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<h2> THE TERRIBLE HEAD </h2>
<p>Once upon a time there was a king whose only child was a girl. Now the
King had been very anxious to have a son, or at least a grandson, to come
after him, but he was told by a prophet whom he consulted that his own
daughter's son should kill him. This news terrified him so much that he
determined never to let his daughter be married, for he thought it was
better to have no grandson at all than to be killed by his grandson. He
therefore called his workmen together, and bade them dig a deep round hole
in the earth, and then he had a prison of brass built in the hole, and
then, when it was finished, he locked up his daughter. No man ever saw
her, and she never saw even the fields and the sea, but only the sky and
the sun, for there was a wide open window in the roof of the house of
brass. So the Princess would sit looking up at the sky, and watching the
clouds float across, and wondering whether she should ever get out of her
prison. Now one day it seemed to her that the sky opened above her, and a
great shower of shining gold fell through the window in the roof, and lay
glittering in her room. Not very long after, the Princess had a baby, a
little boy, but when the King her father heard of it he was very angry and
afraid, for now the child was born that should be his death. Yet, cowardly
as he was, he had not quite the heart to kill the Princess and her baby
outright, but he had them put in a huge brass-bound chest and thrust out
to sea, that they might either be drowned or starved, or perhaps come to a
country where they would be out of his way.</p>
<p>So the Princess and the baby floated and drifted in the chest on the sea
all day and night, but the baby was not afraid of the waves nor of the
wind, for he did not know that they could hurt him, and he slept quite
soundly. And the Princess sang a song over him, and this was her song:</p>
<p>"Child, my child, how sound you sleep!<br/>
Though your mother's care is deep,<br/>
You can lie with heart at rest<br/>
In the narrow brass-bound chest;<br/>
In the starless night and drear<br/>
You can sleep, and never hear<br/>
Billows breaking, and the cry<br/>
Of the night-wind wandering by;<br/>
In soft purple mantle sleeping<br/>
With your little face on mine,<br/>
Hearing not your mother weeping<br/>
And the breaking of the brine."<br/></p>
<p>Well, the daylight came at last, and the great chest was driven by the
waves against the shore of an island. There the brass-bound chest lay,
with the Princess and her baby in it, till a man of that country came
past, and saw it, and dragged it on to the beach, and when he had broken
it open, behold! there was a beautiful lady and a little boy. So he took
them home, and was very kind to them, and brought up the boy till he was a
young man. Now when the boy had come to his full strength the King of that
country fell in love with his mother, and wanted to marry her, but he knew
that she would never part from her boy. So he thought of a plan to get rid
of the boy, and this was his plan: A great Queen of a country not far off
was going to be married, and this king said that all his subjects must
bring him wedding presents to give her. And he made a feast to which he
invited them all, and they all brought their presents; some brought gold
cups, and some brought necklaces of gold and amber, and some brought
beautiful horses; but the boy had nothing, though he was the son of a
princess, for his mother had nothing to give him. Then the rest of the
company began to laugh at him, and the King said: "If you have nothing
else to give, at least you might go and fetch the Terrible Head."</p>
<p>The boy was proud, and spoke without thinking:</p>
<p>"Then I swear that I <i>will</i> bring the Terrible Head, if it may be
brought by a living man. But of what head you speak I know not."</p>
<p>Then they told him that somewhere, a long way off, there dwelt three
dreadful sisters, monstrous ogrish women, with golden wings and claws of
brass, and with serpents growing on their heads instead of hair. Now these
women were so awful to look on that whoever saw them was turned at once
into stone. And two of them could not be put to death, but the youngest,
whose face was very beautiful, could be killed, and it was <i>her</i> head
that the boy had promised to bring. You may imagine it was no easy
adventure.</p>
<p>When he heard all this he was perhaps sorry that he had sworn to bring the
Terrible Head, but he was determined to keep his oath. So he went out from
the feast, where they all sat drinking and making merry, and he walked
alone beside the sea in the dusk of the evening, at the place where the
great chest, with himself and his mother in it, had been cast ashore.</p>
<p>There he went and sat down on a rock, looking toward the sea, and
wondering how he should begin to fulfill his vow. Then he felt some one
touch him on the shoulder; and he turned, and saw a young man like a
king's son, having with him a tall and beautiful lady, whose blue eyes
shone like stars. They were taller than mortal men, and the young man had
a staff in his hand with golden wings on it, and two golden serpents
twisted round it, and he had wings on his cap and on his shoes. He spoke
to the boy, and asked him why he was so unhappy; and the boy told him how
he had sworn to bring the Terrible Head, and knew not how to begin to set
about the adventure.</p>
<p>Then the beautiful lady also spoke, and said that "it was a foolish oath
and a hasty, but it might be kept if a brave man had sworn it." Then the
boy answered that he was not afraid, if only he knew the way.</p>
<p>Then the lady said that to kill the dreadful woman with the golden wings
and the brass claws, and to cut off her head, he needed three things:
first, a Cap of Darkness, which would make him invisible when he wore it;
next, a Sword of Sharpness, which would cleave iron at one blow; and last,
the Shoes of Swiftness, with which he might fly in the air.</p>
<p>The boy answered that he knew not where such things were to be procured,
and that, wanting them, he could only try and fail. Then the young man,
taking off his own shoes, said: "First, you shall use these shoes till you
have taken the Terrible Head, and then you must give them back to me. And
with these shoes you will fly as fleet as a bird, or a thought, over the
land or over the waves of the sea, wherever the shoes know the way. But
there are ways which they do not know, roads beyond the borders of the
world. And these roads have you to travel. Now first you must go to the
Three Gray Sisters, who live far off in the north, and are so very cold
that they have only one eye and one tooth among the three. You must creep
up close to them, and as one of them passes the eye to the other you must
seize it, and refuse to give it up till they have told you the way to the
Three Fairies of the Garden, and <i>they</i> will give you the Cap of
Darkness and the Sword of Sharpness, and show you how to wing beyond this
world to the land of the Terrible Head."</p>
<p>Then the beautiful lady said: "Go forth at once, and do not return to say
good-by to your mother, for these things must be done quickly, and the
Shoes of Swiftness themselves will carry you to the land of the Three Gray
Sisters—for they know the measure of that way."</p>
<p>So the boy thanked her, and he fastened on the Shoes of Swiftness, and
turned to say good-by to the young man and the lady. But, behold! they had
vanished, he knew not how or where! Then he leaped in the air to try the
Shoes of Swiftness, and they carried him more swiftly than the wind, over
the warm blue sea, over the happy lands of the south, over the northern
peoples who drank mare's milk and lived in great wagons, wandering after
their flocks. Across the wide rivers, where the wild fowl rose and fled
before him, and over the plains and the cold North Sea he went, over the
fields of snow and the hills of ice, to a place where the world ends, and
all water is frozen, and there are no men, nor beasts, nor any green
grass. There in a blue cave of the ice he found the Three Gray Sisters,
the oldest of living things. Their hair was as white as the snow, and
their flesh of an icy blue, and they mumbled and nodded in a kind of
dream, and their frozen breath hung round them like a cloud. Now the
opening of the cave in the ice was narrow, and it was not easy to pass in
without touching one of the Gray Sisters. But, floating on the Shoes of
Swiftness, the boy just managed to steal in, and waited till one of the
sisters said to another, who had their one eye:</p>
<p>"Sister, what do you see? do you see old times coming back?"</p>
<p>"No, sister."</p>
<p>"Then give <i>me</i> the eye, for perhaps I can see farther than you."</p>
<p>Then the first sister passed the eye to the second, but as the second
groped for it the boy caught it cleverly out of her hand.</p>
<p>"Where is the eye, sister?" said the second gray woman.</p>
<p>"You have taken it yourself, sister," said the first gray woman.</p>
<p>"Have you lost the eye, sister? have you lost the eye?" said the third
gray woman; "shall we <i>never</i> find it again, and see old times coming
back?"</p>
<p>Then the boy slipped from behind them out of the cold cave into the air,
and he laughed aloud.</p>
<p>When the gray women heard that laugh they began to weep, for now they knew
that a stranger had robbed them, and that they could not help themselves,
and their tears froze as they fell from the hollows where no eyes were,
and rattled on the icy ground of the cave. Then they began to implore the
boy to give them their eye back again, and he could not help being sorry
for them, they were so pitiful. But he said he would never give them the
eye till they told him the way to the Fairies of the Garden.</p>
<p>Then they wrung their hands miserably, for they guessed why he had come,
and how he was going to try to win the Terrible Head. Now the Dreadful
Women were akin to the Three Gray Sisters, and it was hard for them to
tell the boy the way. But at last they told him to keep always south, and
with the land on his left and the sea on his right, till he reached the
Island of the Fairies of the Garden. Then he gave them back the eye, and
they began to look out once more for the old times coming back again. But
the boy flew south between sea and land, keeping the land always on his
left hand, till he saw a beautiful island crowned with flowering trees.
There he alighted, and there he found the Three Fairies of the Garden.
They were like three very beautiful young women, dressed one in green, one
in white, and one in red, and they were dancing and singing round an apple
tree with apples of gold, and this was their song:</p>
<p>THE SONG OF THE WESTERN FAIRIES<br/>
<br/>
Round and round the apples of gold,<br/>
Round and round dance we;<br/>
Thus do we dance from the days of old<br/>
About the enchanted tree;<br/>
Round, and round, and round we go,<br/>
While the spring is green, or the stream shall flow,<br/>
Or the wind shall stir the sea!<br/>
<br/>
There is none may taste of the golden fruit<br/>
Till the golden new time come<br/>
Many a tree shall spring from shoot,<br/>
Many a blossom be withered at root,<br/>
Many a song be dumb;<br/>
Broken and still shall be many a lute<br/>
Or ever the new times come!<br/>
<br/>
Round and round the tree of gold,<br/>
Round and round dance we,<br/>
So doth the great world spin from of old,<br/>
Summer and winter, and fire and cold,<br/>
Song that is sung, and tale that is told,<br/>
Even as we dance, that fold and unfold<br/>
Round the stem of the fairy tree!<br/></p>
<p>These grave dancing fairies were very unlike the Grey Women, and they were
glad to see the boy, and treated him kindly. Then they asked him why he
had come; and he told them how he was sent to find the Sword of Sharpness
and the Cap of Darkness. And the fairies gave him these, and a wallet, and
a shield, and belted the sword, which had a diamond blade, round his
waist, and the cap they set on his head, and told him that now even they
could not see him though they were fairies. Then he took it off, and they
each kissed him and wished him good fortune, and then they began again
their eternal dance round the golden tree, for it is their business to
guard it till the new times come, or till the world's ending. So the boy
put the cap on his head, and hung the wallet round his waist, and the
shining shield on his shoulders, and flew beyond the great river that lies
coiled like a serpent round the whole world. And by the banks of that
river, there he found the three Terrible Women all asleep beneath a poplar
tree, and the dead poplar leaves lay all about them. Their golden wings
were folded and their brass claws were crossed, and two of them slept with
their hideous heads beneath their wings like birds, and the serpents in
their hair writhed out from under the feathers of gold. But the youngest
slept between her two sisters, and she lay on her back, with her beautiful
sad face turned to the sky; and though she slept her eyes were wide open.
If the boy had seen her he would have been changed into stone by the
terror and the pity of it, she was so awful; but he had thought of a plan
for killing her without looking on her face. As soon as he caught sight of
the three from far off he took his shining shield from his shoulders, and
held it up like a mirror, so that he saw the Dreadful Women reflected in
it, and did not see the Terrible Head itself. Then he came nearer and
nearer, till he reckoned that he was within a sword's stroke of the
youngest, and he guessed where he should strike a back blow behind him.
Then he drew the Sword of Sharpness and struck once, and the Terrible Head
was cut from the shoulders of the creature, and the blood leaped out and
struck him like a blow. But he thrust the Terrible Head into his wallet,
and flew away without looking behind. Then the two Dreadful Sisters who
were left wakened, and rose in the air like great birds; and though they
could not see him because of his Cap of Darkness, they flew after him up
the wind, following by the scent through the clouds, like hounds hunting
in a wood. They came so close that he could hear the clatter of their
golden wings, and their shrieks to each other: "<i>here, here,</i>" "<i>no,
there; this way he went,</i>" as they chased him. But the Shoes of
Swiftness flew too fast for them, and at last their cries and the rattle
of their wings died away as he crossed the great river that runs round the
world.</p>
<p>Now when the horrible creatures were far in the distance, and the boy
found himself on the right side of the river, he flew straight eastward,
trying to seek his own country. But as he looked down from the air he saw
a very strange sight—a beautiful girl chained to a stake at the
high-water mark of the sea. The girl was so frightened or so tired that
she was only prevented from falling by the iron chain about her waist, and
there she hung, as if she were dead. The boy was very sorry for her and
flew down and stood beside her. When he spoke she raised her head and
looked round, but his voice only seemed to frighten her. Then he
remembered that he was wearing the Cap of Darkness, and that she could
only hear him, not see him. So he took it off, and there he stood before
her, the handsomest young man she had ever seen in all her life, with
short curly yellow hair, and blue eyes, and a laughing face. And he
thought her the most beautiful girl in the world. So first with one blow
of the Sword of Sharpness he cut the iron chain that bound her, and then
he asked her what she did there, and why men treated her so cruelly. And
she told him that she was the daughter of the King of that country, and
that she was tied there to be eaten by a monstrous beast out of the sea;
for the beast came and devoured a girl every day. Now the lot had fallen
on her; and as she was just saying this a long fierce head of a cruel sea
creature rose out of the waves and snapped at the girl. But the beast had
been too greedy and too hurried, so he missed his aim the first time.
Before he could rise and bite again the boy had whipped the Terrible Head
out of his wallet and held it up. And when the sea beast leaped out once
more its eyes fell on the head, and instantly it was turned into a stone.
And the stone beast is there on the sea-coast to this day.</p>
<p>Then the boy and the girl went to the palace of the King, her father,
where everyone was weeping for her death, and they could hardly believe
their eyes when they saw her come back well. And the King and Queen made
much of the boy, and could not contain themselves for delight when they
found he wanted to marry their daughter. So the two were married with the
most splendid rejoicings, and when they had passed some time at court they
went home in a ship to the boy's own country. For he could not carry his
bride through the air, so he took the Shoes of Swiftness, and the Cap of
Darkness, and the Sword of Sharpness up to a lonely place in the hills.
There he left them, and there they were found by the man and woman who had
met him at home beside the sea, and had helped him to start on his
journey.</p>
<p>When this had been done the boy and his bride set forth for home, and
landed at the harbor of his native land. But whom should he meet in the
very street of the town but his own mother, flying for her life from the
wicked King, who now wished to kill her because he found that she would
never marry him! For if she had liked the King ill before, she liked him
far worse now that he had caused her son to disappear so suddenly. She did
not know, of course, where the boy had gone, but thought the King had
slain him secretly. So now she was running for her very life, and the
wicked King was following her with a sword in his hand. Then, behold! she
ran into her son's very arms, but he had only time to kiss her and step in
front of her, when the King struck at him with his sword. The boy caught
the blow on his shield, and cried to the King:</p>
<p>"I swore to bring you the Terrible Head, and see how I keep my oath!"</p>
<p>Then he drew forth the head from his wallet, and when the King's eyes fell
on it, instantly he was turned into stone, just as he stood there with his
sword lifted!</p>
<p>Now all the people rejoiced, because the wicked King should rule them no
longer. And they asked the boy to be their king, but he said no, he must
take his mother home to her father's house. So the people chose for king
the man who had been kind to his mother when first she was cast on the
island in the great chest.</p>
<p>Presently the boy and his mother and his wife set sail for his mother's
own country, from which she had been driven so unkindly. But on the way
they stayed at the court of a king, and it happened that he was holding
games, and giving prizes to the best runners, boxers, and quoit-throwers.
Then the boy would try his strength with the rest, but he threw the quoit
so far that it went beyond what had ever been thrown before, and fell in
the crowd, striking a man so that he died. Now this man was no other than
the father of the boy's mother, who had fled away from his own kingdom for
fear his grandson should find him and kill him after all. Thus he was
destroyed by his own cowardice and by chance, and thus the prophecy was
fulfilled. But the boy and his wife and his mother went back to the
kingdom that was theirs, and lived long and happily after all their
troubles.</p>
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