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<h2> THE KING OF THE GOLDEN MOUNTAIN </h2>
<p>There was once a merchant who had only one child, a son, that was very
young, and barely able to run alone. He had two richly laden ships then
making a voyage upon the seas, in which he had embarked all his wealth, in
the hope of making great gains, when the news came that both were lost.
Thus from being a rich man he became all at once so very poor that nothing
was left to him but one small plot of land; and there he often went in an
evening to take his walk, and ease his mind of a little of his trouble.</p>
<p>One day, as he was roaming along in a brown study, thinking with no great
comfort on what he had been and what he now was, and was like to be, all
on a sudden there stood before him a little, rough-looking, black dwarf.
'Prithee, friend, why so sorrowful?' said he to the merchant; 'what is it
you take so deeply to heart?' 'If you would do me any good I would
willingly tell you,' said the merchant. 'Who knows but I may?' said the
little man: 'tell me what ails you, and perhaps you will find I may be of
some use.' Then the merchant told him how all his wealth was gone to the
bottom of the sea, and how he had nothing left but that little plot of
land. 'Oh, trouble not yourself about that,' said the dwarf; 'only
undertake to bring me here, twelve years hence, whatever meets you first
on your going home, and I will give you as much as you please.' The
merchant thought this was no great thing to ask; that it would most likely
be his dog or his cat, or something of that sort, but forgot his little
boy Heinel; so he agreed to the bargain, and signed and sealed the bond to
do what was asked of him.</p>
<p>But as he drew near home, his little boy was so glad to see him that he
crept behind him, and laid fast hold of his legs, and looked up in his
face and laughed. Then the father started, trembling with fear and horror,
and saw what it was that he had bound himself to do; but as no gold was
come, he made himself easy by thinking that it was only a joke that the
dwarf was playing him, and that, at any rate, when the money came, he
should see the bearer, and would not take it in.</p>
<p>About a month afterwards he went upstairs into a lumber-room to look for
some old iron, that he might sell it and raise a little money; and there,
instead of his iron, he saw a large pile of gold lying on the floor. At
the sight of this he was overjoyed, and forgetting all about his son, went
into trade again, and became a richer merchant than before.</p>
<p>Meantime little Heinel grew up, and as the end of the twelve years drew
near the merchant began to call to mind his bond, and became very sad and
thoughtful; so that care and sorrow were written upon his face. The boy
one day asked what was the matter, but his father would not tell for some
time; at last, however, he said that he had, without knowing it, sold him
for gold to a little, ugly-looking, black dwarf, and that the twelve years
were coming round when he must keep his word. Then Heinel said, 'Father,
give yourself very little trouble about that; I shall be too much for the
little man.'</p>
<p>When the time came, the father and son went out together to the place
agreed upon: and the son drew a circle on the ground, and set himself and
his father in the middle of it. The little black dwarf soon came, and
walked round and round about the circle, but could not find any way to get
into it, and he either could not, or dared not, jump over it. At last the
boy said to him. 'Have you anything to say to us, my friend, or what do
you want?' Now Heinel had found a friend in a good fairy, that was fond of
him, and had told him what to do; for this fairy knew what good luck was
in store for him. 'Have you brought me what you said you would?' said the
dwarf to the merchant. The old man held his tongue, but Heinel said again,
'What do you want here?' The dwarf said, 'I come to talk with your father,
not with you.' 'You have cheated and taken in my father,' said the son;
'pray give him up his bond at once.' 'Fair and softly,' said the little
old man; 'right is right; I have paid my money, and your father has had
it, and spent it; so be so good as to let me have what I paid it for.'
'You must have my consent to that first,' said Heinel, 'so please to step
in here, and let us talk it over.' The old man grinned, and showed his
teeth, as if he should have been very glad to get into the circle if he
could. Then at last, after a long talk, they came to terms. Heinel agreed
that his father must give him up, and that so far the dwarf should have
his way: but, on the other hand, the fairy had told Heinel what fortune
was in store for him, if he followed his own course; and he did not choose
to be given up to his hump-backed friend, who seemed so anxious for his
company.</p>
<p>So, to make a sort of drawn battle of the matter, it was settled that
Heinel should be put into an open boat, that lay on the sea-shore hard by;
that the father should push him off with his own hand, and that he should
thus be set adrift, and left to the bad or good luck of wind and weather.
