<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0059" id="link2H_4_0059"></SPAN> THE SALAD </h2>
<p>As a merry young huntsman was once going briskly along through a wood,
there came up a little old woman, and said to him, ‘Good day, good day;
you seem merry enough, but I am hungry and thirsty; do pray give me
something to eat.’ The huntsman took pity on her, and put his hand in his
pocket and gave her what he had. Then he wanted to go his way; but she
took hold of him, and said, ‘Listen, my friend, to what I am going to tell
you; I will reward you for your kindness; go your way, and after a little
time you will come to a tree where you will see nine birds sitting on a
cloak. Shoot into the midst of them, and one will fall down dead: the
cloak will fall too; take it, it is a wishing-cloak, and when you wear it
you will find yourself at any place where you may wish to be. Cut open the
dead bird, take out its heart and keep it, and you will find a piece of
gold under your pillow every morning when you rise. It is the bird’s heart
that will bring you this good luck.’</p>
<p>The huntsman thanked her, and thought to himself, ‘If all this does
happen, it will be a fine thing for me.’ When he had gone a hundred steps
or so, he heard a screaming and chirping in the branches over him, and
looked up and saw a flock of birds pulling a cloak with their bills and
feet; screaming, fighting, and tugging at each other as if each wished to
have it himself. ‘Well,’ said the huntsman, ‘this is wonderful; this
happens just as the old woman said’; then he shot into the midst of them
so that their feathers flew all about. Off went the flock chattering away;
but one fell down dead, and the cloak with it. Then the huntsman did as
the old woman told him, cut open the bird, took out the heart, and carried
the cloak home with him.</p>
<p>The next morning when he awoke he lifted up his pillow, and there lay the
piece of gold glittering underneath; the same happened next day, and
indeed every day when he arose. He heaped up a great deal of gold, and at
last thought to himself, ‘Of what use is this gold to me whilst I am at
home? I will go out into the world and look about me.’</p>
<p>Then he took leave of his friends, and hung his bag and bow about his
neck, and went his way. It so happened that his road one day led through a
thick wood, at the end of which was a large castle in a green meadow, and
at one of the windows stood an old woman with a very beautiful young lady
by her side looking about them. Now the old woman was a witch, and said to
the young lady, ‘There is a young man coming out of the wood who carries a
wonderful prize; we must get it away from him, my dear child, for it is
more fit for us than for him. He has a bird’s heart that brings a piece of
gold under his pillow every morning.’ Meantime the huntsman came nearer
and looked at the lady, and said to himself, ‘I have been travelling so
long that I should like to go into this castle and rest myself, for I have
money enough to pay for anything I want’; but the real reason was, that he
wanted to see more of the beautiful lady. Then he went into the house, and
was welcomed kindly; and it was not long before he was so much in love
that he thought of nothing else but looking at the lady’s eyes, and doing
everything that she wished. Then the old woman said, ‘Now is the time for
getting the bird’s heart.’ So the lady stole it away, and he never found
any more gold under his pillow, for it lay now under the young lady’s, and
the old woman took it away every morning; but he was so much in love that
he never missed his prize.</p>
<p>‘Well,’ said the old witch, ‘we have got the bird’s heart, but not the
wishing-cloak yet, and that we must also get.’ ‘Let us leave him that,’
said the young lady; ‘he has already lost his wealth.’ Then the witch was
very angry, and said, ‘Such a cloak is a very rare and wonderful thing,
and I must and will have it.’ So she did as the old woman told her, and
set herself at the window, and looked about the country and seemed very
sorrowful; then the huntsman said, ‘What makes you so sad?’ ‘Alas! dear
sir,’ said she, ‘yonder lies the granite rock where all the costly
diamonds grow, and I want so much to go there, that whenever I think of it
I cannot help being sorrowful, for who can reach it? only the birds and
the flies—man cannot.’ ‘If that’s all your grief,’ said the
huntsman, ‘I’ll take you there with all my heart’; so he drew her under his
cloak, and the moment he wished to be on the granite mountain they were
both there. The diamonds glittered so on all sides that they were
delighted with the sight and picked up the finest. But the old witch made
a deep sleep come upon him, and he said to the young lady, ‘Let us sit
down and rest ourselves a little, I am so tired that I cannot stand any
longer.’ So they sat down, and he laid his head in her lap and fell
asleep; and whilst he was sleeping on she took the cloak from his
shoulders, hung it on her own, picked up the diamonds, and wished herself
home again.</p>
<p>When he awoke and found that his lady had tricked him, and left him alone
on the wild rock, he said, ‘Alas! what roguery there is in the world!’ and
there he sat in great grief and fear, not knowing what to do. Now this
rock belonged to fierce giants who lived upon it; and as he saw three of
them striding about, he thought to himself, ‘I can only save myself by
feigning to be asleep’; so he laid himself down as if he were in a sound
sleep. When the giants came up to him, the first pushed him with his foot,
