<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>XXV<br/> <br/> <span class="f8">THE KING’S HARES</span></h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="upper">Once</span> upon a time there was a man who lived in
the little back room. He had given up his
estate to the heir; but in addition he had three
sons, who were named Peter, Paul and Esben, who
was the youngest. All three hung around at home
and would not work, for they had it too easy, and
they thought themselves too good for anything like
work, and nothing was good enough for them.
Finally Peter once heard that the king wanted a
shepherd for his hares, and he told his father he
would apply for the position, as it would just suit
him, seeing that he wished to serve no one lower in
rank than the king. His father, it is true, was of
the opinion that there might be other work that
would suit him better, for whoever was to herd
hares would have to be quick and spry, and not a
sleepy-head, and when the hares took to their heels
in all directions, it was a dance of another kind than
when one skipped about a room. But it was of no
use. Peter insisted, and would have his own way,
took his knapsack, and shambled down hill. After
he had gone a while, he saw an old woman who had
got her nose wedged in a tree-stump while chopping
wood, and when Peter saw her jerking and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</SPAN></span>
pulling away, trying to get out, he burst into loud
laughter.</p>
<p>“Don’t stand there and laugh in such a stupid
way,” said the woman, “but come and help a poor,
feeble old woman. I wanted to split up some fire-wood,
and caught my nose here, and here I have
been standing for more than a hundred years, pulling
and jerking, without a bit of bread to chew in
all that time,” said she.</p>
<p>Then Peter had to laugh all the harder. He found
it all very amusing, and said that if she had already
been standing there a hundred years, then she could
probably hold out for another hundred years or
more.</p>
<p>When he came to court they at once took him on
as a herdsman. The place was not bad, there was
good food, and good wages, and the chance of winning
the princess besides; yet if no more than a
single one of the king’s hares were to be lost, they
would cut three red strips from his back, and throw
him into the snake-pit.</p>
<p>As long as Peter was on the common or in the
enclosure, he kept his hares together nicely, but
later, when they reached the forest, they ran away
from him across the hills. Peter ran after them
with tremendous leaps, as long as he thought he
could catch even a single hare, but when the very
last one had vanished, his breath was gone, and he
saw no more of them. Toward noon he went home,
taking his time about it, and when he reached the
enclosure, he looked around for them on all sides,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</SPAN></span>
but no hares came. And then, when he came to the
castle, there stood the king with the knife in his hand.
He cut three red strips from his back, and cast him
into the snake-pit.</p>
<p>After a while Paul decided to go to the castle and
herd the king’s hares. His father told him what he
had told Peter, and more besides; but he insisted
on going, and would not listen, and he fared neither
better nor worse than Peter had. The old woman
stood and pulled and jerked at her nose in the tree-trunk,
and he laughed, found it very amusing, and
let her stand there and torment herself. He was
at once taken into service, but the hares all ran
away across the hills, though he pursued them, and
worked away like a shepherd dog in the sun, and
when he came back to the castle in the evening minus
his hares, there stood the king with the knife in his
hand, cut three broad strips from his back, rubbed
in pepper and salt, and flung him into the snake-pit.</p>
<p>Then, after some time had passed, the youngest
decided to set out to herd the king’s hares, and told
his father of his intention. He thought that would
be just the work for him, to loaf about in forest
and field, look for strawberry patches, herd a flock
of hares, and lie down and sleep in the sun between
times. His father thought that there was other work
that would suit him better, and that even if he fared
no worse than his brothers, it was quite certain that
he would fare no better. Whoever herded the king’s
hares must not drag along as though he had lead
in his soles, or like a fly on a limerod; and that when<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</SPAN></span>
the hares took to their heels, it was a horse of another
color from catching flees with gloved hands;
whoever wanted to escape with a whole back, would
have to be more than quick and nimble, and swifter
than a bird. But there was nothing he could do.
Esben merely kept on saying that he wanted to go
to court and serve the king, for he would not take
service with any lesser master, said he; and he
would see to the hares, they could not be much
worse than a herd of goats or of calves. And with
that he took his knapsack and strolled comfortably
down the hill.</p>
<p>After he had wandered a while, and began to feel
a proper hunger, he came to the old woman who was
wedged by the nose in the tree-trunk and who was
pulling and jerking away, in order to get loose.</p>
<p>“Good day, mother,” said Esben, “and why are
you worrying yourself so with your nose, you poor
thing?” “No one has called me mother for the last
hundred years,” said the old woman, “but come and
help me out, and give me a bite to eat; for I have
not had a bit to eat in all that time. And I will
do something for your sake as well,” said she.</p>
<p>Yes, no doubt she would need something to eat
and drink badly, said Esben.</p>
<p>Then he hewed the tree-trunk apart, so that she
got her nose out of the cleft, sat down to eat, and
shared with her. The old woman had a good appetite,
and she received a good half of his provisions.</p>
<p>When they were through she gave Esben a whistle
which had the power that if he blew into one end,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</SPAN></span>
whatever he wished scattered was scattered to all
the winds, and when he blew into the other, all came
together again. And if the whistle passed from
his possession, it would return as soon as he wished
it back.</p>
<p>“That is a wonderful whistle!” thought Esben.</p>
<p>When he came to the castle, they at once took him
on as a shepherd; the place was not bad, he was
to have food and wages, and should he manage to
herd the king’s hares without losing one of them,
he might possibly win the princess; but if he lost so
much as a single hare, and no matter how small it
might be, then they would cut three red strips from
his back, and the king was so sure of his case that
he went right off to whet his knife. It would be
a simple matter to herd the hares, thought Esben;
for when they went off they were as obedient as a
herd of sheep, and so long as they were on the common,
and in the enclosure, they even marched in
rank and file. But when they reached the forest,
and noon-time came, and the sun burned down on hill
and dale, they all took to their heels and ran away
across the hills.</p>
<p>“Hallo, there! So you want to run away!” called
Esben, and blew into one end of his whistle, and then
they scattered the more quickly to all the ends of the
earth. But when he had reached an old charcoal-pit,
he blew into the other end of his whistle, and
before he knew it the hares were back again, and
standing in rank and file so he could review them,
just like a regiment of soldiers on the drill-ground.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“That is a splendid whistle!” thought Esben; lay
down on a sunny hillock, and fell asleep. The hares
were left to their own devices, and played until evening;
then he once more whistled them together,
and took them along to the castle like a herd of
sheep.</p>
<p>The king and queen and the princess, too, stood in
the hall-way, and wondered what sort of a fellow
this was, who could herd hares without losing a
single one. The king reckoned and added them up,
and counted with his fingers, and then added them
up again; but not even the teeny-weeniest hare was
missing. “He is quite a chap, he is,” said the princess.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="i006" id="i006"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/i006.jpg" width-obs="405" height-obs="573" alt="“THE KING RECKONED AND ADDED THEM UP, AND COUNTED WITH HIS FINGERS.” —Page 207" title="" /><br/> <span class="caption">“THE KING RECKONED AND ADDED THEM UP, AND COUNTED WITH HIS FINGERS.”<br/> <span class="flr">—Page 207</span></span></div>
<p>The following day he again went to the forest, and
herded his hares; but while he lay in all comfort
beside a strawberry patch, they sent out the chamber-maid
from the castle to him, and she was to find
out how he managed to herd the king’s hares.</p>
<p>He showed her his whistle, and blew into one
end, and all the hares darted away across the hills in
all directions, and then he blew into the other, and
they came trotting up from all sides, and once more
stood in rank and file. “That is a wonderful whistle,”
said the chamber-maid. She would gladly give
him a hundred dollars, if he cared to sell it.</p>
<p>“Yes, it is a splendid whistle,” said Esben, “and
I will not sell it for money. But if you give me a
hundred dollars, and a kiss with every dollar to
boot, then I might let you have it.”</p>
<p>Yes, indeed, that would suit her right down to the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</SPAN></span>
ground; she would gladly give him two kisses with
every dollar, and feel grateful, besides.</p>
<p>So she got the whistle, but when she reached the
castle, the whistle disappeared all of a sudden.
