Once upon a time a young husband
and wife named Giles and Phyllida lived in a cottage in the heart of
a great plain. League upon league, the rich land fell away to the
west, there to end at a wall of high mountains into whose fastnesses
no one had ever ventured. Yet the mountains were very beautiful. In
the cold of a clear winter's day, the snowy summits and rust-colored
pinnacles shone bright and near at hand; in the spring, fogs hid
them, and lay like gray mantles upon the lower slopes. Midway in the
mountain wall, a wide chasm marked the entrance to a deep, gloomy
valley, out of which a roaring mountain torrent hurried, to lose
itself in the plain below. And because somewhere in the heart of
this dark valley storms were brewed, whose dark clouds, laden with
lightning and hail, poured from between the crags of the valley out
over the land, this valley was known as the Valley of Thunder.
According to an old legend, out of this valley a king should one day
come to rule over the people of the plain.
Giles and Phyllida kept house by themselves. They had two cows, one
red and white, the other black and white, a flock of hens, some
hives of bees, a white horse, a dog, and a cat. All day long
Phyllida worked happily at the household tasks, baking the sweet
white bread and marking the fresh golden butter into square pats,
while Giles went out to work in the waving grain; and Phyllida,
watching from a window, would see the sun flash on the uplifted
blade of her husband's scythe.
One day Phyllida said to Giles:--
"I have made a dress for the youngest child of our cousins, Jack and
Jill, and this morning I shall saddle the white horse and ride over
to their cottage. Perhaps I may stay with them for a few days. You
will find a fresh baking of bread and a meat-pie in the larder.
Good-bye, Giles; I'll soon be home again."
So Giles answered, "Good-bye," and away rode Phyllida on the white
horse.
A few days passed, and Giles, wandering here and there through the
quiet house, felt very lonely indeed. Finally he could stand it no
longer, and said to himself, "Phyllida must be on her way home now;
I shall walk down the highway and meet her."
So he turned all the animals loose in the fields, and putting a few
slices of bread and cheese in his pockets, set forth upon the road.
Leagues ahead of him stood the mysterious mountains rising palely
through the haze of the midsummer afternoon. A pale violet light
fell on their distant precipices, and the snow in the rifts upon
their sides appeared of the purest and loveliest white. Gusts of
wind hurrying from the distant summits swept the great plain, and
the fields of ripening wheat bent before them and rustled harshly.
Suddenly, down the throat of the Thunder Valley, Giles saw a river
of lightning fall, and from far away came a low murmur of thunder.
Then, faster and faster, a storm poured down the chasm like a flood,
drowning out the light of the sun, stilling the songs of the little
birds, and turning to the sky the pale underside of the leaves of
the roadside trees. A darkness as of night itself covered the land.
Rain began to fall in great spattering drops. Now, by the
glare of the lightning, Giles would see the endless fields, drenched
and waving in the rain; now the Thunder Valley itself, covered with
a floor of onrushing cloud unfolding, turning, and sinking in
continuous and multitudinous activity.
Night came on amid the storm, and a flash of lightning revealed to
Giles that he had lost his way. Hoping to find a shelter or some
friendly cottage, however, he plunged on; but the road became worse
and worse, and he was again and again forced to wade brooks flooded
by the tempest. At length his steps led him into a pine wood, and
there in the thickest part he found a little shelter, and fell
asleep.
When he woke, numb, cramped, and cold, he found to his horror that
in the night and darkness he had blundered on into the Valley of
Thunder, into which no living soul had ever before advanced. Worst
of all, he could not find the way by which he had entered, for high
crags rose on every side and held him prisoner. Presently, to his
amazement, he beheld a narrow flight of steps cut in the solid rock
of the mountainside. Up these steps climbed Giles, and as he mounted
higher, the stairs began to twist and turn amid the crags and
pinnacles. At the end of an hour's ascent, he found himself at a
turn from which the Thunder Valley, the chasm through which it
opened into the plain, and the wide plain itself, could all be seen.