and said, ‘What worm is this that lies here curled up?’ ‘Tread upon him
and kill him,’ said the second. ‘It’s not worth the trouble,’ said the
third; ‘let him live, he’ll go climbing higher up the mountain, and some
cloud will come rolling and carry him away.’ And they passed on. But the
huntsman had heard all they said; and as soon as they were gone, he
climbed to the top of the mountain, and when he had sat there a short time
a cloud came rolling around him, and caught him in a whirlwind and bore
him along for some time, till it settled in a garden, and he fell quite
gently to the ground amongst the greens and cabbages.</p>
<p>Then he looked around him, and said, ‘I wish I had something to eat, if
not I shall be worse off than before; for here I see neither apples nor
pears, nor any kind of fruits, nothing but vegetables.’ At last he thought
to himself, ‘I can eat salad, it will refresh and strengthen me.’ So he
picked out a fine head and ate of it; but scarcely had he swallowed two
bites when he felt himself quite changed, and saw with horror that he was
turned into an ass. However, he still felt very hungry, and the salad
tasted very nice; so he ate on till he came to another kind of salad, and
scarcely had he tasted it when he felt another change come over him, and
soon saw that he was lucky enough to have found his old shape again.</p>
<p>Then he laid himself down and slept off a little of his weariness; and
when he awoke the next morning he broke off a head both of the good and
the bad salad, and thought to himself, ‘This will help me to my fortune
again, and enable me to pay off some folks for their treachery.’ So he
went away to try and find the castle of his friends; and after wandering
about a few days he luckily found it. Then he stained his face all over
brown, so that even his mother would not have known him, and went into the
castle and asked for a lodging; ‘I am so tired,’ said he, ‘that I can go
no farther.’ ‘Countryman,’ said the witch, ‘who are you? and what is your
business?’ ‘I am,’ said he, ‘a messenger sent by the king to find the
finest salad that grows under the sun. I have been lucky enough to find
it, and have brought it with me; but the heat of the sun scorches so that
it begins to wither, and I don’t know that I can carry it farther.’</p>
<p>When the witch and the young lady heard of his beautiful salad, they
longed to taste it, and said, ‘Dear countryman, let us just taste it.’ ‘To
be sure,’ answered he; ‘I have two heads of it with me, and will give you
one’; so he opened his bag and gave them the bad. Then the witch herself
took it into the kitchen to be dressed; and when it was ready she could
not wait till it was carried up, but took a few leaves immediately and put
them in her mouth, and scarcely were they swallowed when she lost her own
form and ran braying down into the court in the form of an ass. Now the
servant-maid came into the kitchen, and seeing the salad ready, was going
to carry it up; but on the way she too felt a wish to taste it as the old
woman had done, and ate some leaves; so she also was turned into an ass
and ran after the other, letting the dish with the salad fall on the
ground. The messenger sat all this time with the beautiful young lady, and
as nobody came with the salad and she longed to taste it, she said, ‘I
don’t know where the salad can be.’ Then he thought something must have
happened, and said, ‘I will go into the kitchen and see.’ And as he went
he saw two asses in the court running about, and the salad lying on the
ground. ‘All right!’ said he; ‘those two have had their share.’ Then he
took up the rest of the leaves, laid them on the dish and brought them to
the young lady, saying, ‘I bring you the dish myself that you may not wait
any longer.’ So she ate of it, and like the others ran off into the court
braying away.</p>
<p>Then the huntsman washed his face and went into the court that they might
know him. ‘Now you shall be paid for your roguery,’ said he; and tied them
all three to a rope and took them along with him till he came to a mill
and knocked at the window. ‘What’s the matter?’ said the miller. ‘I have
three tiresome beasts here,’ said the other; ‘if you will take them, give
them food and room, and treat them as I tell you, I will pay you whatever
you ask.’ ‘With all my heart,’ said the miller; ‘but how shall I treat
them?’ Then the huntsman said, ‘Give the old one stripes three times a day
and hay once; give the next (who was the servant-maid) stripes once a day
and hay three times; and give the youngest (who was the beautiful lady)
hay three times a day and no stripes’: for he could not find it in his
heart to have her beaten. After this he went back to the castle, where he
found everything he wanted.</p>
<p>Some days after, the miller came to him and told him that the old ass was
dead; ‘The other two,’ said he, ‘are alive and eat, but are so sorrowful
that they cannot last long.’ Then the huntsman pitied them, and told the
miller to drive them back to him, and when they came, he gave them some of
the good salad to eat. And the beautiful young lady fell upon her knees
before him, and said, ‘O dearest huntsman! forgive me all the ill I have
done you; my mother forced me to it, it was against my will, for I always
loved you very much. Your wishing-cloak hangs up in the closet, and as for
the bird’s heart, I will give it you too.’ But he said, ‘Keep it, it will
be just the same thing, for I mean to make you my wife.’ So they were
married, and lived together very happily till they died.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />