2015년 6월 22일 월요일

Folk-lore and Legends: Russian and Polish 14

Folk-lore and Legends: Russian and Polish 14



“Good man,” said she, “where are you going? How came you in these parts,
where no bird ever flies, and scarce a wild animal runs?”
 
“My mother,” said he, “I have been forced to come here. I carried some
corn to the mill to be ground, and when it was finished, as I carried
the flour home, the wind came and scattered it all out of the pan. I had
no flour when I got home, and I told my wife what had happened; so she
beat me, and sent me off to the wind to ask it to give me the flour
again or to pay me for it. So I came here to look for the wind, but I do
not know where to find it.”
 
“Come with me,” said the woman. “I am the mother of the winds, and I
have four sons. The first is the East-wind, the second the South-wind,
the third the West-wind, and the fourth the North-wind. Tell me, now,
which wind was it that took your flour?”
 
“It was the South-wind,” said the man.
 
The old woman led the man deep into the forest, and bringing him to a
little hut, said
 
“Here we are, my man. Climb up upon the stove and cover yourself up, for
my children will soon be here.”
 
“Why should I cover myself?” asked the man.
 
“Because, my son, the North-wind, will be here,” said the woman, “and he
will otherwise freeze you up.”
 
In a short time the sons began to come in. When the South-wind had
arrived, the old woman told the man to come off the stove, and said to
her son
 
“South-wind, my dear son, this man has a complaint against you. Why do
you hurt the poor? You have taken this man’s flour out of his pan. Now
give him money for it, or make him some recompense.”
 
“Very well, mother,” said the South-wind, “I will buy the flour of him.”
 
So saying, he turned to the man, and said
 
“Here, my man. Take this basket. It has in it all you most wantmoney,
bread, food, and drink of all kinds. You have only to say to it,
‘Basket, give me so and so,’ and it will give you whatever you wish.
Take it to your house. I give it you for your flour.”
 
The peasant bowed to the Wind, thanked it for the basket, and set off
homewards.
 
He gave the basket to his wife, and said
 
“Wife, here is a basket which contains everything, whatever you most
want. You only have to ask for it.”
 
The woman took the basket, and said to it
 
“Basket, give me some good flour, so that I may make bread.”
 
The basket gave her as much as she wished. She continued asking for very
many things, and everything she named the basket gave her.
 
Now it chanced that one day a nobleman was passing by the peasant’s hut.
When the woman saw him she said to her husband
 
“Go and ask the nobleman to dine with us. If you do not bring him in I
will beat you till you are half dead.”
 
The man was afraid of his wife carrying out her threat, so he set off
and asked the stranger in to dinner.
 
His wife meanwhile watched him from the window, having taken out of the
basket all that was required for the dinner. There she sat, with her
hands in her lap, awaiting her husband’s return with the guest.
 
The nobleman was astonished, and laughed at the invitation. He would not
accept it himself, but told his attendants they might go if they wished,
and he should like to know how they dined.
 
So the attendants went, thinking they should fare very badly, for the
appearance of the hut would not have led any one to suppose that there
was much feasting to be had within it. When they entered they were
vastly astonished. The dinner was such as would have done credit had it
been provided by a host of some rank. The men sat down, and ate and
drank and made merry; and, keeping their eyes open the while, they
observed that when the woman wanted anything for the table she went to
the basket and got it given to her by it. The men began to think how
they could get the prize for themselves. As they feasted they sent off
one of their number to look for a basket just like the one in the room.
Off went the man as quickly as he could, found what he wanted, and
brought it with him to the cottage. Then while the peasant and his wife
were busy, the men slipped the new basket in the place of the other.
When they left they carried away the treasure-basket with them, and
coming to their master they told him how they had been entertained.
 
After the feast was over and the guests had gone, the peasant’s wife
cast away the food that was left, for what was the use of keeping it
when fresh could be so easily got? The next morning she went to the
basket and asked it for various things, but a great change seemed to
have come over it, for it paid no heed to her.
 
“Old Greyhead,” cried she to her husband, “this is a nice basket you
have got us! What is the good of it if it does not do what we tell it?
Be off to the wind again, and tell it to give you back your flour, or I
will thrash you till you are half dead.”
 
