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CHAPTER 2:
KINDRED TALES FROM DIVERS LANDS: EROS AND PSYCHE.
Once upon a time there lived a king and a
queen, who had three beautiful daughters. The youngest of them, who was
called Psyche, was the loveliest; she was so very beautiful that she was
thought to be a second Aphrodite, the Goddess of Beauty and Love, and all
who saw her worshipped her as if she were the goddess; so that the temples
of Aphrodite were deserted and her worship neglected, and Psyche was
preferred to her; and as she passed along the streets, or came into the
temples, the people crowded round her, and scattered flowers under her feet,
and offered garlands to her.

Eros and Psyche
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Now, when Aphrodite knew this she grew very angry, and resolved to punish
Psyche, so as to make her a wonder and a shame for ever. So Aphrodite sent
for her son Eros, the God of Love, and took him to the city where Psyche
lived, and showed the maiden to him, and bade him afflict her with love for
a man who should be the most wicked and most miserable of mankind, an
outcast, a beggar, one who had done some great wrong, and had fallen so low
that no man in the whole world could be so wretched.
Eros agreed that he would do what his mother wished; but this was only a
pretence, for when he saw Psyche he fell in love with her himself, and made
up his mind that she should be his own wife. The first thing to do was to
get the maiden into his own care and to hide her from the vengeance of
Aphrodite. So he put it into the mind of her father to go to the shrine of
Phœbus, at Miletus, and ask the god what should be done with Psyche.
The king did so, and he was bidden by an oracle to dress Psyche as a
bride, to take her to the brow of a high mountain, and to leave her there,
and that after a time a great monster would come and take her away and make
her his wife. So Psyche was decked in bridal garments, was taken to a rock
on the top of a mountain, and was left there as a sacrifice to turn away the
wrath of Aphrodite.
But Eros took care that she came to no harm. He went to Zephyrus, the God
of the West Wind, and told him to carry Psyche gently down into a beautiful
valley, and to lay her softly on the turf, amidst lovely flowers. So
Zephyrus lulled Psyche to sleep, and then carried her safely down, and laid
her in the place where Eros had bidden him.
When Psyche awoke from sleep she saw a thick grove, with a crystal
fountain in it, and close to the fountain there was a stately palace, fit
for the dwelling of a king or a god. She went into the palace, and found it
very wonderful. The walls and ceilings were made of cedar and ivory, there
were golden columns holding up the roof, the floors were laid with precious
stones, so put together as to make pictures, and on the walls were carvings
in gold and silver of birds, and beasts, and flowers, and all kinds of
strange and beautiful things. And there were also great treasure places full
of gold, and silver, and gems, in such great measure that it seemed as if
all the riches of the world were gathered there.
But nowhere was there any living creature to be seen; all the palace was
empty, and Psyche was there alone. And while she went trembling and fearing
through the rooms, and wondering whose all this might be, she heard voices,
as of invisible maidens, which told her that the palace was for her, and
that they who spoke, but whom she might not see, were her servants. And the
voices bade her go first to the bath, and then to a royal banquet which was
prepared for her. So Psyche, still wondering, went to the bath, and then to
a great and noble room, where there was a royal seat, and upon this she
placed herself, and then unseen attendants put before her all kinds of
delicate food and wine; and while she ate and drank there was a sound as of
a great number of people singing the most charming music, and of one playing
upon the lyre; but none of them could she see.
Then night came on, and all the beautiful palace grew dark, and Psyche
laid herself down upon a couch to sleep. Then a great terror fell upon her,
for she heard footsteps, which came nearer and nearer, and she thought it
was the monster whose bride the oracle of Phoebus had destined her to be.
And the footsteps drew closer to her, and then an unseen being came to her
couch and lay down beside her, and made her his wife; and he lay there until
just before the break of day, and then he departed, and it was still so dark
that Psyche could not see his form; nor did he speak, so that she could not
guess from his voice what kind of creature it was to whom the Fates had
wedded her.
So Psyche lived for a long while, wandering about her palace in the
daytime, tended by her unseen guardians, and every night her husband came to
her and stayed until daybreak. Then she began to long to hear about her
father and mother, and to see her sisters, and she begged leave of her
husband that these might come to her for a time. To this Eros agreed, and
gave her leave to give her sisters rich gifts, but warned her that she must
answer no questions they might ask about him, and that she must not listen
to any advice they might give her to find out who he was, or else a great
misfortune would happen to her.
Then Zephyrus brought the sisters of Psyche to her, and they stayed with
her for a little while, and were very curious to know who her husband was,
and what he was like. But Psyche, mindful of the commands of Eros, put them
off, first with one story and then with another, and at last sent them away,
loaded with jewels.
Now Psyche's sisters were envious of her, because such good fortune had
not happened to themselves, to have such a grand palace, and such store of
wealth, and they plotted between themselves to make her discover her
husband, hoping to get some good for themselves out of it, and not caring
what happened to her. And it so fell out that they had their way, for Psyche
again getting tired of solitude, again begged of her husband that her
sisters might come to see her once more, to which, with much sorrow, he
consented, but warned her again that if she spoke of him, or sought to see
him, all her happiness would vanish, and that she would have to bear a life
of misery.
But it was fated that Psyche should disobey her husband; and it fell out
in this way. When her sisters came to her again they questioned her about
her husband, and persuaded her that she was married to a monster too
terrible to be looked at, and they told her that this was the reason why he
never came in the daytime, and refused to let himself be seen at night. Then
they also persuaded her that she ought to put an end to the enchantment by
killing the monster; and for this purpose they gave her a sharp knife, and
they gave her also a lamp, so that while he was asleep she might look at
him, so as to know where to strike.
Then, being left alone, poor Psyche's mind was full of terror, and she
resolved to follow the advice of her sisters. So when her husband was
asleep, she went and fetched the lamp, and looked at him by its light; and
then she saw that, instead of a deadly monster, it was Eros himself, the God
of Love, to whom she was married. But while she was filled with awe and
delight at this discovery, the misfortune happened which Eros had foretold.
A drop of oil from the lamp fell upon the shoulder of the god, and he sprang
up from the couch, reproached Psyche for her fatal curiosity, and vanished
from her sight; and then the beautiful palace vanished also, and Psyche
found herself lying on the bare cold earth, weeping, deserted, and alone.
Then poor Psyche began a long and weary journey, to try to find the
husband she had lost, but she could not, for he had gone to his mother
Aphrodite, to be cured of his wound; and Aphrodite, finding out that Eros
had fallen in love with Psyche, determined to punish her, and to prevent her
from finding Eros.
