<SPAN name="The_King_of_England_and_His_Three_Sons"
name='The_King_of_England_and_His_Three_Sons'></SPAN>
<h2>The King of England and His Three Sons</h2>
<br/>
<p>Once upon a time there was an old king who had three sons; and the
old king fell very sick one time and there was nothing at all could
make him well but some golden apples from a far country. So the three
brothers went on horseback to look for some of these apples. They set
off together, and when they came to cross-roads they halted and
refreshed themselves a bit; and then they agreed to meet on a certain
time, and not one was to go home before the other. So Valentine took
the right, and Oliver went straight on, and poor Jack took the
left.</p>
<p>To make my long story short, I shall follow poor Jack, and let the
other two take their chance, for I don't think there was much good in
them. Off poor Jack rides over hills, dales, valleys, and mountains,
through woolly woods and sheepwalks, where the old chap never sounded
his hollow bugle-horn, farther than I can tell you to-night or ever
intend to tell you.</p>
<p>At last he came to an old house, near a great forest, and there was
an old man sitting out by the door, and his look was enough to
frighten you or any one else; and the old man said to him:</p>
<p>"Good morning, my king's son."</p>
<p>"Good morning to you, old gentleman," was the young prince's
answer; frightened out of his wits though he was, he didn't like to
give in.</p>
<p>The old gentleman told him to dismount and to go in to have some
refreshment, and to put his horse in the stable, such as it was. Jack
soon felt much better after having something to eat, and began to ask
the old gentleman how he knew he was a king's son.</p>
<p>"Oh dear!" said the old man, "I knew that you were a king's son,
and I know what is your business better than what you do yourself. So
you will have to stay here to-night; and when you are in bed you
mustn't be frightened whatever you may hear. There will come all
manner of frogs and snakes, and some will try to get into your eyes
and your mouth, but mind, don't stir the least bit or you will turn
into one of those things yourself."</p>
<p>Poor Jack didn't know what to make of this, but, however, he
ventured to go to bed. Just as he thought to have a bit of sleep,
round and over and under him they came, but he never stirred an inch
all night.</p>
<p>"Well, my young son, how are you this morning?"</p>
<p>"Oh, I am very well, thank you, but I didn't have much rest."</p>
<p>"Well, never mind that; you have got on very well so far, but you
have a great deal to go through before you can have the golden apples
to go to your father. You'd better come and have some breakfast before
you start on your way to my other brother's house. You will have to
leave your own horse here with me until you come back again, and tell
me everything about how you get on."</p>
<p>After that out came a fresh horse for the young prince, and the old
man gave him a ball of yarn, and he flung it between the horse's two
ears.</p>
<p>Off he went as fast as the wind, which the wind behind could not
catch the wind before, until he came to the second oldest brother's
house. When he rode up to the door he had the same salute as from the
first old man, but this one was even uglier than the first one. He had
long grey hair, and his teeth were curling out of his mouth, and his
finger- and toe-nails had not been cut for many thousand years. He put
the horse into a much better stable, and called Jack in, and gave him
plenty to eat and drink, and they had a bit of a chat before they went
to bed.</p>
<p>"Well, my young son," said the old man, "I suppose you are one of
the king's children come to look for the golden apples to bring him
back to health."</p>
<p>"Yes, I am the youngest of the three brothers, and I should like to
get them to go back with."</p>
<p>"Well, don't mind, my young son. Before you go to bed to-night I
will send to my eldest brother, and will tell him what you want, and
he won't have much trouble in sending you on to the place where you
must get the apples. But mind not to stir to-night no matter how you
get bitten and stung, or else you will work great mischief to
yourself."</p>
<p>The young man went to bed and bore all, as he did the first night,
and got up the next morning well and hearty. After a good breakfast
out comes a fresh horse, and a ball of yarn to throw between his ears.
