooms were
beautifully carpeted. The best of food and drink also was set
before them when they wished to dine. And outside the house was a
large courtyard with horse and cow stables and a coach-house—all
fine buildings; and a splendid garden with most beautiful flowers
and fruit, and in a park quite a league long were deer and roe and
hares, and everything one could wish for.

'Now,' said the wife, 'isn't this beautiful?'

'Yes, indeed,' said the fisherman. 'Now we will stay here and live
in this beautiful castle, and be very happy.'

'We will consider the matter,' said his wife, and they went to
bed.

The next morning the wife woke up first at daybreak, and looked
out of the bed at the beautiful country stretched before her. Her
husband was still sleeping, so she dug her elbows into his side
and said:

'Husband, get up and look out of the window. Could we not become
the king of all this land? Go down to the flounder and tell him we
choose to be king.'

'Ah, wife!' replied her husband, 'why should we be king? I don't
want to be king.'

'Well,' said his wife, 'if you don't want to be king, I will be
king. Go down to the flounder; I will be king.'

'Alas! wife,' said the fisherman, 'why do you want to be king? I
can't ask him that.'

'And why not?' said his wife. 'Go down at once. I must be king.'

So the fisherman went, though much vexed that his wife wanted to
be king. 'It is not right! It is not right,' he thought. He did
not wish to go, yet he went.

When he came to the sea, the water was a dark-grey colour, and it
was heaving against the shore. So he stood and said:

'Once a prince, but changed you be
Into a flounder in the sea.
Come! for my wife, Ilsebel,
Wishes what I dare not tell.'

'What does she want now?' asked the flounder.

'Alas!' said the fisherman, 'she wants to be king.'

'Go home; she is that already,' said the flounder.

The fisherman went home, and when he came near the palace he saw
that it had become much larger, and that it had great towers and
splendid ornamental carving on it. A sentinel was standing before
the gate, and there were numbers of soldiers with kettledrums and
trumpets. And when he went into the palace, he found everything
was of pure marble and gold, and the curtains of damask with
tassels of gold. Then the doors of the hall flew open, and there
stood the whole Court round his wife, who was sitting on a high
throne of gold and diamonds; she wore a great golden crown, and
had a sceptre of gold and precious stones in her hand, and by her
on either side stood six pages in a row, each one a head taller
than the other. Then he went before her and said:

'Ah, wife! are you king now?'

'Yes,' said his wife; 'now I am king.'

He stood looking at her, and when he had looked for some time, he
said:

'Let that be enough, wife, now that you are king! Now we have
nothing more to wish for.'

'Nay, husband,' said his wife restlessly, 'my wishing powers are
boundless; I cannot restrain them any longer. Go down to the
flounder; king I am, now I must be emperor.'

'Alas! wife,' said the fisherman, 'why do you want to be emperor?'

'Husband,' said she, 'go to the flounder; I will be emperor.'

'Ah, wife,' he said, 'he cannot make you emperor; I don't like to
ask him that. There is only one emperor in the kingdom. Indeed and
indeed he cannot make you emperor.'

'What!' said his wife. 'I am king, and you are my husband. Will
you go at once? Go! If he can make king he can make emperor, and
emperor I must and will be. Go!'

So he had to go. But as he went, he felt quite frightened, and he
thought to himself, 'This can't be right; to be emperor is too
ambitious; the flounder will be tired out at last.'

Thinking this he came to the shore. The sea was quite black and
thick, and it was breaking high on the beach; the foam was flying
about, and the wind was blowing; everything looked bleak. The
fisherman was chilled with fear. He stood and said:

'Once a prince, but changed you be
Into a flounder in the sea.
Come! for my wife, Ilsebel,
Wishes what I dare not tell.'

'What does she want now?' asked flounder.

'Alas! flounder,' he said, 'my wife wants to be emperor.'

'Go home,' said the flounder; 'she is that already.'