First Psyche went to the god Pan, but he could not help her; then she
went to the goddess Demeter, the Earth-Mother, but she warned her against
the vengeance of Aphrodite, and sent her away. And the great goddess Hera
did the same; and at last, abandoned by every one,
Psyche went to Aphrodite herself, and the goddess, who had caused great
search to be made for her, now ordered her to be beaten and tormented, and
then ridiculed her sorrows, and taunted her with the loss of Eros, and set
her to work at many tasks that seemed impossible to be done.
First the goddess took a great heap of seeds of wheat, barley, millet,
poppy, lentils, and beans, and mixed them all together, and then bade Psyche
separate them into their different kinds by nightfall. Now there were so
many of them that this was impossible; but Eros, who pitied Psyche, though
she had lost him, sent a great many ants, who parted the seeds from each
other and arranged them in their proper heaps, so that by evening all that
Aphrodite had commanded was done.
Then the goddess was very angry, and fed Psyche on bread and water, and
next day she set Psyche another task. This was to collect a quantity of
golden wool from the sheep of the goddess, creatures so fierce and wild that
no mortal could venture near them and escape with life. Then Psyche thought
herself lost; but Pan came to her help and bade her wait until evening, when
the golden sheep would be at rest, and then she might from the trees and
shrubs collect all the wool she needed. So Psyche fulfilled this task
also.
But Aphrodite was still unsatisfied. She now demanded a crystal urn,
filled with icy waters from the fountain of Oblivion. The fountain was
placed on the summit of a great mountain; it issued from a fissure in a
lofty rock, too steep for any one to ascend, and from thence it fell into a
narrow channel, deep, winding, and rugged, and guarded on each side by
terrible dragons, which never slept. And the rush of the waters, as they
rolled along, resembled a human voice, always crying out to the adventurous
explorer—
"Beware! fly! or you perish!"
Here Psyche thought her sufferings at an end; sooner than face the
dragons and climb the rugged rocks she must die. But again Eros helped her,
for he sent the eagle of Zeus, the All-Father, and the eagle took the
crystal urn in his claws, flew past the dragons, settled on the rock, and
drew the water of the black fountain, and gave it safely to Psyche, who
carried it back and presented it to the angry Aphrodite.
But the goddess, still determined that Psyche should perish, set her
another task, the hardest and most dangerous of all.
"Take this box," she said, "go with it into the infernal
regions to Persephone, and ask her for a portion of her beauty, that I may
adorn myself with it for the supper of the gods."
Now on hearing this, poor Psyche knew that the goddess meant to destroy
her; so she went up to a lofty tower, meaning to throw herself down headlong
so that she might be killed, and thus pass into the realm of Hades, never to
return. But the tower was an enchanted place, and a voice from it spoke to
her and bade her be of good cheer, and told her what to do.
She was to go to a city of Achaia and find near it a mountain, and in the
mountain she would see a gap, from which a narrow road led straight into the
infernal regions. But the voice warned her of many things which must be done
on the journey, and of others which must be avoided. She was to take in each
hand a piece of barley bread, soaked in honey, and in her mouth she was to
put two pieces of money. On entering the dreary path she would meet an old
man driving a lame ass, laden with wood, and the old man would ask her for
help, but she was to pass him by in silence. Then she would come to the bank
of the black river, over which the boatman Charon ferries the souls of the
dead; and from her mouth Charon must take one piece of money, she saying not
a word. In crossing the river a dead hand would stretch itself up to her,
and a dead face, like that of her father, would appear, and a voice would
issue from the dead man's mouth, begging for the other piece of money, that
he might pay for his passage, and get released from the doom of floating for
ever in the grim flood of Styx. But still she was to keep silence, and to
let the dead man cry out in vain; for all these, the voice told her, were
snares prepared by Aphrodite, to make her let go the money, and to let fall
the pieces of bread.
Then, at the gate of the palace of Persephone she would meet the great
three-headed dog, Kerberos, who keeps watch there for ever, and to him, to
quiet his terrible barking, she must give one piece of the bread, and pass
on, still never speaking. So Kerberos would allow her to pass; but still
another danger would await her. Persephone would greet her kindly, and ask
her to sit upon soft cushions, and to eat of a fine banquet. But she must
refuse both offers—sitting only on the ground, and eating only of the
bread of mortals, or else she must remain for ever in the gloomy regions
below the earth.
Psyche listened to this counsel, and obeyed it. Everything happened as
the voice had foretold. She saw the old man with the overladen ass, she
permitted Charon to take the piece of money from her lips, she stopped her
ears against the cry of the dead man floating in the black river, she gave
the honey bread to Kerberos, and she refused the soft cushions and the
banquet offered to her by the queen of the infernal regions. Then Persephone
gave her the precious beauty demanded by Aphrodite, and shut it up in the
box, and Psyche came safely back into the light of day, giving to Kerberos,
the three-headed dog, the remaining piece of honey bread, and to Charon the
remaining piece of money.
But now she fell into a great danger. The voice in the tower had warned
her not to look into the box; but she was tempted by a strong desire, and so
she opened it, that she might see and use for herself the beauty of the
gods. But when she opened the box it was empty, save of a vapour of sleep,
which seized upon Psyche, and made her as if she were dead. In this unhappy
state, brought upon her by the vengeance of Aphrodite, she would have been
lost for ever, but Eros, healed of the wound caused by the burning oil, came
himself to her help, roused her from the death-like sleep, and put her in a
place of safety.
Then Eros flew up into the abode of the gods, and besought Zeus to
protect Psyche against his mother Aphrodite; and Zeus, calling an assembly
of the gods, sent Hermes to bring Psyche thither, and then he declared her
immortal, and she and Eros were wedded to each other; and there was a great
feast in Olympus. And the sisters of Psyche, who had striven to ruin her,
were punished for their crimes, for Eros appeared to them one after the
other in a dream, and promised to make each of them his wife, in place of
Psyche, and bade each throw herself from the great rock whence Psyche was
carried into the beautiful valley by Zephyrus; and both the sisters did as
the dream told them, and they were dashed to pieces, and perished
miserably.
Now this is the story of Eros and Psyche, as it is told by Apuleius, in
his book of Metamorphoses, written nearly two thousand years ago. But
the story was told ages before Apuleius by people other than the Greeks, and
in a language which existed long before theirs. It is the tale of Urvasî and
Purûravas, which is to be found in one of the oldest of the Vedas, or
Sanskrit sacred books, which contain the legends of the Aryan race before it
broke up and went in great fragments southward into India, and westward into
Persia and Europe. A translation of the story of Urvasî and Purûravas is
given by Mr. Max-Müller,1
who also tells what the story means, and this helps us to see the meaning of
the tale of Eros and Psyche, and of many other myths which occur among all
the branches of the Aryan family; among the Teutons, the Scandinavians, and
the Slavs, as well as among the Greeks.
Urvasî, then, was an immortal being, a kind of fairy, who fell in love
with Purûravas, a hero and a king; and she married him, and lived with him,
on this condition—that she should never see him unless he was dressed in
his royal robes.
Now there was a ewe, with two lambs, tied to the couch of Urvasî and Purûravas;
and the fairies—or Gandharvas, as the kinsfolk of Urvasî were
called—wished to get her back amongst them; and so they stole one of the
lambs.
Then Urvasî reproached her husband, and said,
"They take away my darling, as if I lived in a land where there is no
hero and no man."
The fairies stole the other lamb, and Urvasî reproached her husband
again, saying,
"How can that be a land without heroes or men where I am?"
Then Purûravas hastened to bring back the pet lamb; so eager was he that
he stayed not to clothe himself, and so sprang up naked.
Then the Gandharvas sent a flash of lightning, and Urvasî saw her
husband naked as if by daylight; and then she cried out to her
kinsfolk,
"I come back," and she vanished.
And Purûravas, made wretched by the loss of his love, sought her
everywhere, and once he was permitted to see her, and when he saw her, he
said he should die if she did not come back to him.
But Urvasî could not return; but she gave him leave to come to her, on
the last night of the year, to the golden seats; and he stayed with her for
that night.
And Urvasî said to him,
"The Gandharvas will to-morrow grant thee a wish; choose."
He said; "Choose thou for me."
She replied,
"Say to them, Let me be one of you."
And he said
this, and they taught him how to make the sacred fire, and he became one of
them, and dwelt with Urvasî for ever.
Now this, we see, is like the story of Eros and Psyche; and Mr. Max-Müller
teaches us what it means. It is the story of the Sun and the Dawn. Urvasî is
the Dawn, which must vanish or die when it beholds the risen Sum; and Purûravas
is the Sun; and they are united again at sunset, when the Sun dies away into
night. So, in the Greek myth, Eros is the dawning Sun, and when Psyche, the
Dawn, sees him, he flies from her, and it is only at nightfall that they can
be again united.
In the same paper Mr. Max-Müller shows how this root idea of the Aryan
race is found again in another of the most beautiful of Greek myths or
stories—that of Orpheus and Eurydike. In the Greek legends the Dawn has
many names; one of them is Eurydike. The name of her husband, Orpheus, comes
straight from the Sanskrit: it is the same as Ribhu or Arbhu, which is a name
of Indra, or the Sun, or which may be used for the rays of the Sun. The old
story, then, says our teacher, was this: "Eurydike (the Dawn) is bitten
by a serpent (the Night); she dies, and descends into the lower regions.
Orpheus follows her, and obtains from the gods that his wife should follow
him, if he promised not to look back. Orpheus promises—ascends from the
dark world below; Eurydike is behind him as he rises, but, drawn by doubt or
by love, he looks round; the first ray of the Sun glances at the Dawn; and
the Dawn fades away."
We have now seen that the Greek myth is like a much older myth existing
amongst the Aryan race before it passed westward. We have but to look to
other collections of Aryan folk-lore to find that in some of its features the
legend is common to all branches of the Aryan family. In our own familiar
story of "Beauty and the Beast," for instance, we have the same
idea. There are the three sisters, one of whom is chosen as the bride of an
enchanted monster, who dwells in a beautiful palace. By the arts of her
sisters she is kept away from him, and he is at the point of death through
his grief. Then she returns, and he revives, and becomes changed into a
handsome Prince, and they live happy ever after.
One feature of these legends is that beings closely united to each
other—as closely, that is, as the Sun and the Dawn—may not look upon each
other without misfortune. This is illustrated in the charming Scandinavian
story of "The Land East of the Sun and West of the Moon," which is
told in various forms; the best of them being in Mr. Morris's beautiful poem
in "The Earthly Paradise," and in Dr. Dasent's Norse Tales.2
We shall abridge Dr. Dasent's version, telling the story in our own way:
There was a poor peasant who had a large family whom he could scarcely
keep; and there were several daughters amongst them. The loveliest was the
youngest daughter; who was very beautiful indeed.
One evening in autumn, in bad weather, the family sat round the fire; and
there came three taps at the window. The father went out to see who it was,
and he found only a great White Bear.
And the White Bear said, "If you will give me your youngest
daughter, I will make you rich."
So the peasant went in and asked his daughter if she would be the wife of
the White Bear; and the daughter said "No."
So the White Bear went away, but said he would come back in a few days to
see if the maiden had changed her mind.
Now her father and mother talked to her so much about it, and seemed so
anxious to be well off, that the maiden agreed to be the wife of the White
Bear: and when he came again, she said "Yes," and the White Bear
told her to sit upon his back, and hold by his shaggy coat, and away they
went together.
After the maiden had ridden for a long way, they came to a great hill,
and the White Bear gave a knock on the hill with his paw, and the hill
opened, and they went in. Now inside the hill there was a palace with fine
rooms, ornamented with gold and silver, and all lighted up; and there was a
table ready laid; and the White Bear gave the maiden a silver bell, and told
her to ring it when she wanted anything.
And when the maiden had eaten and drank, she went to bed, in a beautiful
bed with silk pillows and curtains, and gold fringe to them. Then, in the
dark, a man came and lay down beside her. This was the White Bear, who was
an Enchanted Prince, and who was able to put off the shape of a beast at
night, and to become a man again; but before daylight, he went away and
turned once more into a White Bear, so that his wife could never see him in
the human form.
Well, this went on for some time, and the wife of the White Bear was very
happy with her kind husband, in the beautiful palace he had made for her.
Then she grew dull and miserable for want of company, and she asked leave to
go home for a little while to see her father and mother, and her brothers
and sisters. So the White Bear took her home again, but he told her that
there was one thing she must not do; she must not go into a room with her
mother alone, to talk to her, or a great misfortune would happen.
When the wife of the White Bear got home, she found that her family lived
in a grand house, and they were all very glad to see her; and then her
mother took her into a room by themselves, and asked about her husband. And
the wife of the White Bear forgot the warning, and told her mother that
every night a man came and lay down with her, and went away before daylight,
and that she had never seen him, and wanted to see him, very much.
Then the mother said it might be a Troll she slept with; and that she
ought to see what it was; and she gave her daughter a piece of candle, and
said, "Light this while he is asleep, and look at him, but take care
you don't drop the tallow upon him."
So then the White Bear came to fetch his wife, and they went back to the
palace in the hill, and that night she lit the candle, while her husband was
asleep, and then she saw that he was a handsome Prince, and she felt quite
in love with him, and gave him a soft kiss. But just as she kissed him she
let three drops of tallow fall upon his shirt, and he woke up.
