Northern Fairy Tales
The Three Languages
An aged count once lived in Switzerland, who had an only son,
but he was stupid, and could learn nothing. Then said the father:
"Hark you, my son, try as I will I can get nothing into
your head. You must go from here. I will give you into the care of a celebrated
master, who shall see what he can do with you."
The youth was sent into a strange town, and remained a whole
year with the master. At the end of this time, he came home again, and his father
asked:
"Now, my son, what have you learnt?"
"Father, I have learnt to understand what the dogs say when
they bark."
"By Bragi's wisdom!" cried the father. "Is that
all you have learnt? I will send you into another town, to another master."
The youth was taken to a new master where he stayed a year. When
he came back his father again asked:
"Now, my son, what have you learnt?"
He answered, "Father, I have learnt to understand what the
birds say."
Then the father fell into a rage and said, "Oh, you lost
man! You have spent the precious time and learnt nothing! Are you not ashamed
to appear before my eyes! I will send you to a third master, but if you learn
nothing this time also, I will no longer be your father."
The youth remained a whole year with this third master. When
he came home again, his father inquired:
"Now, my son, what have you learnt?"
He answered, "Father, this year I have learnt to understand
what the frogs croak."
His father fell into the most furious anger. He sprang up, called
his people together, and said:
"This man is no longer my son! I drive him forth, and command
you to take him out into the forest, and kill him."
They took him forth, but when they should have killed him, they
could not do it for pity, and let him go. They cut the eyes and the tongue out
of a deer that they might carry them to the old man as a token.
The youth wandered. After some time he came to a fortress where
he begged for a night's lodging.
"Yes," said the lord of the castle, "if you will
pass the night down there in the old tower. Go there, but I warn you, it is
at the peril of your life. It is full of wild dogs, which bark and howl without
stopping, and at certain hours a man has to be given to them, whom they at once
devour. The whole district is in sorrow and dismay because of them, and yet
no one can do anything to stop this."
The youth, however, was without fear, and said:
"Just let me go down to the barking dogs, and give me something
that I can throw to them, they will do nothing to harm me."
Since this was the way he wanted things, they gave him food for
the wild dogs, and led him down to the tower.
When he went inside, the dogs did not bark at him, but wagged
their tails to show their friendship, ate what he set before them, and never
harmed him.
Next morning, to the astonishment of everyone, he came out again
safe and unharmed, and said to the lord of the castle:
"The dogs have revealed to me, in their own language, why
they dwell there, and bring evil on the land. They are bewitched. They are cursed
to watch over a great treasure below in the tower, and they can have no rest
until it is taken away. I have likewise learnt, from their discourse, how that
is to be done."
Everyone who heard this rejoiced, and the lord of the castle
said:
"If you can carry out this task and retrieve this great
treasure then you will no longer be a wanderer, but I will adopt you as my own
son."
He went down again, and as he knew what he had to do, he did
it thoroughly, and brought a chest full of gold out with him.
The howling of the wild dogs was never heard again. They disappeared,
and the country was freed from the trouble.
After some time he took it into his head that he would travel
to Miklagard. On the way he passed by a marsh, in which a number of frogs were
sitting croaking. He listened to them, and when he became aware of what they
were saying, he grew very thoughtful and sad.
At last he arrived in Miklagard, where the Emperor had just died
without leaving an heir, and there was great doubt among the ministers as to
who should succeed him. They at length agreed that the person should be chosen
as Emperor who should be distinguished by some divine and miraculous token.
Just as that was decided on, the young count entered into the
imperial court, and suddenly two snow-white doves flew on his shoulders and
remained sitting there. The ministers recognised at once the token from above,
and asked him on the spot if he would be Emperor.
He was undecided, and knew not if he was worthy of this, but
the doves counselled him to do it, and at length he said yes.
Then was he anointed and consecrated, and thus was fulfilled
what he had heard from the frogs on his way, which had so affected him, that
he was to be his Highness the Emperor.
Then he had to sing a mass, and did not know one word of it,
but the two doves sat continually on his shoulders, and said it all in his ear.
It came to pass, however, that when the Emperor grew old and
frail, a dog ran across the street in front of his carriage as he was being
ferried from one imperial appointment to another.
The driver of the carriage swerved so sharply that a wheel was
thrown and the Emperor was cast out into the dirt and the mire. The driver was
enraged and cracked his whip at the dog. The dog, however, managed to avoid
his blows and rushed up and licked the face of the Emperor.
As he licked, he whispered to the Emperor: "Now is the time
for your sojourn in a land that is not your own to end."
The Emperor sighed. "I have been given three sorts of wisdom,
and with them I have ruled this empire as best as I can. I have mumbled the
alien prayers of a strange people with the help of the doves. I have listened
to the croaking of the frogs in the marshes and learned of the movements of
my enemies in faraway places. And whenever I needed income for a building project,
then I would consult the dogs, who are cursed to care for the base riches of
this world. I am tired with the weight of these three wisdoms. I think it is
time to return."
The dog ran off as the driver rushed up, but the Emperor was
hurt and carried by a litter of servants to his bedroom. There the imperial
physicians studied his wounds and knew that he was worn out and it was his time
to leave this mortal scene.
That night, the Emperor gave his imperial seal ring to his first-born
son, and told him the three secrets he had been trained in. The son wept piteously,
but his father comforted him.
"This is your land. This is the place where you first opened
your eyes. This is the land where your mother grew up. All this is yours by
right and birth. But I am still a stranger here, and although I have led the
people of the land in the worship of meek prophets, I am still a son of my own
gods."
"But, father…" began his son, but the old Emperor hushed
him.
"Look!"
The son turned and looked. The moon rode high in the sky and
the clouds were parted, and a troop of ghostly horsemen rode down out of the
sky. About the heels of their horses the wild dogs of the chase bugled and gave
tongue. About their heads, the doves had changed to hawks and they were fastened
to the hawk-gauntlets of the hunters, and their eyes were sharp and fell.
As they came down out of the sky, the frogs in the royal gardens
all gave tongue.
The leader of the hunt was a grey and grizzled veteran of the
hunt, and he carried the reins of a riderless horse in his hand. The Emperor
embraced his son for one last time, and mounted this horse.
The son stood back, as the hounds gave tongue, the frogs croaked
in a riot of strange tongues, and the ghostly hawks with red eyes and sharp
beaks screeched harshly, and the company of riders, reared their mounts with
flashing hooves and flying manes and rolling eyes.
And on certain nights in the autumn, the old Emperor can sometimes
still be glimpsed, a-horse with the Wild Hunt, flying with the geese that stream
through the darkness overhead.
Based on The Three Languages
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