So the fisherman went home, and when he came there he saw the
whole castle was made of polished marble, ornamented with
alabaster statues and gold. Before the gate soldiers were
marching, blowing trumpets and beating drums. Inside the palace
were walking barons, counts, and dukes, acting as servants; they
opened the door, which was of beaten gold. And when he entered, he
saw his wife upon a throne which was made out of a single block of
gold, and which was quite six cubits high. She had on a great
golden crown which was three yards high and set with brilliants
and sparkling gems. In one hand she held a sceptre, and in the
other the imperial globe, and on either side of her stood two rows
of halberdiers, each smaller than the other, from a seven-foot
giant to the tiniest little dwarf no higher than my little finger.
Many princes and dukes were standing before her. The fisherman
went up to her quietly and said:

'Wife, are you emperor now?'

'Yes,' she said, 'I am emperor.'

He stood looking at her magnificence, and when he had watched her
for some time, said:

'Ah, wife, let that be enough, now that you are emperor.'

'Husband,' said she, 'why are you standing there? I am emperor
now, and I want to be pope too; go down to the flounder.'

'Alas! wife,' said the fisherman, 'what more do you want? You
cannot be pope; there is only one pope in Christendom, and he
cannot make you that.'

'Husband,' she said, 'I will be pope. Go down quickly; I must be
pope to-day.'

'No, wife,' said the fisherman; 'I can't ask him that. It is not
right; it is too much. The flounder cannot make you pope.'

'Husband, what nonsense!' said his wife. 'If he can make emperor,
he can make, pope too. Go down this instant; I am emperor and you
are my husband. Will you be off at once?'

So he was frightened and went out; but he felt quite faint, and
trembled and shook, and his knees and legs began to give way under
him. The wind was blowing fiercely across the land, and the clouds
flying across the sky looked as gloomy as if it were night; the
leaves were being blown from the trees; the water was foaming and
seething and dashing upon the shore, and in the distance he saw
the ships in great distress, dancing and tossing on the waves.
Still the sky was very blue in the middle, although at the sides
it was an angry red as in a great storm. So he stood shuddering in
anxiety, and said:

'Once a prince, but changed you be
Into a flounder in the sea.
Come! for my wife, Ilsebel,
Wishes what I dare not tell.'

'Well, what does she want now?' asked the flounder.

'Alas!' said the fisherman, 'she wants to be pope.'

'Go home, then; she is that already,' said the flounder.

Then he went home, and when he came there he saw, as it were, a
large church surrounded by palaces. He pushed his way through the
people. The interior was lit up with thousands and thousands of
candles, and his wife was dressed in cloth of gold and was sitting
on a much higher throne, and she wore three great golden crowns.
Round her were numbers of Church dignitaries, and on either side
were standing two rows of tapers, the largest of them as tall as a
steeple, and the smallest as tiny as a Christmas-tree candle. All
the emperors and kings were on their knees before her, and were
kissing her foot.

'Wife,' said the fisherman looking at her, 'are you pope now?'

'Yes,' said she; 'I am pope.'

So he stood staring at her, and it was as if he were looking at
the bright sun. When he had watched her for some time he said:

'Ah, wife, let it be enough now that you are pope.'

But she sat as straight as a tree, and did not move or bend the
least bit. He said again:

'Wife, be content now that you are pope. You cannot become
anything more.'

'We will think about that,' said his wife.

With these words they went to bed. But the woman was not content;
her greed would not allow her to sleep, and she kept on thinking
and thinking what she could still become. The fisherman slept well
and soundly, for he had done a great deal that day, but his wife
could not sleep at all, and turned from one side to another the
whole night long, and thought, till she could think no longer,
what more she could become. Then the sun began to rise, and when
she saw the red dawn she went to the end of the bed and looked at
it, and as she was watching the sun rise, out of the window, she
thought, 'Ha! could I not make the sun and man rise?'

'Husband,' said she, poking him in the ribs with her elbows, 'wake
up. Go down to the flounder; I will be a god.'