Then the White Bear was very sorrowful, and said that he was enchanted by
a wicked fairy, and that if his wife had only waited for a year before
looking at him, the enchantment would be broken, and he would be a man again
always. But now that she had given way to curiosity, he must go to a dreary
castle East of the Sun and West of the Moon, and marry a witch Princess,
with a nose three ells long.
And then he vanished, and so did his palace, and his poor wife found
herself lying in the middle of a gloomy wood, and she was dressed in rags,
and was very wretched. But she did not stop to cry about her hard fate, for
she was a brave girl, and made up her mind to go at once in search of her
husband.
So she walked for days, and then she met an old woman sitting on a
hillside, and playing with a golden apple; and she asked the old woman the
way to the Land East of the Sun and West of the Moon. And the old woman
listened to her story, and then she said,
"I don't know where it is;
but you can go on and ask my next neighbour. Ride there on my horse, and
when you have done with him, give him a pat under the left ear and say, 'Go
home again;' and take this golden apple with you, it may be useful."
So she rode on for a long way, and then came to another old woman, who was
playing with a golden carding comb; and she asked her the way to the Land
East of the Sun and West of the Moon? But this old woman couldn't tell her,
and bade her go on to another old woman, a long way off. And she gave her
the golden carding comb, and lent her a horse just like the first one.
And the third old woman was playing with a golden spinning wheel; and she
gave this to the wife of the White Bear, and lent her another horse, and
told her to ride on to the East Wind, and ask him the way to the enchanted
land.
Now after a weary journey she got to the home of the East Wind, and he
said he had heard of the Enchanted Prince, and of the country East of the
Sun and West of the Moon, but he did not know where it was, for he had never
been so far. But, he said,
"Get on my back, and we will go to my
brother the West Wind; perhaps he knows."
So they sailed off to the West Wind, and told him the story, and he took
it quite kindly, but said he didn't know the way. But perhaps his brother
the South Wind might know; and they would go to him.
So the White Bear's wife got on the back of the West Wind, and he blew
straight away to the dwelling-place of the South Wind, and asked him where
to find the Land East of the Sun and West of the Moon.
But the South Wind said that although he had blown pretty nearly
everywhere, he had never blown there; but he would take her to his brother
the North Wind, the oldest, and strongest, and wisest Wind of all; and he
would be sure to know.
Now the North Wind was very cross at being disturbed, and he used bad
language, and was quite rude and unpleasant. But he was a kind Wind after
all, and when his brother the West Wind told him the story, he became quite
fatherly, and said he would do what he could, for he knew the Land East of
the Sun and West of the Moon very well.
But, he said,
"It is a long way off; so far off that once in my life
I blew an aspen leaf there, and was so tired with it that I couldn't blow or
puff for ever so many days after."
So they rested that night, and next
morning the North Wind puffed himself out, and got stout, and big, and
strong, ready for the journey; and the maiden got upon his back, and away
they went to the country East of the Sun and West of the Moon.
It was a terrible journey, high up in the air, in a great storm, and over
the mountains and the sea, and before they got to the end of it the North
Wind grew very tired, and drooped, and nearly fell into the sea, and got so
low down that the crests of the waves washed over him. But he blew as hard
as he could, and at last he put the maiden down on the shore, just in front
of the Enchanted Castle that stood in the Land East of the Sun and West of
the Moon; and there he had to stop and rest many days before he became
strong enough to blow home again.
Now the wife of the White Bear sat down before the castle, and began to
play with the golden apple. And then the wicked Princess with the nose three
ells long opened a window, and asked if she would sell the apple? But she
said
"No;" she would give the golden apple for leave to spend the
night in the bed-chamber of the Prince who lived there.
So the Princess with the long nose said "Yes," and the wife of
the White Bear was allowed to pass the night in her husband's chamber. But a
sleeping draught had been given to the Prince, and she could not wake him,
though she wept greatly, and spent the whole night in crying out to him; and
in the morning before he woke she was driven away by the wicked
Princess.
Well, next day she sat and played with the golden carding comb, and the
Princess wanted that too; and the same bargain was made; but again a
sleeping draught was given to the Prince, and he slept all night, and
nothing could waken him; and at the first peep of daylight the wicked
Princess drove the poor wife out again.
Now it was the third day, and the wife of the White Bear had only the
golden spinning-wheel left. So she sat and played with it, and the Princess
bought it on the same terms as before. But some kind folk who slept in the
next room to the Prince told him that for two nights a woman had been in his
chamber, weeping bitterly, and crying out to him to wake and see her.
So, being warned, the Prince only pretended to drink the sleeping
draught, and so when his wife came into the room that night he was wide
awake, and was rejoiced to see her; and they spent the whole night in loving
talk.
Now the next day was to be the Prince's wedding day; but now that his
lost wife had found him, he hit upon a plan to escape marrying the Princess
with the long nose. So when morning came, he said he should like to see what
his bride was fit for?
"Certainly," said the Witch-mother and the
Princess, both together.
Then the Prince said he had a fine shirt, with three drops of tallow upon
it; and he would marry only the woman who could wash them out, for no other
would be worth having. So they laughed at this, for they thought it would be
easily done.
And the Princess began, but the more she rubbed, the worse the tallow
stuck to the shirt. And the old Witch-mother tried; but it got deeper and
blacker than ever. And all the Trolls in the enchanted castle tried; but
none of them could wash the shirt clean.
Then said the Prince,
"Call in the lassie who sits outside, and let
her try." And she came in, and took the shirt, and washed it quite
clean and white, all in a minute.
Then the old Witch-mother put herself into such a rage that she burst
into pieces, and so did the Princess with the long nose, and so did all the
Trolls in the castle; and the Prince took his wife away with him, and all
the silver and gold, and a number of Christian people who had been enchanted
by the witch; and away they went for ever from the dreary Land East of the
Sun and West of the Moon.
In the story of "The Soaring Lark," in the collection of German
popular tales made by the brothers Grimm, we have another version of the same
idea; and here, as in Eros and Psyche, and in the Land East of the Sun and
West of the Moon, it is the woman to whose fault the misfortunes are laid,
and upon whom falls the long and weary task of search. The story told in
brief, is this:
A merchant went on a journey, and promised to bring back for his three
daughters whatever they wished. The eldest asked for diamonds, the second
for pearls, and the youngest, who was her father's favourite, for a singing,
soaring lark.
As the merchant came home, he passed through a great forest, and on the
top bough of a tall tree he found a lark, and tried to take it. Then a Lion
sprang from behind the tree, and said the lark was his, and that he would
eat up the merchant for trying to steal it.
