Once upon a time, while riding, a
brave, young prince dashed merrily ahead of his friends, and after
galloping across a ploughed field, turned his horse's head down a
grassy road leading to a wood. For some time he cantered easily
along, expecting any moment to hear the shouts and halloos of his
friends following after; but they by mistake took quite another
road, and no sound except the pounding of his courser's hoofs
reached the Prince's ear. Suddenly an ugly snarl and a short bark
broke the stillness of the pleasant forest, and looking down, the
Prince saw a gray wolf snapping at his horse's heels.
Though the horse, wild with fear, threatened to run away any
instant, the Prince leaned over and struck the wolf with his whip.
Hardly had he done so, when an angry voice cried, "How dare you
strike my pet?"
A little distance ahead, a wicked old witch stood at one side of the
road. With its tail between its legs, the wolf cowered close to her
skirts, and showed its long yellow fangs.
"Pet, indeed!" cried the Prince. "Keep him away from my horse or I
will strike him again."
"At your peril, Prince," answered the witch. And then, as the Prince
turned his horse's head and galloped back, she called out, "You
shall rue this day! You shall rue this day!"
Now by the time the Prince had arrived at the ploughed field and the
great road again, his friends had galloped on so far that they were
lost to sight. Thinking that he might overtake them by following a
shorter road, he turned down a byway skirting the wood in which he
had encountered the enchantress. Presently he began to feel very
thirsty. Chancing to see an old peasant woman in the fields, the
Prince called to her and asked where he could find a roadside
spring.
Now this old peasant woman was the wicked witch under another form.
Overjoyed at having the Prince fall so easily into her power, she
curtsied; and replied that within the wood was to be found the
finest spring in the country. Anxious not to lose time, the Prince
begged her to lead him to the water. Little did he know that the
witch was leading him back into the wood, and that she had just
bewitched the water!
When they arrived at the pool, the Prince dismounted, and kneeling
by the brim, made a cup of his hands and drank till his thirst was
satisfied. He was just about to seize his horse again by the bridle
and put his foot into the stirrup, when a terrible pang shot through
his body, darkness swam before his eyes, his arms lengthened and
became branches, his fingers, twigs; his feet shot into the ground,
and he found himself turned into a giant elm.
A giant elm he was; a giant elm he remained. Unable to find him
after a long search, his friends gave him up for lost, and a new
Prince ruled over the land. Though the elm tried many times to tell
passers-by of his plight, none ever seemed to understand his words.
Again and again, when simple wood-cutters ventured into the great
dark wood, he would tell them his story and cry out, "I am the
Prince! I am the Prince!" But the wood-cutters heard only the wind
stirring in the branches. Ah, how cold it was in winter when the
skies were steely black and the giant stars sparkled icily! And how
pleasant it was when spring returned, and the gossipy birds came
back again!
The first year a pair of wood-pigeons took to housekeeping in his
topmost branches. The Prince was glad to welcome them, for though
denied human speech, he understood the language of trees and birds.
On Midsummer Eve, the pigeons said to him, "To-night the King of the
Trees comes through the wood. Do you not hear the stir in the
forest? All the real trees are preparing for the King's coming; they
are shedding dead leaves and shaking out their branches."
"Tell me of the King," said the Prince.
"He is tall and dark and strong," said the doves. "He dwells in a
great pine in the North. On Midsummer Eve, he goes through the world
to see if all is well with the tree people."
"Do you think he can help me?" asked the Prince.
"You might ask him," replied the doves.
The long, long twilight of Midsummer Eve came to a close; night
folded the world beneath its starry curtains. At twelve o'clock,
though not a breath of air was stirring, the trees were shaken as if
by a mighty wind, the rustling of the leaves blending into strange
and lovely music, and presently the King of the Trees entered the
haunted wood. Even as the wood-doves had said, he was tall and dark
and stately.
"Is all well with you, O my people?" said the King, in a voice as
sweet and solemn as the wind in the branches on a summer's day.
"Yes, all is well," answered the trees softly. Though some replied,
"I have lost a branch"; and a little tree called out unhappily, "My
neighbors are shutting out all my sunlight."
"Then fare ye well, my people, till next Midsummer Eve," said the
stately King. And he was about to stride onward through the dark
wood when the enchanted Prince called aloud to him!
"Stay, O King of the Trees," cried the poor Prince. "Hear me even
though I am not of your people. I am a mortal, a prince, and a
wicked witch has turned me into a tree. Can you not help me?"
"Alas, poor friend, I can do nothing," replied the King. "However,
do not despair. In my travels through the world, I shall surely find
someone who can help you. Look for me on next Midsummer Eve."
So the great elm swayed his branches sadly, and the King went on his
way.
The winter came again, silent and dark and cold. At the return of
spring, a maiden who dwelt with a family of wood-cutters came often
to rest in the shade of the great tree. Her father had once been a
rich merchant, but evil times had overtaken him, and at his death
the only relatives who could be found to take care of the little
girl were a family of rough wood-cutters in the royal service. These
grudging folk kept the poor maiden always hard at work and gave her
the most difficult household tasks. The Prince, who knew the whole
story, pitied her very much, and ended by falling quite in love with
her. As for the unhappy maiden, it seemed to her that beneath the
sheltering shade of the great elm she enjoyed a peace and happiness
to be found nowhere else.