There was nothing for it but he must go. He came to the old woman’s hut,
and there he began to tell her what a terrible wife he had got, and the
old woman told him to wait a while till her son, the South-wind, came
home.
 
Not long after in came the South-wind, and the peasant told him all
about his trouble.
 
“Well,” said the wind, when he had heard him to an end, “I am sorry, old
man, that you have such a bad wife, but I will help you, and your wife
shall thrash you no more. Here now is a cask. Take it home with you, and
when your wife threatens to beat you, stand behind the cask and say,
‘Five, come out of the cask and beat my wife!’ When you think they have
punished her sufficiently, say, ‘Five, go back to your cask!’”
 
The peasant was very grateful to the Wind, made him his best bow, and
went home. When he got there, he said
 
“There, wife, now you have a cask instead of the basket.”
 
His wife flew into a rage, and said
 
“What do I want with your cask? Why didn’t you bring the flour with
you?”
 
She grasped a weapon as she said this, and got ready to lay on her
husband, but he slipped behind the cask, and when he saw how matters
were, he said
 
“Five, come out of the cask and beat my wife!”
 
In an instant out sprang five big fellows, who set to to thrash the
wife. The husband looked on till he thought she had had enough. Then he
listened to her cries for mercy, and said
 
“Five, go back to your cask!”
 
In the twinkling of an eye the men ceased their labour, and disappeared
into the cask again. From that hour the woman was much improved, and the
peasant, seeing that he should not want the cask in order to preserve
quiet at home, began to think whether he could not somehow obtain his
basket by means of it. He concluded that the nobleman’s servants must
have taken the basket away, and he and his wife set their heads together
to think how they could get it from them.
 
“Since you have such a marvellous cask,” said she, “you need not be
afraid even of a thousand men. Why not then go to the nobleman and make
him give you the basket.” Her husband thought the idea was a good one,
so he went off to the nobleman’s house and asked him to come outside and
fight him. He laughed at the peasant, but thought he would have a joke
with him, so he told him to await him outside. Off went the peasant,
took his cask under his arm, and came to the spot where the nobleman was
to meet him. In a short time he came, bringing with him several of his
servants. As soon as he had come up he ordered his attendants to set on
the peasant and give him a good thrashing; but he, when he saw the
gentleman’s trickery, fell in a rage, and shouted out
 
“Look you, sir, will you give me back my basket, or will you not? It
shall be better for you all if you do!”
 
When, however, he saw that no one paid any attention to what he said,
and that the attendants were about to thrash him, he cried out
 
“Five to each man come out of the cask, and beat them thoroughly!”
 
In an instant there sprang forth five stout fellows for each of them,
and they laid upon them most unmercifully. The nobleman was afraid he
should be beaten till there was no life in him, and so he called out
 
“Good fellow, for Heaven’s sake, do not beat us any more!”
 
When the peasant heard that, he said
 
“Go back to the cask, you fellows.”
 
In a moment the cudgels ceased to play, and the men disappeared into the
cask. The gentleman had had enough. He ordered that the basket should be
given up to the peasant as quickly as possible, and the man taking it
home with him, he and his wife lived very happily ever after.
 
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
 
 
 
THE WONDERFUL CLOTH.
 
 
THERE was once a shepherd who looked after the king’s flocks. He had
three sons, two of whom were considered very clever, but the third was
looked upon as a fool. The elder brothers helped their father to herd
the flocks, but the youngest, who was thought to be good for nothing,
played about or went to sleep.
 
He passed his days and nights sleeping on the top of the stove, and
never left that place unless he was driven from it. If he bestirred
himself, it was rather because he was too hot, or wanted something to
eat or drink. His father did not care for him, and called him a lazy
fellow, while his brothers often tormented him, pulling him off the
stove or refusing to let him eat. If his mother had not looked after him
he would have been nearly starved. She, however, would caress him and
give him food. Was it his fault that he was a fool? Who could tell what
Heaven had in store for him? It sometimes happens that the wisest folk
do not get on well, and that fools, especially such as are harmless and inoffensive, succeed in a wonderful fashion.

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