Giles lingered there a while, trying to see his own cottage, or
perhaps Phyllida on her white horse; but he could see neither one
nor the other. So he began to climb again. All day long he climbed
and climbed and climbed. Twilight fell. The circle of the sun
dropped below the level horizon of the distant fields. One still
golden star hung on the fringe of the sun-glow. The stairs began to
widen, and presently Giles found himself at the summit of the
mountain. Before his eyes lay a little level field surrounded by
strange crags and pinnacles, looming tall and black against the
fast-appearing stars, and as Giles rubbed his eyes in wonder, lights
shone here and there in the sides of the towering rocks, even as
lights shine in the windows of a village when you see it from afar.
Giles rubbed his eyes again. Lights? What could they mean? Presently
a great door, cut in the side of a towering mass of stone, opened
with a burst of light, and toward Giles there hurried the two
strangest creatures whom he had ever seen. These were two elves,
alike as two peas and each about three feet tall. Instead of having
ears much like other elves, however, the first one had ears like
great curved cornucopias, which projected almost a foot on each side
of his enormous round head, while the other, whose ears were quite
natural, had but one huge eye in the centre of his forehead.
Without saying a single word, these strange elves seized Giles by
the hands, and after hurrying him across the open space, urged him
through the open doors into the house in the crags.
Still keeping silence, the elves led Giles through hundreds of
splendid rooms and great halls, all lighted by hanging lamps as
countless in number as the leaves upon the trees. Suddenly, a great
archway rose before them, through which appeared a hall larger and
brighter than all the others seen before. At one end of it, under a
canopy of rosy-gray, stood a golden throne, and on the throne sat a
being dressed in radiant blue--in blue such as the sky wears after a
rain, when the dark clouds with bright edges break asunder and
reveal the glory overhead. At the same moment, the countless
mountain elves gathered in the hall began to sing:--
"All Hail, All Hail to the Shepherd of Clouds,
Who, high in his mountain-top, rules o'er the' weather;
He sends the rich rain over mountain and plain,
And sprinkles the dew-drops afar o'er the heather."
The elves led Giles before the Shepherd.
"How comest thou, mortal, to invade my mountain?" said the Shepherd.
"I went forth to seek Phyllida," said Giles, "and lost my way in the
storm."
"What sayest thou, Eye-o?" said the Shepherd to the elf with the
single great eye in his forehead.
"The mortal speaks the truth," answered Eye-o in the queerest,
squealiest voice. "I saw him set out yesterday from his cottage on
the plain. He had not gone far when the storm which Your Mightiness
prepared in the morning and sent forth in the afternoon overtook
him. He lost his way, and chance led him to your dwelling, O
Shepherd of Clouds."
"What sayest thou, Ear-o?" said the Shepherd to the elf with the
great ears.
"I heard him say good-bye to his wife Wednesday last," replied the
elf in a voice exactly like that of his brother. "Phyllida said to
him, 'You will find a fresh baking of bread and a meat-pie in the
larder.'"
The Shepherd of Clouds fixed his deep, solemn gaze upon Giles and
said:--
"Mortal, I have hearkened to your story and to the words of my
faithful Eye-o, who sees all things that happen in the whole wide
world; I have paid heed to the words of Ear-o, who hears all things
that are to be heard under the sun. Chance has led you to discover
the secret of the weather. Nevermore must you revisit the lower
world. Here shall you stay till Death overtakes you. Obey me, and I
will give you happiness and honor; seek to escape, and my lightnings
will find you wheresoever you may hide."
"Oh, no! no! no!" cried poor Giles, throwing himself down before the
throne. "Great Shepherd of Clouds, do not keep me here. Let me
return to my cottage on the plain, to Phyllida who waits for me, and
knows not whither I am gone or whether I am living or dead. Oh, let
me go, let me go!"
But the Shepherd only shook his head austerely, and rising from his
throne, disappeared behind the rose-gray curtains. Again the
mountain elves sang, and as they sang, the great hall slowly grew
darker than the darkest night, and cold gusts of wind arose wailing
in the darkness. Presently Giles felt his body grow weak, strong
hands seized him and bore him up, and an instant later a deep sleep
blotted out the world.
When he awoke, he found himself in a little room. Dawn was at hand,
and the sweet, cold mountain air was blowing through the eastern
window. Suddenly, the door swung open, and Eye-o and Ear-o entered.
"The sun is rising, Giles," said Ear-o, "and your appointed task
awaits you. The Shepherd wishes the clouds released at once. Hurry,
hurry, hurry, Giles, and open their prison-door."
