<h3><SPAN name="chap52"></SPAN>52 King Thrushbeard</h3>
<p>A King had a daughter who was beautiful beyond all measure, but so proud and
haughty withal that no suitor was good enough for her. She sent away one after
the other, and ridiculed them as well.</p>
<p>Once the King made a great feast and invited thereto, from far and near, all
the young men likely to marry. They were all marshalled in a row according to
their rank and standing; first came the kings, then the grand-dukes, then the
princes, the earls, the barons, and the gentry. Then the King’s daughter
was led through the ranks, but to every one she had some objection to make; one
was too fat, “The wine-cask,” she said. Another was too tall,
“Long and thin has little in.” The third was too short,
“Short and thick is never quick.” The fourth was too pale,
“As pale as death.” The fifth too red, “A
fighting-cock.” The sixth was not straight enough, “A green log
dried behind the stove.”</p>
<p>So she had something to say against every one, but she made herself especially
merry over a good king who stood quite high up in the row, and whose chin had
grown a little crooked. “Well,” she cried and laughed, “he
has a chin like a thrush’s beak!” and from that time he got the
name of King Thrushbeard.</p>
<p>But the old King, when he saw that his daugher did nothing but mock the people,
and despised all the suitors who were gathered there, was very angry, and swore
that she should have for her husband the very first beggar that came to his
doors.</p>
<p>A few days afterwards a fiddler came and sang beneath the windows, trying to
earn a small alms. When the King heard him he said, “Let him come
up.” So the fiddler came in, in his dirty, ragged clothes, and sang
before the King and his daughter, and when he had ended he asked for a trifling
gift. The King said, “Your song has pleased me so well that I will give
you my daughter there, to wife.”</p>
<p>The King’s daughter shuddered, but the King said, “I have taken an
oath to give you to the very first beggar-man, and I will keep it.” All
she could say was in vain; the priest was brought, and she had to let herself
be wedded to the fiddler on the spot. When that was done the King said,
“Now it is not proper for you, a beggar-woman, to stay any longer in my
palace, you may just go away with your husband.”</p>
<p>The beggar-man led her out by the hand, and she was obliged to walk away on
foot with him. When they came to a large forest she asked, “To whom does
that beautiful forest belong?” “It belongs to King Thrushbeard; if
you had taken him, it would have been yours.” “Ah, unhappy girl
that I am, if I had but taken King Thrushbeard!”</p>
<p>Afterwards they came to a meadow, and she asked again, “To whom does this
beautiful green meadow belong?” “It belongs to King Thrushbeard; if
you had taken him, it would have been yours.” “Ah, unhappy girl
that I am, if I had but taken King Thrushbeard!”</p>
<p>Then they came to a large town, and she asked again, “To whom does this
fine large town belong?” “It belongs to King Thrushbeard; if you
had taken him, it would have been yours.” “Ah, unhappy girl that I
am, if I had but taken King Thrushbeard!”</p>
<p>“It does not please me,” said the fiddler, “to hear you
always wishing for another husband; am I not good enough for you?” At
last they came to a very little hut, and she said, “Oh goodness! what a
small house; to whom does this miserable, mean hovel belong?” The fiddler
answered, “That is my house and yours, where we shall live
together.”</p>
<p>She had to stoop in order to go in at the low door. “Where are the
servants?” said the King’s daughter. “What servants?”
answered the beggar-man; “you must yourself do what you wish to have
done. Just make a fire at once, and set on water to cook my supper, I am quite
tired.” But the King’s daughter knew nothing about lighting fires
or cooking, and the beggar-man had to lend a hand himself to get anything
fairly done. When they had finished their scanty meal they went to bed; but he
forced her to get up quite early in the morning in order to look after the
house.</p>
<p>For a few days they lived in this way as well as might be, and came to the end
of all their provisions. Then the man said, “Wife, we cannot go on any
longer eating and drinking here and earning nothing. You weave baskets.”
He went out, cut some willows, and brought them home. Then she began to weave,
but the tough willows wounded her delicate hands.</p>
<p>“I see that this will not do,” said the man; “you had better
spin, perhaps you can do that better.” She sat down and tried to spin,
but the hard thread soon cut her soft fingers so that the blood ran down.
“See,” said the man, “you are fit for no sort of work; I have
made a bad bargain with you. Now I will try to make a business with pots and
earthenware; you must sit in the market-place and sell the ware.”
“Alas,” thought she, “if any of the people from my
father’s kingdom come to the market and see me sitting there, selling,
how they will mock me?” But it was of no use, she had to yield unless she
chose to die of hunger.</p>
<p>For the first time she succeeded well, for the people were glad to buy the
woman’s wares because she was good-looking, and they paid her what she
asked; many even gave her the money and left the pots with her as well. So they
lived on what she had earned as long as it lasted, then the husband bought a
lot of new crockery. With this she sat down at the corner of the market-place,
and set it out round about her ready for sale. But suddenly there came a
drunken hussar galloping along, and he rode right amongst the pots so that they
were all broken into a thousand bits. She began to weep, and did now know what
to do for fear. “Alas! what will happen to me?” cried she;
“what will my husband say to this?”</p>
<p>She ran home and told him of the misfortune. “Who would seat herself at a
corner of the market-place with crockery?” said the man; “leave off
crying, I see very well that you cannot do any ordinary work, so I have been to
our King’s palace and have asked whether they cannot find a place for a
kitchen-maid, and they have promised me to take you; in that way you will get
your food for nothing.”</p>
<p>The King’s daughter was now a kitchen-maid, and had to be at the
cook’s beck and call, and do the dirtiest work. In both her pockets she
fastened a little jar, in which she took home her share of the leavings, and
upon this they lived.</p>
<p>It happened that the wedding of the King’s eldest son was to be
celebrated, so the poor woman went up and placed herself by the door of the
hall to look on. When all the candles were lit, and people, each more beautiful
than the other, entered, and all was full of pomp and splendour, she thought of
her lot with a sad heart, and cursed the pride and haughtiness which had
humbled her and brought her to so great poverty.</p>
<p>The smell of the delicious dishes which were being taken in and out reached
her, and now and then the servants threw her a few morsels of them: these she
put in her jars to take home.</p>
<p>All at once the King’s son entered, clothed in velvet and silk, with gold
chains about his neck. And when he saw the beautiful woman standing by the door
he seized her by the hand, and would have danced with her; but she refused and
shrank with fear, for she saw that it was King Thrushbeard, her suitor whom she
had driven away with scorn. Her struggles were of no avail, he drew her into
the hall; but the string by which her pockets were hung broke, the pots fell
down, the soup ran out, and the scraps were scattered all about. And when the
people saw it, there arose general laughter and derision, and she was so
ashamed that she would rather have been a thousand fathoms below the ground.
She sprang to the door and would have run away, but on the stairs a man caught
her and brought her back; and when she looked at him it was King Thrushbeard
again. He said to her kindly, “Do not be afraid, I and the fiddler who
has been living with you in that wretched hovel are one. For love of you I
disguised myself so; and I also was the hussar who rode through your crockery.
This was all done to humble your proud spirit, and to punish you for the
insolence with which you mocked me.”</p>
<p>Then she wept bitterly and said, “I have done great wrong, and am not
worthy to be your wife.” But he said, “Be comforted, the evil days
are past; now we will celebrate our wedding.” Then the maids-in-waiting
came and put on her the most splendid clothing, and her father and his whole
court came and wished her happiness in her marriage with King Thrushbeard, and
the joy now began in earnest. I wish you and I had been there too.</p>
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