The old man told him to jump up quick, and said that he had made it
all right with his eldest brother, not to delay for anything whatever,
"For," said he, "you have a good deal to go through with in a very
short and quick time."</p>
<p>He flung the ball, and off he goes as quick as lightning, and comes
to the eldest brother's house. The old man receives him very kindly
and told him he long wished to see him, and that he would go through
his work like a man and come back safe and sound. "To-night," said he,
"I will give you rest; there shall nothing come to disturb you, so
that you may not feel sleepy for to-morrow. And you must mind to get
up middling early, for you've got to go and come all in the same day;
there will be no place for you to rest within thousands of miles of
that place; and if there was, you would stand in great danger never to
come from there in your own form. Now, my young prince, mind what I
tell you. To-morrow, when you come in sight of a very large castle,
which will be surrounded with black water, the first thing you will do
you will tie your horse to a tree, and you will see three beautiful
swans in sight, and you will say, 'Swan, swan, carry me over in the
name of the Griffin of the Greenwood,' and the swans will swim you
over to the earth. There will be three great entrances, the first
guarded by four great giants with drawn swords in their hands, the
second by lions, the other by fiery serpents and dragons. You will
have to be there exactly at one o'clock; and mind and leave there
precisely at two and not a moment later. When the swans carry you over
to the castle, you will pass all these things, all fast asleep, but
you must not notice any of them.</p>
<p>"When you go in, you will turn up to the right; you will see some
grand rooms, then you will go downstairs through the cooking kitchen,
and through; a door on your left you go into a garden, where you will
find the apples you want for your father to get well. After you fill
your wallet, you make all speed you possibly can, and call out for the
swans to carry you over the same as before. After you get on your
horse, should you hear anything shouting or making any noise after
you, be sure not to look back, as they will follow you for thousands
of miles; but when the time is up and you get near my place, it will
be all over. Well now, my young man, I have told you all you have to
do to-morrow; and mind, whatever you do, don't look about you when you
see all those frightful things asleep. Keep a good heart, and make
haste from there, and come back to me with all the speed you can. I
should like to know how my two brothers were when you left them, and
what they said to you about me."</p>
<SPAN name="castle_illus" name='castle_illus'></SPAN> <SPAN href='images/illus160_lg.png'></SPAN>
<center>
<ANTIMG src='images/illus160.jpg' width-obs='340' height-obs='445' alt='The Castle of Melvales Swan Swan, Carry me over, In the name of the Griffin of Greenwood.' border='0' />
</center>
<center>
<b><small>The Castle of Melvales<br/>
Swan Swan, Carry me over, In the name<br/>
of the Griffin of Greenwood.</small></b>
</center>
<br/>
<p>"Well, to tell the truth, before I left London my father was sick,
and said I was to come here to look for the golden apples, for they
were the only things that would do him good; and when I came to your
youngest brother, he told me many things I had to do before I came
here. And I thought once that your youngest brother put me in the
wrong bed, when he put all those snakes to bite me all night long,
until your second brother told me 'So it was to be,' and said, 'It is
the same here,' but said you had none in your beds."</p>
<p>"Well, let's go to bed. You need not fear. There are no snakes
here."</p>
<p>The young man went to bed, and had a good night's rest, and got up
the next morning as fresh as newly caught trout. Breakfast being over,
out comes the other horse, and, while saddling and fettling, the old
man began to laugh, and told the young gentleman that if he saw a
pretty young lady, not to stay with her too long, because she might
waken, and then he would have to stay with her or to be turned into
one of those unearthly monsters, like those he would have to pass by
going into the castle.</p>
<p>"Ha! ha! ha! you make me laugh so that I can scarcely buckle the
saddle-straps. I think I shall make it all right, my uncle, if I see a
young lady there, you may depend."</p>
<p>"Well, my boy, I shall see how you will get on."</p>
<p>So he mounts his Arab steed, and off he goes like a shot out of a
gun. At last he comes in sight of the castle. He ties his horse safe
to a tree, and pulls out his watch. It was then a quarter to one, when
he called out, "Swan, swan, carry me over, for the name of the old
Griffin of the Greenwood." No sooner said than done. A swan under each
side, and one in front, took him over in a crack. He got on his legs,
and walked quietly by all those giants, lions, fiery serpents, and all
manner of other frightful things too numerous to mention, while they
were fast asleep, and that only for the space of one hour, when into
the castle he goes neck or nothing. Turning to the right, upstairs he
runs, and enters into a very grand bedroom, and sees a beautiful
Princess lying full stretch on a gold bedstead, fast asleep. He gazed
on her beautiful form with admiration, and he takes her garter off,
and buckles it on his own leg, and he buckles his on hers; he also
takes her gold watch and pocket-handkerchief, and exchanges his for
hers; after that he ventures to give her a kiss, when she very nearly
opened her eyes. Seeing the time short, off he runs downstairs, and
passing through the kitchen to go into the garden for the apples, he
could see the cook all-fours on her back on the middle of the floor,
with the knife in one hand and the fork in the other. He found the
apples, and filled the wallet; and on passing through the kitchen the
cook near wakened, but he was obliged to make all the speed he
possibly could, as the time was nearly up. He called out for the
swans, and they managed to take him over; but they found that he was a