So Giles went forth with the elves. Over the summit of the mountain
they ran, along a path which wandered here and there--now dodging
between huge boulders, now skirting terrible precipices. Presently
Giles saw a monstrous wall of rock rising before him, in which were
fixed two brazen doors taller and more stately than he had ever seen
in the world below. Beside these doors, a flight of steps began,
which led to the top of the wall.
Curious to see what lay behind the wall and the closed doors, Giles
hurried to the top. He found himself standing at the brink of a
great bowl, many miles wide and many miles long, hollowed out of the
very rock of the mountaintop. Within this bowl, like a giant flock
of sheep, lay hundreds of clouds on whose misty tops the rising sun
poured gold, pale lavender, and rose. At first, Giles thought them
motionless, but as he gazed intently within the bowl, he saw that
the clouds moved and swayed much like anchored ships in a tide.
This bowl was the weather-bowl. In it the Shepherd of Clouds
prepared the weather for the neighboring countries. One day he would
keep the fair-weather clouds at home and let the rain-clouds sail
over the land; on another day, he would keep all the clouds in and
let the sun shine; on other days he would mix together such frosts,
mists, and snow-flurries as the season required.
Suddenly, ringing infinitely sweet over the mountain-top, rose the
clear music of a silver horn.
"It is the Shepherd!" cried Eye-o and Ear-o.
"The hour is at hand to send the clouds over the earth. Quick,
Giles, unbar the doors!"
So Giles unbound the giant doors, which of their own volition opened
wide. A sound as of thunder heard from far away over the sea beat
upon Giles's ear as the portals turned upon their hinges. In answer
to this sound, the clouds rose and lifted their golden heads, and
hastening to the brazen doors, one by one escaped through them to
the sunlit spaces of the morning sky. There, they formed themselves
into a fleet, and sailed majestically away.
Thus Giles became the servant of the Shepherd of Clouds. It was his
task to unbar the door when the Shepherd had prepared the weather;
it was his to lock the clouds in, once they had returned from the
heavens in answer to the Shepherd's summoning horn. In time he came
to know the rain-clouds from their fair-weather brothers; he learned
how frosts were sent forth; how fogs were made; and he was even
allowed to prepare a small storm. He saw the icy caverns in which
the hail-stones lie piled in monstrous bags, the lightning-bolts in
their crystal jars, and even the prisoned storm-winds. You may be
sure that, when he could so arrange it, Phyllida's garden had quite
the finest variety of weather. For Eye-o and Ear-o would tell him
about her.
"Tell me, what is Phyllida doing?" Giles would say again and again.
And Eye-o would answer, "She is out in the garden gathering plums";
or, "she is in the kitchen making gingerbread."
And then Giles would say to Ear-o, "Tell me, what is Phyllida
saying?"
And Ear-o would answer, "'Oh, would that my lad were home!'"
Two years passed, and Giles, who had found no opportunity of escape,
began to lose hope of doing so. Never again, he feared, would he see
Phyllida. One day, with Eye-o and Ear-o by his side, he sat on a
great boulder and gazed gloomily down on the plain. Spring was just
ripening into early summer, the plain was at its very greenest and
loveliest, and here and there a little blue wood-smoke hung over the
tiny villages. Giles thought of Phyllida far, far away, and a
terrible loneliness poured into his heart. Eye-o and Ear-o sitting
beside him, their long, strange arms clasped about their knees,
looked on with sympathy. Presently Ear-o's right ear turned itself
about, and after a moment's silence, the elf said:--
"I hear voices telling of war. I hear the Robber King of the Black
Lakes summoning his terrible army. He is preparing a secret attack
on the people of the plain."
"I see him! I see him!" cried Eye-o. "He is talking to the Grand
Chamberlain Scelerato."
"Listen," said Ear-o; "he is saying, 'We will sweep the land at
dawn, steal the grain, and destroy every village to its
foundation.'"
"I see the robbers gathering," said Eye-o. "They are hiding in the
dark pine forests, lest they be seen by the people of the plain. The
sunlight pierces here and there through the thick branches and
shines on the breastplates of the armed men."