The fisherman was still half asleep, yet he was so frightened that
he fell out of bed. He thought he had not heard aright, and opened
his eyes wide and said:

'What did you say, wife?'

'Husband,' she said, 'if I cannot make the sun and man rise when I
appear I cannot rest. I shall never have a quiet moment till I can
make the sun and man rise.'

He looked at her in horror, and a shudder ran over him.

'Go down at once; I will be a god.'

'Alas! wife,' said the fisherman, falling on his knees before her,
'the flounder cannot do that. Emperor and pope he can make you. I
implore you, be content and remain pope.'

Then she flew into a passion, her hair hung wildly about her face,
she pushed him with her foot and screamed:

'I am not contented, and I shall not be contented! Will you go?'

So he hurried on his clothes as fast as possible, and ran away as
if he were mad.

But the storm was raging so fiercely that he could scarcely stand.
Houses and trees were being blown down, the mountains were being
shaken, and pieces of rock were rolling in the sea. The sky was as
black as ink, it was thundering and lightening, and the sea was
tossing in great waves as high as church towers and mountains, and
each had a white crest of foam.

So he shouted, not able to hear his own voice:

'Once a prince, but changed you be
Into a flounder in the sea.
Come! for my wife, Ilsebel,
Wishes what I dare not tell.'

'Well, what does she want now?' asked the flounder.

'Alas!' said he, 'she wants to be a god.'

'Go home, then; she is sitting again in the hut.'

And there they are sitting to this day.

Grimm.

The Three Musicians
*

Once upon a time three musicians left their home and set out on
their travels. They had all learnt music from the same master, and
they determined to stick together and to seek their fortune in
foreign lands. They wandered merrily from place to place and made
quite a good living, and were much appreciated by everyone who
heard them play. One evening they came to a village where they
delighted all the company with their beautiful music. At last they
ceased playing, and began to eat and drink and listen to the talk
that was going on around them. They heard all the gossip of the
place, and many wonderful things were related and discussed. At
last the conversation fell on a castle in the neighbourhood, about
which many strange and marvellous things were told. One person
said that hidden treasure was to be found there; another that the
richest food was always to be had there, although the castle was
uninhabited; and a third, that an evil spirit dwelt within the
walls, so terrible, that anyone who forced his way into the castle
came out of it more dead than alive.

As soon as the three musicians were alone in their bedroom they
agreed to go and examine the mysterious castle, and, if possible,
to find and carry away the hidden treasure. They determined, too,
to make the attempt separately, one after the other, according to
age, and they settled that a whole day was to be given to each
adventurer in which to try his luck.

The fiddler was the first to set out on his adventures, and did so
in the best of spirits and full of courage. When he reached the
castle he found the outer gate open, quite as if he were an
expected guest, but no sooner had he stepped across the entry than
the heavy door closed behind him with a bang, and was bolted with
a huge iron bar, exactly as if a sentinel were doing his office
and keeping watch, but no human being was to be seen anywhere. An
awful terror overcame the fiddler; but it was hopeless to think of
turning back or of standing still, and the hopes of finding gold
and other treasures gave him strength and courage to force his way
further into the castle. Upstairs and downstairs he wandered,
through lofty halls, splendid rooms, and lovely little boudoirs,
everything beautifully arranged, and all kept in the most perfect
order. But the silence of death reigned everywhere, and no living
thing, not even a fly, was to be seen. Notwithstanding, the youth
felt his spirits return to him when he entered the lower regions
of the castle, for in the kitchen the most tempting and delicious
food was spread out, the cellars were full of the most costly
wine, and the store-room crammed with pots of every sort of jam
you can imagine. A cheerful fire was burning in the kitchen,
before which a roast was being basted by unseen hands, and all
kinds of vegetables and other dainty dishes were being prepared in
like manner. Before the fiddler had time to think, he was ushered
into a little room by invisible hands, and there a table was
spread for him with all the delicious food he had seen cooking in
the kitchen.

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