In times of yore, when wishes
were both heard and granted, lived a king whose daughters were all
beautiful, but the youngest was so lovely that the sun himself, who
has seen so much, wondered at her beauty every time he looked in her
face. Now, near the king's castle was a large dark forest; and in
the forest, under an old linden-tree, was a deep well. When the day
was very hot, the king's daughter used to go to the wood and seat
herself at the edge of the cool well; and when she became wearied,
she would take a golden ball, throw it up in the air, and catch it
again. This was her favourite amusement. Once it happened that her
golden ball, instead of falling back into the little hand that she
stretched out for it, dropped on the ground, and immediately rolled
away into the water. The king's daughter followed it with her eyes,
but the ball had vanished, and the well was so deep that no one
could see down to the bottom. Then she began to weep, wept louder
and louder every minute, and could not console herself at all.
While she was thus lamenting some one called to her: "What is the
matter with you, king's daughter? You weep so, that you would touch
the heart of a stone."
She looked around to see whence the voice came, and saw a frog
stretching his thick ugly head out of the water.
"Ah! it is you, old water-paddler!" said she. "I am crying for my
golden ball, which has fallen into the well."
"Be content," answered the frog, "I daresay I can give you some good
advice; but what will you give me if I bring back your plaything to
you?"
"Whatever you like, dear frog," said she, "my clothes, my pearls and
jewels, even the golden crown I wear."
The frog answered, "Your clothes, your pearls and jewels, even your
golden crown, I do not care for; but if you will love me, and let me
be your companion and playfellow; sit near you at your little table,
eat from your little golden plate, drink from your little cup, and
sleep in your little bed;—if you will promise me this, then I will
bring you back your golden ball from the bottom of the well."
"Oh, yes!" said she; "I promise you everything, if you will only
bring me back my golden ball."
She thought to herself, meanwhile: "What nonsense the silly frog
talks! He sits in the water with the other frogs, and croaks, and
can not be anybody's playfellow!"
But the frog, as soon as he had received the promise, dipped his
head under the water and sank down. In a little while up he came
again with the ball in his mouth, and threw it on the grass. The
king's daughter was overjoyed when she beheld her pretty plaything
again, picked it up, and ran away with it.
"Wait! wait!" cried the frog; "take me with you. I cannot run as
fast as you."
Alas! of what use was it that he croaked after her as loud as he
could. She would not listen to him, but hastened home, and soon
forgot the poor frog, who was obliged to plunge again to the bottom
of his well.
The next day, when she was sitting at dinner with the king and all
the courtiers, eating from her little gold plate, there came a sound
of something creeping up the marble staircase—splish, splash; and
when it had reached the top, it knocked at the door and cried,
"Youngest king's daughter, open to me."
She ran, wishing to see who was outside; but when she opened the
door, and there sat the frog, she flung it hastily to again, and sat
down at table, feeling very, very uncomfortable. The king saw that
her heart was beating violently, and said, "How, my child, why are
you afraid? Is a giant standing outside the door to carry you off?"
"Oh, no!" answered she, "it is no giant, but a nasty frog, who
yesterday, when I was playing in the wood near the well, fetched my
golden ball out of the water. For this I promised him he should be
my companion, but I never thought he could come out of his well. Now
he is at the door, and wants to come in."
Again, the second time there was a knock, and a voice cried:
"Youngest king's daughter,
Open to me;
Know you what yesterday
You promised me,
By the cool water?
Youngest king's daughter
Open to me."
Then said the king, "What you promised you must perform. Go and open
the door."
She went and opened the door; the frog hopped in, always following
and following her till he came up to her chair. There he sat and
cried out, "Lift me up to you on the table."
She refused, till the king, her father, commanded her to do it. When
the frog was on the table, he said, "Now push your little golden
plate nearer to me, that we may eat together." She did as he
desired, but one could easily see that she did it unwillingly. The
frog seemed to enjoy his dinner very much, but every morsel she ate
stuck in the throat of the poor little princess.
Then said the frog, "I have eaten enough, and am tired; carry me to
your little room, and make your little silken bed smooth, and we
will lay ourselves down to sleep together."
At this the daughter of the king began to weep; for she was afraid
of the cold frog, who wanted to sleep in her pretty clean bed.
But the king looked angrily at her, and said again: "What you have
promised you must perform. The frog is your companion."
It was no use to complain whether she liked it or not; she was
obliged to take the frog with her up to her little bed. So she
picked him up with two fingers, hating him bitterly the while, and
carried him upstairs: but when she got into bed, instead of lifting
him up to her, she threw him with all her strength against the wall,
saying, "Now, you nasty frog, there will be an end of you."
But what fell down from the wall was not a dead frog, but a living
young prince, with beautiful and loving eyes, who at once became, by
her own promise and her father's will, her dear companion and
husband. He told her how he had been cursed by a wicked sorceress,
and that no one but the king's youngest daughter could release him
from his enchantment and take him out of the well.
The next day a carriage drove up to the palace-gates with eight
white horses, having white feathers on their heads and golden reins.
Behind it stood the servant of the young prince, called the Faithful
Henry. This faithful Henry had been so grieved when his master was
changed into a frog, that he had been compelled to have three iron
bands fastened round his heart, lest it should break. Now the
carriage came to convey the prince to his kingdom, so the faithful
Henry lifted in the bride and bridegroom, and mounted behind, full
of joy at his lord's release. But when they had gone a short
distance, the prince heard behind him a noise as if something was
breaking. He turned round, and cried out, "Henry, the carriage is
breaking!"
But Henry replied: "No, sir, it is not the carriage, but one of the
bands from my heart, with which I was forced to bind it up, or it
would have broken with grief, while you sat as a frog at the bottom
of the well."
Twice again this happened, and the prince always thought the
carriage was breaking; but it was only the bands breaking off from
the heart of the faithful Henry, out of joy that his lord the
Frog-Prince was a frog no more.