At this terrible news, Giles was stricken to the heart with anxiety
and fear. What was to become of Phyllida and the people of the
plain? If he could only hurry down the mountain and warn them! If he
could only escape! And he looked round eagerly, as he had looked a
thousand times before, for any avenue of escape; but his gaze met
only the great precipices of the mountain and the guarded stairs.
What could he do? His heart became like ice, and he feared to gaze
upon the plain lest he see the smoke of burning villages. All night
long he never closed his eyes. At dawn he rose and hurried to the
top of the gate which overlooked the cloud-bowl. For two whole
weeks, not a cloud had been allowed to roam the sky, and it seemed
to Giles that the mists were angry, and that a darkness brooded upon
them. Turning toward the plain, Giles saw, at the edge of the land,
a little glow of fire. The robbers had invaded the plain!
Presently Eye-o came clambering up the steps.
"I see a village in flames," said the elf. "The inhabitants are
fleeing down the roads. The news is spreading, and the people of the
plain are hurrying to seek refuge in the mountains."
"Oh, where is Phyllida?" cried Giles.
"She is on the highway with Jack and Jill and their children,
hastening toward the Valley of Thunder," answered the elf.
Suddenly Giles stood up, and throwing his arms high over his head,
uttered a loud shout. "I can save them," he cried. "Let us send a
storm against the robbers. Hurry, let us prepare the worst tempest
that ever was seen."
And away he ran to the hail-stone caverns, and carrying bag after
bag to the brim, emptied them all into the weather-bowl; he then
tossed in a dozen skinsful of the fiercest storm-winds, and ended by
casting in all the jars of thunderbolts that were to be found in the
cavern. You should have heard the crash of the crystal vases on the
rocky floor of the weather-bowl, and the hiss with which the
lightning escaped and hid in the rolling edges of the clouds. The
great bowl roared and trembled, the clouds massed together and grew
dark; lightning played over the black crests of the thunder-heads.
From the top of the gate, Giles took one satisfied look into the
prisoned tempest, and then hurried down to unbar the door.
Through the gates, like wild herds, poured the clouds, and rising in
the air, were caught by the spreading storm-winds and whirled madly
over the sky. The thunder roared as no mortal had ever before heard
it or ever will hear it again, and the tempest sailed away to break
in all its anger over the heads of the robber army. So terrible was
the noise that the enchanted mountain trembled to its very
foundations.
Hearing the roar, the Shepherd of Clouds himself was roused and ran
down to the cloudbowl; but so dark was the mountain-top that he lost
his way, and narrowly missed falling down a precipice. The mountain
elves, terrified by the confusion, ran hither and thither like ants
whose nests had been opened. Crash went the thunder! Rumble, rumble,
rumble, room, rrrr-rang bang! bang!
Once he had seen the storm break over the robber army, Giles, taking
advantage of the darkness, noise, and confusion, determined to make
one more effort to escape. Down the endless stairs he hurried,
splashing through the falling rain, down, and down, and down. Once
at the bottom, he was lucky enough to find the path out of the
chasm, and hurried along it to the mouth of the Valley of Thunder.
He was free! The terrible storm had spent itself, and the sun was
beginning to shine on the thousand rain-drops caught in the matted
grass. A rainbow formed just as Giles approached the plain, and the
little birds came out to shake the rain from their feathers.
Now, in the secure shelter of an overhanging cliff, were to be found
those people of the plain who had fled to the valley for refuge; and
when these poor worried folk saw Giles coming down the valley, they
recalled the prophecy that a king should come to them out of the
valley, and hailed Giles as their king. Best of all, Phyllida
herself ran out, and threw her arms about her husband. As for the
robbers, the storm had overwhelmed them and swept them all into the
river. There, I am glad to say, they turned into little fishes.
When the Shepherd of Clouds found that Giles had escaped after
making all this disturbance, he was very angry, and rushed to his
lightning closet to hurl some thunderbolts at him. When he got to
the closet, however, he found that Giles had used every single bolt,
and that the cupboard was empty. Consequently, he had to wait till
the end of summer before he could get some new lightning, and by
that time, he was so busy arranging the autumn frosts that he quite
forgot about Giles.
So Giles and Phyllida became King and Queen of the people of the
plain and lived happily ever after.