Then he took leave of his father, and set himself in the boat, but before
it got far off a wave struck it, and it fell with one side low in the
water, so the merchant thought that poor Heinel was lost, and went home
very sorrowful, while the dwarf went his way, thinking that at any rate he
had had his revenge.</p>
<p>The boat, however, did not sink, for the good fairy took care of her
friend, and soon raised the boat up again, and it went safely on. The
young man sat safe within, till at length it ran ashore upon an unknown
land. As he jumped upon the shore he saw before him a beautiful castle but
empty and dreary within, for it was enchanted. 'Here,' said he to himself,
'must I find the prize the good fairy told me of.' So he once more
searched the whole palace through, till at last he found a white snake,
lying coiled up on a cushion in one of the chambers.</p>
<p>Now the white snake was an enchanted princess; and she was very glad to
see him, and said, 'Are you at last come to set me free? Twelve long years
have I waited here for the fairy to bring you hither as she promised, for
you alone can save me. This night twelve men will come: their faces will
be black, and they will be dressed in chain armour. They will ask what you
do here, but give no answer; and let them do what they will—beat,
whip, pinch, prick, or torment you—bear all; only speak not a word,
and at twelve o'clock they must go away. The second night twelve others
will come: and the third night twenty-four, who will even cut off your
head; but at the twelfth hour of that night their power is gone, and I
shall be free, and will come and bring you the Water of Life, and will
wash you with it, and bring you back to life and health.' And all came to
pass as she had said; Heinel bore all, and spoke not a word; and the third
night the princess came, and fell on his neck and kissed him. Joy and
gladness burst forth throughout the castle, the wedding was celebrated,
and he was crowned king of the Golden Mountain.</p>
<p>They lived together very happily, and the queen had a son. And thus eight
years had passed over their heads, when the king thought of his father;
and he began to long to see him once again. But the queen was against his
going, and said, 'I know well that misfortunes will come upon us if you
go.' However, he gave her no rest till she agreed. At his going away she
gave him a wishing-ring, and said, 'Take this ring, and put it on your
finger; whatever you wish it will bring you; only promise never to make
use of it to bring me hence to your father's house.' Then he said he would
do what she asked, and put the ring on his finger, and wished himself near
the town where his father lived.</p>
<p>Heinel found himself at the gates in a moment; but the guards would not
let him go in, because he was so strangely clad. So he went up to a
neighbouring hill, where a shepherd dwelt, and borrowed his old frock, and
thus passed unknown into the town. When he came to his father's house, he
said he was his son; but the merchant would not believe him, and said he
had had but one son, his poor Heinel, who he knew was long since dead: and
as he was only dressed like a poor shepherd, he would not even give him
anything to eat. The king, however, still vowed that he was his son, and
said, 'Is there no mark by which you would know me if I am really your
son?' 'Yes,' said his mother, 'our Heinel had a mark like a raspberry on
his right arm.' Then he showed them the mark, and they knew that what he
had said was true.</p>
<p>He next told them how he was king of the Golden Mountain, and was married
to a princess, and had a son seven years old. But the merchant said, 'that
can never be true; he must be a fine king truly who travels about in a
shepherd's frock!' At this the son was vexed; and forgetting his word,
turned his ring, and wished for his queen and son. In an instant they
stood before him; but the queen wept, and said he had broken his word, and
bad luck would follow. He did all he could to soothe her, and she at last
seemed to be appeased; but she was not so in truth, and was only thinking
how she should punish him.</p>
<p>One day he took her to walk with him out of the town, and showed her the
spot where the boat was set adrift upon the wide waters. Then he sat
himself down, and said, 'I am very much tired; sit by me, I will rest my
head in your lap, and sleep a while.' As soon as he had fallen asleep,
however, she drew the ring from his finger, and crept softly away, and
wished herself and her son at home in their kingdom. And when he awoke he
found himself alone, and saw that the ring was gone from his finger. 'I
can never go back to my father's house,' said he; 'they would say I am a
sorcerer: I will journey forth into the world, till I come again to my
kingdom.'</p>
<p>So saying he set out and travelled till he came to a hill, where three
giants were sharing their father's goods; and as they saw him pass they
cried out and said, 'Little men have sharp wits; he shall part the goods
between us.' Now there was a sword that cut off an enemy's head whenever
the wearer gave the words, 'Heads off!'; a cloak that made the owner
invisible, or gave him any form he pleased; and a pair of boots that
carried the wearer wherever he wished. Heinel said they must first let him
try these wonderful things, then he might know how to set a value upon
them. Then they gave him the cloak, and he wished himself a fly, and in a
moment he was a fly. 'The cloak is very well,' said he: 'now give me the
sword.' 'No,' said they; 'not unless you undertake not to say, "Heads
off!" for if you do we are all dead men.' So they gave it him, charging
him to try it on a tree. He next asked for the boots also; and the moment
he had all three in his power, he wished himself at the Golden Mountain;
and there he was at once. So the giants were left behind with no goods to
share or quarrel about.</p>
<p>As Heinel came near his castle he heard the sound of merry music; and the
people around told him that his queen was about to marry another husband.
Then he threw his cloak around him, and passed through the castle hall,
and placed himself by the side of the queen, where no one saw him. But
when anything to eat was put upon her plate, he took it away and ate it
himself; and when a glass of wine was handed to her, he took it and drank
it; and thus, though they kept on giving her meat and drink, her plate and
cup were always empty.</p>
<p>Upon this, fear and remorse came over her, and she went into her chamber
alone, and sat there weeping; and he followed her there. 'Alas!' said she
to herself, 'was I not once set free? Why then does this enchantment still
seem to bind me?'</p>
<p>'False and fickle one!' said he. 'One indeed came who set thee free, and
he is now near thee again; but how have you used him? Ought he to have had
such treatment from thee?' Then he went out and sent away the company, and
said the wedding was at an end, for that he was come back to the kingdom.
But the princes, peers, and great men mocked at him. However, he would
enter into no parley with them, but only asked them if they would go in
peace or not. Then they turned upon him and tried to seize him; but he
drew his sword. 'Heads Off!' cried he; and with the word the traitors'
heads fell before him, and Heinel was once more king of the Golden
Mountain.</p>
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