little heavier than before. No sooner than he had mounted his horse he
could hear a tremendous noise, the enchantment was broke, and they
tried to follow him, but all to no purpose. He was not long before he
came to the oldest brother's house; and glad enough he was to see it,
for the sight and the noise of all those things that were after him
nearly frightened him to death.</p>
<p>"Welcome, my boy; I am proud to see you. Dismount and put the horse
in the stable, and come in and have some refreshments; I know you are
hungry after all you have gone through in that castle. And tell me all
you did, and all you saw there. Other kings' sons went by here to go
to that castle, but they never came back alive, and you are the only
one that ever broke the spell. And now you must come with me, with a
sword in your hand, and must cut my head off, and must throw it in
that well."</p>
<p>The young Prince dismounts, and puts his horse in the stable, and
they go in to have some refreshments, for I can assure you he wanted
some; and after telling everything that passed, which the old
gentleman was very pleased to hear, they both went for a walk
together, the young Prince looking around and seeing the place looking
dreadful, as did the old man. He could scarcely walk from his
toe-nails curling up like ram's horns that had not been cut for many
hundred years, and big long hair. They come to a well, and the old man
gives the Prince a sword, and tells him to cut his head off, and throw
it in that well. The young man has to do it against his wish, but has
to do it.</p>
<p>No sooner has he flung the head in the well, than up springs one of
the finest young gentlemen you would wish to see; and instead of the
old house and the frightful-looking place, it was changed into a
beautiful hall and grounds. And they went back and enjoyed themselves
well, and had a good laugh about the castle.</p>
<p>The young Prince leaves this young gentleman in all his glory, and
he tells the young Prince before leaving that he will see him again
before long. They have a jolly shake-hands, and off he goes to the
next oldest brother; and, to make my long story short, he has to serve
the other two brothers the same as the first.</p>
<p>Now the youngest brother began to ask him how things went on. "Did
you see my two brothers?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"How did they look?"</p>
<p>"Oh! they looked very well. I liked them much. They told me many
things what to do."</p>
<p>"Well, did you go to the castle?"</p>
<p>"Yes, my uncle."</p>
<p>"And will you tell me what you see in there? Did you see the young
lady?"</p>
<p>"Yes, I saw her, and plenty of other frightful things."</p>
<p>"Did you hear any snake biting you in my oldest brother's bed?"</p>
<p>"No, there were none there; I slept well."</p>
<p>"You won't have to sleep in the same bed to-night. You will have to
cut my head off in the morning."</p>
<p>The young Prince had a good night's rest, and changed all the
appearance of the place by cutting his friend's head off before he
started in the morning. A jolly shake-hands, and the uncle tells him
it's very probable he shall see him again soon when he is not aware of
it. This one's mansion was very pretty, and the country around it
beautiful, after his head was cut off. Off Jack goes, over hills,
dales, valleys, and mountains, and very near losing his apples
again.</p>
<p>At last he arrives at the cross-roads, where he has to meet his
brothers on the very day appointed. Coming up to the place, he sees no
tracks of horses, and, being very tired, he lays himself down to
sleep, by tying the horse to his leg, and putting the apples under his
head. Presently up come the other brothers the same time to the
minute, and found him fast asleep; and they would not waken him, but
said one to another, "Let us see what sort of apples he has got under
his head." So they took and tasted them, and found they were different
to theirs. They took and changed his apples for theirs, and off to
London as fast as they could, and left the poor fellow sleeping.</p>
<p>After a while he awoke, and, seeing the tracks of other horses, he
mounted and off with him, not thinking anything about the apples being
changed. He had still a long way to go, and by the time he got near
London he could hear all the bells in the town ringing, but did not
know what was the matter till he rode up to the palace, when he came
to know that his father was recovered by his brothers' apples. When he
got there his two brothers were off to some sports for a while; and
the King was glad to see his youngest son, and very anxious to taste
his apples. But when he found out that they were not good, and thought
that they were more for poisoning him, he sent immediately for the
headsman to behead his youngest son, who was taken away there and then
in a carriage. But instead of the headsman taking his head off, he
took him to a forest not far from the town, because he had pity on
him, and there left him to take his chance, when presently up comes a
big hairy bear, limping upon three legs. The Prince, poor fellow,
climbed up a tree, frightened of him, but the bear told him to come
down, that it was no use of him to stop there. With hard persuasion
poor Jack comes down, and the bear speaks to him and bids him "Come
here to me; I will not do you any harm. It's better for you to come
with me and have some refreshments; I know that you are hungry all
this time."</p>
<p>The poor young Prince says, "No, I am not hungry; but I was very
frightened when I saw you coming to me first, as I had no place to run
away from you."</p>
<p>The bear said, "I was also afraid of you when I saw that gentleman
setting you down from the carriage. I thought you would have guns with
you, and that you would not mind killing me if you saw me; but when I
saw the gentleman going away with the carriage, and leaving you behind
by yourself, I made bold to come to you, to see who you were, and now
I know who you are very well. Are you not the king's youngest son? I
have seen you and your brothers and lots of other gentlemen in this
wood many times. Now before we go from here, I must tell you that I am