The merchant told the Lion why he wanted the bird, and then the Lion said
that he would give him the lark, and let him go, on one condition, namely,
that he should give to the Lion the first thing or person that met him on
his return. Now the first person who met the merchant when he got home was
his youngest daughter, and the poor merchant told her the story, and wept
very much, and said that she should not go into the forest.
But the daughter said, "What you have promised you must do;"
and so she went into the forest, to find the Lion. The Lion was an Enchanted
Prince, and all his servants were also turned into lions; and so they
remained all day; but at night they all changed back again into men. Now
when the Lion Prince saw the merchant's daughter, he fell in love with her,
and took her to a fine castle, and at night, when he became a man, they were
married, and lived very happily, and in great splendour.
One day the Prince said to his wife, "To-morrow your eldest sister
is to be married; if you would like to be there, my lions shall go with
you." So she went, and the lions with her, and there were great
rejoicings in her father's house, because they were afraid that she had been
torn to pieces in the forest; and after staying some time, she went back to
her husband.
After a while, the Prince said to his wife, "To-morrow your second
sister is going to be married," and she replied, "This time I will
not go alone, for you shall go with me." Then he told her how dangerous
that would be, for if a single ray from a burning light fell upon him, he
would be changed into a Dove, and in that form would have to fly about for
seven years.
But the Princess very much wanted him to go, and in order to protect him
from the light, she had a room built with thick walls, so that no light
could get through, and there he was to sit while the bridal candles were
burning. But by some accident, the door of the room was made of new wood,
which split, and made a little chink, and through this chink one ray of
light from the torches of the bridal procession fell like a hair upon the
Prince, and he was instantly changed in form; and when his wife came to tell
him that all danger was over, she found only a White Dove, who said very
sadly to her—
"For seven years I must fly about in the world, but at every seventh
mile I will let fall a white feather and a drop of red blood, which will
show you the way, and if you follow it, you may save me."
Then the White Dove flew out of the door, and the Princess followed it,
and at every seventh mile the Dove let fall a white feather and a drop of
red blood; and so, guided by the feathers and the drops of blood, she
followed the Dove, until the seven years had almost passed, and she began to
hope that the Prince's enchantment would be at an end. But one day there was
no white feather to be seen, nor any drop of red blood, and the Dove had
flown quite away.
Then the poor Princess thought, "No man can help me now;" and
so she mounted up to the Sun, and said, "Thou shinest into every chasm
and over every peak; hast thou seen a White Dove on the wing?"
"No," answered the Sun. "I have not seen one; but take
this casket, and open it when you are in need of help."
She took the casket, and thanked the Sun. When evening came, she asked
the Moon—
"Hast thou seen a White Dove? for thou shinest all night long over
every field and through every wood."
"No," said the Moon, "I have not seen a White Dove; but
here is an egg—break it when you are in great trouble."
She thanked the Moon, and took the egg; and then the North Wind came by;
and she said to the North Wind:
"Hast thou not seen a White Dove? for thou passest through all the
boughs, and shakest every leaf under heaven."
"No," said the North Wind, "I have not seen one; but I
will ask my brothers, the East Wind, and the West Wind, and the South
Wind."
So he asked them all three; and the East Wind and the West Wind said,
"No, they had not seen the White Dove;" but the South Wind said—
"I have seen the White Dove; he has flown to the Red Sea, and has
again been changed into a Lion, for the seven years are up; and the Lion
stands there in combat with an Enchanted Princess, who is in the form of a
great Caterpillar."
Then the North Wind knew what to do; and he said to the Princess—
"Go to the Red Sea; on the right-hand shore there are great reeds,
count them, and cut off the eleventh reed, and beat the Caterpillar with it.
Then the Caterpillar and the Lion will take their human forms. Then look for
the Griffin which sits on the Red Sea, and leap upon its back with the
Prince, and the Griffin will carry you safely home. Here is a nut; let it
fall when you are in the midst of the sea, and a large nut-tree will grow
out of the water, and the Griffin will rest upon it."
So the Princess went to the Red Sea, and counted the reeds, and cut off
the eleventh reed, and beat the Caterpillar with it, and then the Lion
conquered in the fight, and both of them took their human forms again.
But the Enchanted Princess was too quick for the poor wife, for she
instantly seized the Prince and sprang upon the back of the Griffin, and
away they flew, quite out of sight. Now the poor deserted wife sat down on
the desolate shore, and cried bitterly; and then she said, "So far as
the wind blows, and so long as the cock crows, will I search for my husband,
till I find him;" and so she travelled on and on, until one day she
came to the palace whither the Enchanted Princess had carried the Prince;
and there was great feasting going on, and they told her that the Prince and
Princess were about to be married.
Then she remembered what the Sun had said, and took out the casket and
opened it, and there was the most beautiful dress in all the world; as
brilliant as the Sun himself. So she put it on, and went into the palace,
and everybody admired the dress, and the Enchanted Princess asked if she
would sell it?
"Not for gold or silver," she said, "but for flesh and
blood."
"What do you mean?" the Princess asked.
"Let me sleep for one night in the bridegroom's chamber," the
wife said. So the Enchanted Princess agreed, but she gave the Prince a
sleeping draught, so that he could not hear his wife's cries; and in the
morning she was driven out, without a word from him, for he slept so soundly
that all she said seemed to him only like the rushing of the wind through
the fir-trees.
Then the poor wife sat down and wept again, until she thought of the egg
the Moon had given her; and when she took the egg and broke it, there came
out of it a hen with twelve chickens, all of gold, and the chickens pecked
quite prettily, and then ran under the wings of the hen for shelter.
Presently, the Enchanted Princess looked out of the window, and saw the
hen and the chickens, and asked if they were for sale. "Not for gold or
silver, but for flesh and blood," was the answer she got; and then the
wife made the same bargain as before—that she should spend the night in
the bridegroom's chamber.
Now this night the Prince was warned by his servant, and so he poured
away the sleeping draught instead of drinking it; and when his wife came,
and told her sorrowful story, he knew her, and said, "Now I am
saved;" and then they both went as quickly as possible, and set
themselves upon the Griffin, who carried them over the Red Sea; and when
they got to the middle of the sea, the Princess let fall the nut which the
North Wind had given to her, and a great nut-tree grew up at once, on which
the Griffin rested; and then it went straight to their home, where they
lived happy ever after.
One more story of the same kind must be told, for three reasons: because
it is very good reading, because it brings together various legends, and
because it shows that these were common to Celtic as well as to Hindu, Greek,
Teutonic, and Scandinavian peoples. It is called "The Battle of the
Birds," and is given at full length, and in several different versions,
in Campbell's "Popular Tales of the West Highlands."3
To bring it within our space we must tell it in our own way.
Once upon a time every bird and other creature gathered to battle. The
son of the King of Tethertoun went to see the battle, but it was over before
he got there, all but one fight, between a great Raven and a Snake; and the
Snake was getting the victory. The King's son helped the Raven, and cut off
the Snake's head.
The Raven thanked him for his kindness and said, "Now
I will give thee a sight; come up on my wings;" and then the Raven flew
with him over seven mountains, and seven glens, and seven moors, and that
night the King's son lodged in the house of the Raven's sisters; and
promised to meet the Raven next morning in the same place. This went on for
three nights and days, and on the third morning, instead of a raven, there
met him a handsome lad, who gave him a bundle, and told him not to look into
it, until he was in the place where he would most wish to dwell.
But the
King's son did look into the bundle, and then he found himself in a great
castle with fine grounds about it, and he was very sorry, because he wished
the castle had been near his father's house, but he could not put it back
into the bundle again.
Then a great Giant met him, and offered to put the
castle back into a bundle for a reward, and this was to be the Prince's son,
when the son was seven years old. So the Prince promised, and the Giant put
everything back into the bundle, and the Prince went home with it to his
father's house. When he got there he opened the bundle, and out came the
castle and all the rest, just as before, and at the castle door stood a
beautiful maiden who asked him to marry her, and they were married, and had
a son.
When the seven years were up, the Giant came to ask for the boy, and
then the King's son (who had now become a king himself) told his wife about
his promise.
"Leave that to me and the Giant," said the Queen. So
she dressed the cook's son (who was the right age) in fine clothes, and gave
him to the Giant; but the Giant gave the boy a rod, and asked him,
"If
thy father had that rod, what would he do with it?"
"He would beat
the dogs if they went near the King's meat," said the boy.
Then Said
the Giant, "Thou art the cook's son," and he killed him.
Then the
Giant went back, very angry, and the Queen gave him the butler's son; and
the Giant gave him the rod, and asked him the same question,
"My father
would beat the dogs if they came near the King's glasses," said the
boy.
"Thou art the butler's son," said the Giant; and he killed
him.
Now the Giant went back the third time, and made a dreadful noise.
"Out here thy son," he said, "or the stone that is
highest in thy dwelling shall be the lowest." So they gave him the
King's son, and the Giant took him to his own house, and he stayed there a
long while.
One day the youth heard sweet music at the top of the Giant's
house, and he saw a sweet face. It was the Giant's youngest daughter; and
she said to him,
"My father wants you to marry one of my sisters, and
he wants me to marry the King of the Green City, but I will not. So when he
asks, say thou wilt take me."
Next day the Giant gave the King's son
choice of his two eldest daughters; but the Prince said, "Give me this
pretty little one?" and then the Giant was angry, and said that before
he had her he must do three things.
The first of these was to clean out a
byre or cattle place, where there was the dung of a hundred cattle, and it
had not been cleaned for seven years. He tried to do it, and worked till
noon, but the filth was as bad as ever. Then the Giant's youngest daughter
came, and bid him sleep, and she cleaned out the stable, so that a golden
apple would run from end to end of it.
Next day the Giant set him to thatch
the byre with birds' down, and he had to go out on the moors to catch the
birds; but at midday, he had caught only two blackbirds, and then the
Giant's youngest daughter came again, and bid him sleep, and then she caught
the birds, and thatched the byre with the feathers before sundown.
The third
day the Giant set him another task. In the forest there was a fir-tree, and
at the top was a magpie's nest, and in the nest were five eggs, and he was
to bring these five eggs to the Giant without breaking one of them. Now the
tree was very tall; from the ground to the first branch it was five hundred
feet, so that the King's son could not climb up it. Then the Giant's
youngest daughter came again, and she put her fingers one after the other
into the tree, and made a ladder for the King's son to climb up by. When he
was at the nest at the very top, she said, "Make haste now with the
eggs, for my father's breath is burning my back;" and she was in such a
hurry that she left her little finger sticking in the top of the tree.
Then
she told the King's son that the Giant would make all his daughters look
alike, and dress them alike, and that when the choosing time came he was to
look at their hands, and take the one that had not a little finger on one
hand. So it happened, and the King's son chose the youngest daughter,
because she put out her hand to guide him.
Then they were married, and there was a great feast, and they went to
their chamber. The Giant's daughter said to her husband, "Sleep not, or
thou diest; we must fly quick, or my father will kill thee." So first
she cut an apple into nine pieces, and put two pieces at the head of the
bed, and two at the foot, and two at the door of the kitchen, and two at the
great door, and one outside the house. And then she and her husband went to
the stable, and mounted the fine grey filly, and rode off as fast as they
could.
Presently the Giant called out, "Are you asleep yet?" and
the apple at the head of the bed said, "We are not asleep." Then
he called again, and the apple at the foot of the bed said the same thing;
and then he asked again and again, until the apple outside the house door
answered; and then he knew that a trick had been played on him, and ran to
the bedroom and found it empty. And then he pursued the runaways as fast as
possible.
Now at day-break—"at the mouth of day," the
story-teller says—the Giant's daughter said to her husband, "My
father's breath is burning my back; put thy hand into the ear of the grey
filly, and whatever thou findest, throw it behind thee."
"There is
a twig of sloe-tree," he said. "Throw it behind thee," said
she; and he did so, and twenty miles of black-thorn wood grew out of it, so
thick that a weasel could not get through. But the Giant cut through it with
his big axe and his wood-knife, and went after them again. At the heat of
day the Giant's daughter said again, "My father's breath is burning my
back;" and then her husband put his finger in the filly's ear, and took
out a piece of grey stone, and threw it behind him, and there grew up
directly a great rock twenty miles broad and twenty miles high. Then the
Giant got his mattock and his lever, and made a way through the rocks, and
came after them again.
Now it was near sunset, and once more the Giant's
daughter felt her father's breath burning her back. So, for the third time,
her husband put his hand into the filly's ear, and took out a bladder of
water, and he threw it behind him, and there was a fresh-water loch, twenty
miles long and twenty miles broad; and the Giant came on so fast that he ran
into the middle of the loch and was drowned.
Here is clearly a Sun-myth, which is like those of ancient Hindu and
Greek legend: the blue-grey Filly is the Dawn, on which the new day, the
maiden and her lover, speed away. The great Giant, whose breath burns the
maiden's back, is the morning Sun, whose progress is stopped by the thick
shade of the trees. Then he rises higher, and at midday he breaks through
the forest, and soars above the rocky mountains. At evening, still powerful
in speed and heat, he comes to the great lake, plunges into it, and sets,
and those whom he pursues escape. This ending is repeated in one of the
oldest Hindu mythical stories, that of Bheki, the Frog Princess, who lives
with her husband on condition that he never shows her a drop of water. One
day he forgets, and she disappears: that is, the sun sets or dies on the
water—a fanciful idea which takes us straight as an arrow to Aryan myths.
Now, however, we must complete the Gaelic story, which here becomes like
the Soaring Lark, and the Land East of the Sun and West of the Moon, and
other Teutonic and Scandinavian tales.
After the Giant's daughter and her husband had got free from the Giant,
she bade him go to his father's house, and tell them about her; but he was
not to suffer anything to kiss him, or he would forget her altogether. So he
told everybody they were not to kiss him, but an old greyhound leapt up at
him, and touched his mouth, and then he forgot all about the Giant's
daughter, just as if she had never lived.
Now when the King's son left her,
the poor forgotten wife sat beside a well, and when night came she climbed
into an oak-tree, and slept amongst the branches. There was a shoemaker who
lived near the well, and next day he sent his wife to fetch water, and as
she drew it she saw what she fancied to be her own reflection in the water,
but it was really the likeness of the maiden in the tree above it. The
shoemaker's wife, however, thinking it was her own, imagined herself to be
very handsome, and so she went back and told the shoemaker that she was too
beautiful to be his thrall, or slave, any longer, and so she went off. The
same thing happened to the shoemaker's daughter; and she went off too.
Then
the man himself went to the well, and saw the maiden in the tree, and
understood it all, and asked her to come down and stay at his house, and to
be his daughter. So she went with him.
After a while there came three
gentlemen from the King's Court, and each of them wanted to marry her; and
she agreed with each of them privately, on condition that each should give a
sum of money for a wedding gift. Well, they agreed to this, each unknown to
the other; and she married one of them, but when he came and had paid the
money, she gave him a cup of water to hold, and there he had to stand, all
night long, unable to move or to let go the cup of water, and in the morning
he went away ashamed, but said nothing to his friends.
Next night it was the
turn of the second; and she told him to see that the door-latch was
fastened; and when he touched the latch he could not let it go, and had to
stand there all night holding it; and so he went away, and said nothing.
The
next night the third came, and when he stepped upon the floor, one foot
stuck so fast that he could not draw it out until morning; and then he did
the same as the others—went off quite cast down.
And then the maiden gave
all the money to the shoemaker for his kindness to her.
This is like the
story of "The Master Maid," in Dr. Dasent's collection of
"Tales from the Norse." But there is the end of it to come.
The
shoemaker had to finish some shoes because the young King was going to be
married; and the maiden said she should like to see the King before he
married. So the shoemaker took her to the King's castle; and then she went
into the wedding-room, and because of her beauty they filled a vessel of
wine for her. When she was going to drink it, there came a flame out of the
glass, and out of the flame there came a silver pigeon and a golden pigeon;
and just then three grains of barley fell upon the floor, and the silver
pigeon ate them up.
Then the golden one said, "If thou hadst mind when
I cleaned the byre, thou wouldst not eat that without giving me a
share." Then three more grains fell, and the silver pigeon ate them
also. Then said the golden pigeon, "If thou hadst mind when I thatched
the byre, thou wouldst not eat that without giving me a share." Then
three other grains fell, and the silver pigeon ate them up. And the golden
pigeon said, "If thou hadst mind when I harried the magpie's nest, thou
wouldst not eat that without giving me my share. I lost my little finger
bringing it down, and I want it still."
Then, suddenly, the King's son
remembered, and knew who it was, and sprang to her and kissed her from hand
to mouth; and the priest came, and they were married.
These stories will be enough to show how the same idea repeats itself in
different ways among various peoples who have come from the same stock: for
the ancient Hindu legend of Urvasî and Purûravas, the Greek fable of Eros
and Psyche, the Norse story of the Land East of the Sun and West of the Moon,
the Teutonic story of the Soaring Lark, and the Celtic story of the Battle of
the Birds, are all one and the same in their general character, their origin,
and their meaning; and in all these respects they resemble the story which we
know so well in English—that of Beauty and the Beast. The same kind of
likeness has already been shown in the story of Cinderella, and in those
which resemble it in the older Aryan legends and in the later stories of the
Greeks. If space allowed, such comparisons might be carried much further;
indeed, there is no famous fairy tale known to children in our day which has
not proceeded from our Aryan forefathers, thousands of years ago, and which
is not repeated in Hindu, Persian, Greek, Teutonic, Scandinavian, and Celtic
folk-lore; the stories being always the same in their leading idea, and yet
always so different in their details as to show that the story-tellers have
not copied from each other, but that they are repeating, in their own way,
legends and fancies which existed thousands of years ago, before the Aryan
people broke up from their old homes, and went southward and westward, and
spread themselves over India and throughout Europe.
Now there is a curious little German story, called "The Wolf and the
Seven Little Kids," which is told in Grimm's collection, and which shows
at once the connection between Teutonic folk-lore, and Greek mythology, and
Aryan legend:
There was an old Goat who had seven young ones, and when she went into
the forest for wood, she warned them against the Wolf; if he came, they were
not to open the door to him on any account. Presently the Wolf came, and
knocked, and asked to be let in; but the little Kids said, "No, you
have a gruff voice; you are a wolf."
So the Wolf went and bought a
large piece of chalk, and ate it up, and by this means he made his voice
smooth; and then he came back to the cottage, and knocked, and again asked
to be let in. The little Kids, however, saw his black paws, and they said,
"No, your feet are black; you are a wolf."
Then the Wolf went to a
baker, and got him to powder his feet with flour; and when the little Kids
saw his white feet, they thought it was their mother, and let him in.
Then
the little Kids were very much frightened, and ran and hid themselves. The
first got under the table, the second into the bed, the third into the
cupboard, the fourth into the kitchen, the fifth into the oven, the sixth
into the wash-tub, and the seventh into the clock-case. The wicked Wolf,
however, found all of them out, and ate them up, excepting the one in the
clock-case, where he did not think of looking. And when the greedy monster
had finished his meal, he went into the meadow, and lay down and slept.
Just
at this time the old Goat came home, and began crying for her children; but
the only one who answered was the youngest, who said, "Here I am, dear
mother, in the clock-case;" and then he came out and told her all about
it. Presently the Goat went out into the meadow, and there lay the Wolf,
snoring quite loud; and she thought she saw something stirring in his body.
So she ran back, and fetched a pair of scissors and a needle and thread, and
then she cut open the monster's hairy coat, and out jumped first one little
kid, and then another, until all the six stood round her, for the greedy
Wolf was in such a hurry that he had swallowed them whole.
Then the Goat and
the little Kids brought a number of stones, and put them into the Wolf's
stomach, and sewed up the place again. When the Wolf woke up, he felt very
thirsty, and ran off to the brook to drink, and the heavy stones
overbalanced him, so that he fell into the brook, and was drowned. And then
the seven little Kids danced round their mother, singing joyfully, "The
wolf is dead! the wolf is dead!"