Now it was the custom of the wood-men to cut down, during the
summer, such trees as would be needed for the coming winter, and one
day the wood-cutter in whose family the maiden dwelt announced his
intention of cutting down the great elm.
"Not the great elm which towers above all the forest?" cried the
maiden.
"Yes, that very tree," answered the woodcutter gruffly. "To-morrow
morning we shall fell it to the ground, and to-morrow night we shall
build the midsummer fire with its smaller branches. What are you
crying about, you silly girl?"
"Oh, please don't cut the great elm!" begged the good maiden.
"Nonsense!" said the wood-cutter. "I wager you have been wasting
your time under its branches. I shall certainly cut the tree down in
the morning."
All night long, you may be sure, the maiden pondered on the best way
to save the great tree; and since she was as clever as she was good,
she at length hit upon a plan. Rising early on Midsummer Morn, she
ran to the forest, climbed the great elm, and concealed herself in
its topmost branches. She saw the rest of the wood beneath her, and
the distant peaks of the Adamant Mountains; and she rejoiced in the
dawn songs of the birds.
An hour after the sun had risen, she heard the voices of the
wood-cutter and his men as they came through the wood. Soon the band
arrived at the foot of the tree. Imagine the feelings of the poor
Prince when he saw the sharp axes at hand to cut him down!
"I shall strike the first blow," said the chief wood-cutter, and he
lifted his axe in the air.
Suddenly from the tree-top a warning voice sang,--
"Throw the axe down, harm not me.
I am an enchanted tree.
He who strikes shall breathe his last,
Before Midsummer Eve hath passed."
"There is a spirit in the tree," cried the woodcutters, thoroughly
frightened. "Let us hurry away from here before it does us a
mischief." And in spite of all the chief wood-cutter's remonstrances,
they ran away as fast as their legs could carry them.
The chief wood-cutter, however, was bolder-hearted, and lifted the
axe again. As the blade shone uplifted in the sun, the maiden sang
once more,--
"Throw the axe down, harm not me.
I am an enchanted tree.
He who strikes shall breathe his last
Before Midsummer Eve hath passed."
Hearing the voice again, the chief began to feel just the littlest
bit alarmed; nevertheless, he stood his ground and lifted the axe a
third time. Once more the girl sang,--
"Throw the axe down, harm not me.
I am an enchanted tree.
He who strikes shall breathe his last
Before Midsummer Eve hath passed."
At the same moment, the elm managed to throw down a great branch
which struck the rogue a sound thump on the shoulders. Now
thoroughly terrified, the chief wood-cutter himself fled from the
spot.
All day long, for fear lest he return, the maiden remained hidden in
the tree. At twilight, overcome by weariness, she fell into a deep
sleep. Just before midnight, alas, she was awakened from her slumber
by hearing an angry voice cry,--
"Come down from the tree, wicked, deceitful girl, or I shall cut it
down at once!"
Very much alarmed, the poor maiden looked down through the branches,
and discovered the wood-cutter standing at the foot of the elm. A
lantern swung from his left hand, and his sharpest axe rested on his
right shoulder. He had returned home, and not finding the maiden
there, had suspected that it was her voice which had frightened his
men away.
"Come down," roared the rascal. "I'll teach you, you minx, to play
tricks with me. One--two--three." And lifting the axe in the air, he
was about to send it crashing into the trunk of the elm, when the
mysterious murmur which heralded the coming of the King of the Trees
sounded through the wood. Perplexed and frightened again, the chief
wood-cutter let fall his axe. Presently he perceived two beings
coming toward him through the solemn forest. Uttering a howl of
fear, the rogue would have fled, but, lifting his wand, the elder of
the newcomers transfixed him to the spot. The two personages were
the King of the Trees and his friend, the mighty enchanter, Gorbodoc.
"Descend and fear not, maiden," said the King of the Trees. "You
have done bravely and well. Your misfortunes are over, and a happier
day is at hand."
So the brave girl hurried down the tree, and stood before the
enchanter and the King. Very pretty she was, too, in her rustic
dress and ribbons.
Lifting his wand with great solemnity, Gorbodoc touched the trunk
of the elm. There was a blinding flash of rosy fire; the great tree
appeared to shrink and dissolve, and presently the Prince stood
before them.
"Welcome, Prince," said the enchanter.
"Your enemy, the witch, will trouble you no more. I have turned her
into an owl and given her to the Queen of Lantern Land. As for you,"
and here the enchanter turned fiercely upon the wood-cutter, "you
shall be a green monkey, until you have planted and brought to full
growth as many trees as you have cut down."
An instant later, a green monkey swung off into the tree-tops.
Then the grateful Prince thanked the King of the Trees, the mighty
Gorbodoc, and the brave maiden, with all his heart. I am glad to say
that he got his castle back again and married the maiden who had
saved his life, and they lived happily ever after.