in disguise; and I shall take you where we are stopping."</p>
<p>The young Prince tells him everything from first to last, how he
started in search of the apples, and about the three old men, and
about the castle, and how he was served at last by his father after he
came home; and instead of the headsman taking his head off, he was
kind enough to leave him his life, "and here I am now, under your
protection."</p>
<p>The bear tells him, "Come on, my brother; there shall no harm come
to you as long as you are with me."</p>
<p>So he takes him up to the tents; and when they see 'em coming, the
girls begin to laugh, and say, "Here is our Jubal coming with a young
gentleman." When he advanced nearer the tents, they all knew that he
was the young Prince that had passed by that way many times before;
and when Jubal went to change himself, he called most of them together
into one tent, and told them all about him, and to be kind to him. And
so they were, for there was nothing that he desired but what he had,
the same as if he was in the palace with his father and mother. Jubal,
after he pulled off his hairy coat, was one of the finest young men
amongst them, and he was the young Prince's closest companion. The
young Prince was always very sociable and merry, only when he thought
of the gold watch he had from the young Princess in the castle, and
which he had lost he knew not where.</p>
<p>He passed off many happy days in the forest; but one day he and
poor Jubal were strolling through the trees, when they came to the
very spot where they first met, and, accidentally looking up, he could
see his watch hanging in the tree which he had to climb when he first
saw poor Jubal coming to him in the form of a bear; and he cries out,
"Jubal, Jubal, I can see my watch up in that tree."</p>
<p>"Well, I am sure, how lucky!" exclaimed poor Jubal; "shall I go and
get it down?"</p>
<p>"No, I'd rather go myself," said the young Prince.</p>
<p>Now whilst all this was going on, the young Princess in that
castle, seeing that one of the King of England's sons had been there
by the changing of the watch and other things, got herself ready with
a large army, and sailed off for England. She left her army a little
out of the town, and she went with her guards straight up to the
palace to see the King, and also demanded to see his sons. They had a
long conversation together about different things. At last she demands
one of the sons to come before her; and the oldest comes, when she
asks him, "Have you ever been at the Castle of Melvales?" and he
answers, "Yes." She throws down a pocket handkerchief and bids him to
walk over it without stumbling. He goes to walk over it, and no sooner
did he put his foot on it, than he fell down and broke his leg. He was
taken off immediately and made a prisoner of by her own guards. The
other was called upon, and was asked the same questions, and I had to
go through the same performance, and he also was made a prisoner of.
Now she says, "Have you not another son?" when the King began so to
shiver and shake and knock his two knees together that he could
scarcely stand upon his legs, and did not know what to say to her, he
was so much frightened. At last a thought came to him to send for his
headsman, and inquire of him particularly, Did he behead his son, or
was he alive?</p>
<p>"He is saved, O King."</p>
<p>"Then bring him here immediately, or else I shall be done for."</p>
<p>Two of the fastest horses they had were put in the carriage, to go
and look for the poor Prince; and when they got to the very spot where
they left him, it was the time when the Prince was up the tree,
getting his watch down, and poor Jubal standing a distance off. They
cried out to him, Had he seen another young man in this wood? Jubal,
seeing such a nice carriage, thought something, and did not like to
say No, and said Yes, and pointed up the tree; and they told him to
come down immediately, as there was a young lady in search of him.</p>
<p>"Ha! ha! ha! Jubal, did you ever hear such a thing in all your
life, my brother?"</p>
<p>"Do you call him your brother?"</p>
<p>"Well, he has been better to me than my brothers."</p>
<p>"Well, for his kindness he shall accompany you to the palace, and
see how things turn out."</p>
<p>After they go to the palace, the Prince has a good wash, and
appears before the Princess, when she asks him, Had he ever been at
the Castle of Melvales? With a smile upon his face, he gives a
graceful bow. And says my Lady, "Walk over that handkerchief without
stumbling." He walks over it many times, and dances upon it, and
nothing happened to him. She said, with a proud and smiling air, "That
is the young man;" and out come the objects exchanged by both of them.
Presently she orders a very large box to be brought in and to be
opened, and out come some of the most costly uniforms that were ever
worn on an emperor's back; and when he dressed himself up, the King
could scarcely look upon him from the dazzling of the gold and
diamonds on his coat. He orders his two brothers to be in confinement
for a period of time; and before the Princess asks him to go with her
to her own country, she pays a visit to the bear's camp, and she makes
some very handsome presents for their kindness to the young Prince.
And she gives Jubal an invitation to go with them, which he accepts;
wishes them a hearty farewell for a while, promising to see them all
again in some little time.</p>
<p>They go back to the King and bid farewell, and tell him not to be
so hasty another time to order people to be beheaded before having a
proper cause for it. Off they go with all their army with them; but
while the soldiers were striking their tents, the Prince bethought
himself of his Welsh harp, and had it sent for immediately to take
with him in a beautiful wooden case. They called to see each of those
three brothers whom the Prince had to stay with when he was on his way
to the Castle of Melvales; and I can assure you, when they all got
together, they had a very merry time of it. And there we will leave
them.</p>
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