Now this story is nothing but another version of an old Greek legend which
tells how Kronos (Time), an ancient god, devoured his children while they
were quite young; and Kronos was the son of Ouranos, which means the heavens;
and Ouranos is a name which comes from that of Varuna, a god of the sky in
the old sacred books, or Vedas, of the Hindus; and the meaning of the legend
is that Night swallows up or devours the days of the week, all but the
youngest, which still exists, because, like the little kid in the German
tale, it is in the clock-case.
Again, in the Vedas we have many accounts of the fights of Indra, the
sun-god, with dragons and monsters, which mean the dark-clouds, the tempest
thunder-bearing clouds, which were supposed to have stolen the heavenly cows,
or the light, pleasant, rain-bearing clouds, and to have shut them up in
gloomy caverns. From this source we have an infinite number of Greek and
Teutonic, and Scandinavian, and other legends. One of these is the story of
Polyphemos, the great one-eyed giant, or Kyklops, whom Odysseus blinded.
Polyphemos is the storm-cloud, and Odysseus stands for the sun. The
storm-cloud threatens the mariners; the lightnings dart from the spot which
seems like an eye in the darkness; he hides the blue heavens and the soft
white clouds—the cows of the sky, or the white-fleeced flocks of heaven.
Then comes Odysseus, the sun-god, the hero, and smites him blind, and chases
him away, and disperses the threatening and the danger, and brings light, and
peace, and calm again.
Now this legend of Polyphemos is to be found everywhere; in the oldest
Hindu books, in Teutonic, and Norse, and Slav stories; and everywhere also
the great giant, stormy, angry, and one-eyed, is always very stupid, and is
always overthrown or outwitted by the hero, Odysseus, when he is shut up in
the cavern of Polyphemos, cheats the monster by tying himself under the belly
of the largest and oldest ram, and so passes out while the blind giant feels
the fleece, and thinks that all is safe.
Almost exactly the same trick is told in an old Gaelic story, that of
Conall Cra Bhuidhe.4
A great Giant with only one eye seized upon Conall, who was hunting on the
Giant's lands. Conall himself is made to tell the story:
"I hear a great clattering coming, and what was there but a great
Giant and his dozen of goats with him, and a buck at their head. And when
the Giant had tied the goats, he came up, and he said to me,
'Hao O! Conall,
it's long since my knife is rusting in my pouch waiting for thy tender
flesh.'
'Och!' said I, 'it's not much thou wilt be bettered by me, though
thou shouldst tear me asunder; I will make but one meal for thee. But I see
that thou art one-eyed. I am a good leech, and I will give thee the sight of
the other eye.'
The Giant went and he drew the great caldron on the site of
the fire. I was telling him how he should heat the water, so that I should
give its sight to the other eye. I got leather and I made a rubber of it,
and I set him upright in the caldron. I began at the eye that was well, till
I left them as bad as each other.
When he saw that he could not see a
glimpse, and when I myself said to him that I would get out in spite of him,
he gave that spring out of the water, and he stood in the mouth of the cave,
and he said that he would have revenge for the sight of his eye. I had but
to stay there crouched the length of the night, holding in my breath in such
a way that he might not feel where I was.
When he felt the birds calling in
the morning, and knew that the day was, he said, 'Art thou sleeping? Awake,
and let out my lot of goats!' I killed the buck. He cried, 'I will not
believe that thou art not killing my buck.' 'I am not,' I said, 'but the
ropes are so tight that I take long to loose them.'
I let out one of the
goats, and he was caressing her, and he said to her, 'There thou art, thou
shaggy hairy white goat; and thou seest me, but I see thee not.' I was
letting them out, by way of one by one, as I flayed the buck, and before the
last one was out I had him flayed, bag-wise.
Then I went and put my legs in
the place of his legs, and my hands in the place of his fore-legs, and my
head in the place of his head, and the horns on top of my head, so that the
brute might think it was the buck. I went out. When I was going out the
Giant laid his hand on me, and said, 'There thou art, thou pretty buck; thou
seest me, but I see thee not.'
When I myself got out, and I saw the world
about me, surely joy was on me. When I was out and had shaken the skin off
me, I said to the brute, 'I am out now, in spite of thee!'"
It was a blind fiddler, in Islay, who told the story of Conall, as it had
been handed down by tradition from generation to generation; just as
thousands of years before the story of Odysseus and Polyphemos was told by
Greek bards to wondering villagers.
Here we must stop; for volumes would not contain all that might be said of
the likeness of legend to legend in all the branches of the Aryan family, or
of the meaning of these stories, and of the lessons they teach—lessons of
history, and religious belief, and customs, and morals and ways of thought,
and poetic fancies, and of well-nigh all things, heavenly and
human—stretching back to the very spring and cradle of our race, older than
the oldest writings, and yet so ever fresh and new that while great scholars
ponder over them for their deep meaning, little children in the nursery or by
the fire-side in winter listen to them with delight for their wonder and
their beauty.
Else, if there were time and space we might tell the story of Jason, and
show how it springs from the changes of day and night, and how the hero, in
his good ship Argo, our mother Earth, searches for and bears away in triumph
the Golden Fleece, the beams of the radiant sun. Or we might fly with Perseus
on his weary, endless journey—the light pursuing and scattering the
darkness; the glittering hero, borne by the mystic sandals of Hermes, bearing
the sword of the sunlight, piercing the twilight or gloaming in the land of
the mystic Graiæ; slaying Medusa, the solemn star-lit night; destroying the
dark dragon, and setting free Andromeda the dawn-maiden; and doing many
wonders more. Or in Hermes we might trace out the Master Thief of Teutonic,
and Scandinavian, and Hindu legends; or in Herakles, the type of the heroes
who are god-like in their strength, yet who do the bidding of others, and who
suffer toil and wrong, and die glorious deaths, and leave great names for men
to wonder at: heroes such as Odysseus, and Theseus, and Phœbus, and
Achilles, and Sigurd, and Arthur, and all of whom represent, in one form or
another, the great mystery of Nature, and the conflict of light and darkness;
and so, if we look to their deeper meaning, the constant triumph of good over
evil, and of right over wrong.
[1] Oxford Essays: "Comparative
Mythology," p. 69.
[2] Popular Tales from the Norse, by
George Webbe Dasent, D.C.L.
[3] Popular Titles of the West Highlands.
Orally collected, with a Translation by J. F. Campbell. Edinburgh: Edmonton
and Douglas. 4 vols.
[4] Campbell's Popular Tales of the West
Highlands, i. 112.
Next: Chapter 3
Dwellers In Fairyland : Stories From The East . . .
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