<h3><SPAN name="chap91"></SPAN>91 The Gnome</h3>
<p>There was once upon a time a rich King who had three daughters, who daily went
to walk in the palace garden, and the King was a great lover of all kinds of
fine trees, but there was one for which he had such an affection, that if
anyone gathered an apple from it he wished him a hundred fathoms underground.
And when harvest time came, the apples on this tree were all as red as blood.
The three daughters went every day beneath the tree, and looked to see if the
wind had not blown down an apple, but they never by any chance found one, and
the tree was so loaded with them that it was almost breaking, and the branches
hung down to the ground. Then the King’s youngest child had a great
desire for an apple, and said to her sisters, “Our father loves us far
too much to wish us underground, it is my belief that he would only do that to
people who were strangers.” And while she was speaking, the child plucked
off quite a large apple, and ran to her sisters, saying, “Just taste, my
dear little sisters, for never in my life have I tasted anything so
delightful.” Then the two other sisters also ate some of the apple,
whereupon all three sank deep down into the earth, where they could hear no
cock crow.</p>
<p>When mid-day came, the King wished to call them to come to dinner, but they
were nowhere to be found. He sought them everywhere in the palace and garden,
but could not find them. Then he was much troubled, and made known to the whole
land that whosoever brought his daughters back again should have one of them to
wife. Hereupon so many young men went about the country in search, that there
was no counting them, for every one loved the three children because they were
so kind to all, and so fair of face. Three young huntsmen also went out, and
when they had travelled about for eight days, they arrived at a great castle,
in which were beautiful apartments, and in one room a table was laid on which
were delicate dishes which were still so warm that they were smoking, but in
the whole of the castle no human being was either to be seen or heard. They
waited there for half a day, and the food still remained warm and smoking, and
at length they were so hungry that they sat down and ate, and agreed with each
other that they would stay and live in that castle, and that one of them, who
should be chosen by casting lots, should remain in the house, and the two
others seek the King’s daughters. They cast lots, and the lot fell on the
eldest; so next day the two younger went out to seek, and the eldest had to
stay home. At mid-day came a small, small mannikin and begged for a piece of
bread, then the huntsman took the bread which he had found there, and cut a
round off the loaf and was about to give it to him, but whilst he was giving it
to the mannikin, the latter let it fall, and asked the huntsman to be so good
as to give him that piece again. The huntsman was about to do so and stooped,
on which the mannikin took a stick, seized him by the hair, and gave him a good
beating. Next day, the second stayed at home, and he fared no better. When the
two others returned in the evening, the eldest said, “Well, how have you
got on?”</p>
<p>“Oh, very badly,” said he, and then they lamented their misfortune
together, but they said nothing about it to the youngest, for they did not like
him at all, and always called him Stupid Hans, because he did not exactly
belong to the forest. On the third day, the youngest stayed at home, and again
the little mannikin came and begged for a piece of bread. When the youth gave
it to him, the elf let it fall as before, and asked him to be so good as to
give him that piece again. Then said Hans to the little mannikin, “What!
canst thou not pick up that piece thyself? If thou wilt not take as much
trouble as that for thy daily bread, thou dost not deserve to have it.”
Then the mannikin grew very angry and said he was to do it, but the huntsman
would not, and took my dear mannikin, and gave him a thorough beating. Then the
mannikin screamed terribly, and cried, “Stop, stop, and let me go, and I
will tell thee where the King’s daughters are.” When Hans heard
that, he left off beating him and the mannikin told him that he was an earth
mannikin, and that there were more than a thousand like him, and that if he
would go with him he would show him where the King’s daughters were. Then
he showed him a deep well, but there was no water in it. And the elf said that
he knew well that the companions Hans had with him did not intend to deal
honourably with him, therefore if he wished to deliver the King’s
children, he must do it alone. The two other brothers would also be very glad
to recover the King’s daughters, but they did not want to have any
trouble or danger. Hans was therefore to take a large basket, and he must seat
himself in it with his hanger and a bell, and be let down. Below were three
rooms, and in each of them was a princess, with a many-headed dragon, whose
heads she was to comb and trim, but he must cut them off. And having said all
this, the elf vanished. When it was evening the two brothers came and asked how
he had got on, and he said, “pretty well so far,” and that he had
seen no one except at mid-day when a little mannikin had come and begged for a
piece of bread, that he had given some to him, but that the mannikin had let it
fall and had asked him to pick it up again; but as he did not choose to do
that, the elf had begun to lose his temper, and that he had done what he ought
not, and had given the elf a beating, on which he had told him where the
King’s daughters were. Then the two were so angry at this that they grew
green and yellow. Next morning they went to the well together, and drew lots
who should first seat himself in the basket, and again the lot fell on the
eldest, and he was to seat himself in it, and take the bell with him. Then he
said, “If I ring, you must draw me up again immediately.” When he
had gone down for a short distance, he rang, and they at once drew him up
again. Then the second seated himself in the basket, but he did just the same
as the first, and then it was the turn of the youngest, but he let himself be
lowered quite to the bottom. When he had got out of the basket, he took his
hanger, and went and stood outside the first door and listened, and heard the
dragon snoring quite loudly. He opened the door slowly, and one of the
princesses was sitting there, and had nine dragon’s heads lying upon her
lap, and was combing them. Then he took his hanger and hewed at them, and the
nine fell off. The princess sprang up, threw her arms round his neck, embraced
and kissed him repeatedly, and took her stomacher, which was made of pure gold,
and hung it round his neck. Then he went to the second princess, who had a
dragon with five heads to comb, and delivered her also, and to the youngest,
who had a dragon with four heads, he went likewise. And they all rejoiced, and
embraced him and kissed him without stopping. Then he rang very loud, so that
those above heard him, and he placed the princesses one after the other in the
basket, and had them all drawn up, but when it came to his own turn he
remembered the words of the elf, who had told him that his comrades did not
mean well by him. So he took a great stone which was lying there, and placed it
in the basket, and when it was about half way up, his false brothers above cut
the rope, so that the basket with the stone fell to the ground, and they
thought that he was dead, and ran away with the three princesses, making them
promise to tell their father that it was they who had delivered them, and then
they went to the King, and each demanded a princess in marriage.</p>
<p>In the meantime the youngest huntsman was wandering about the three chambers in
great trouble, fully expecting to have to end his days there, when he saw,
hanging on the wall, a flute; then said he, “Why dost thou hang there, no
one can be merry here?” He looked at the dragons, heads likewise and
said, “You too cannot help me now.” He walked backwards and
forwards for such a long time that he made the surface of the ground quite
smooth. But at last other thoughts came to his mind, and he took the flute from
the wall, and played a few notes on it, and suddenly a number of elves
appeared, and with every note that he sounded one more came. Then he played
until the room was entirely filled. They all asked what he desired, so he said
he wished to get above ground back to daylight, on which they seized him by
every hair that grew on his head, and thus they flew with him onto the earth
again. When he was above ground, he at once went to the King’s palace,
just as the wedding of one princess was about to be celebrated, and he went to
the room where the King and his three daughters were. When the princesses saw
him they fainted. Hereupon the King was angry, and ordered him to be put in
prison at once, because he thought he must have done some injury to the
children. When the princesses came to themselves, however, they entreated the
King to set him free again. The King asked why, and they said that they were
not allowed to tell that, but their father said that they were to tell it to
the stove. And he went out, listened at the door, and heard everything. Then he
caused the two brothers to be hanged on the gallows, and to the third he gave
his youngest daughter, and on that occasion I wore a pair of glass shoes, and I
struck them against a stone, and they said, “Klink,” and were
broken.</p>
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