Esben had wished it back again, and toward evening
he came along, driving his hares like a herd
of sheep. The king reckoned and counted and added,
but all to no purpose, for not the least little hare was
missing.</p>
<p>When Esben was herding his hares the third day,
they sent the princess to him to get away his pipe
from him. She was tickled to death, and finally offered
him two hundred dollars if he would let her
have the whistle, and would also tell her what she
had to do in order to fetch it safely home with her.</p>
<p>“Yes, it is a very valuable whistle,” said Esben,
“and I will not sell it,” but at last, as a favor to
her, he said he would let her have it if she gave him
two hundred dollars, and a kiss for every dollar to
boot. But if she wanted to keep it, why, she must
take good care of it, for that was her affair.</p>
<p>“That is a very high price for a hare-whistle,”
said the princess, and she really shrank from kissing
him, “but since we are here in the middle of the
forest, where no one can see or hear us, I’ll let it
pass, for I positively must have the whistle,” said
she. And when Esben had pocketed the price agreed
upon, she received the whistle, and held it tightly
clutched in her hand all the way home; yet when she
reached the castle, and wanted to show it, it disappeared
out of her hands. On the following day<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</SPAN></span>
the queen herself set out, and she felt quite sure that
she would succeed in coaxing the whistle away from
him.</p>
<p>She was stingier, and only offered fifty dollars; but
she had to raise her bid until she reached three hundred.
Esben said it was a magnificent whistle, and
that the price was a beggarly one; but seeing that
she was the queen, he would let it pass. She was to
pay him three hundred dollars, and for every dollar
she was to give him a buss to boot, then she should
have the whistle. And he was paid in full as agreed,
since as regards the busses the queen was not so
stingy.</p>
<p>When she had the whistle in her hands, she tied
it fast, and hid it well, but she fared not a whit better
than either of the others; when she wanted to show
the whistle it was gone, and in the evening Esben
came home, driving his hares as though they were
a well-trained flock of sheep.</p>
<p>“You are stupid women!” said the king. “I suppose
I will have to go to him myself if we really are
to obtain this trumpery whistle. There seems to be
nothing else left to do!” And the following day,
when Esben was once more herding his hares, the
king followed him, and found him at the same place
where the women had bargained with him.</p>
<p>They soon became good friends, and Esben showed
him the whistle, and blew into one end and the other,
and the king thought the whistle very pretty, and
finally insisted on buying it, even though it cost him
a thousand dollars.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Yes, it is a magnificent whistle,” said Esben,
“and I would not sell it for money. But do you see
that white mare over yonder?” said he, and pointed
into the forest.</p>
<p>“Yes, she belongs to me, that is my Snow Witch!”
cried the king, for he knew her very well.</p>
<p>“Well, if you will give me a thousand dollars, and
kiss the white mare that is grazing on the moor by
the big pine, to boot, then you can have my whistle!”
said Esben.</p>
<p>“Is that the only price at which you will sell?”
asked the king.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Esben.</p>
<p>“But at least may I not put a silken handkerchief
between?” asked the king.</p>
<p>This was conceded him, and thus he obtained the
whistle. He put it in the purse in his pocket, and
carefully buttoned up the pocket. Yet when he
reached the castle, and wanted to take it out, he was
in the same case as the women, for he no longer had
the whistle. And in the evening Esben came home
with his herd of hares, and not the least little hare
was missing.</p>
<p>The king was angry, and furious because he had
made a fool of them all, and had swindled the king’s
self out of the whistle into the bargain, and now he
wanted to do away with Esben. The queen was
of the same opinion, and said it was best to
behead such a knave when he was caught in the
act.</p>
<p>Esben thought this neither fair nor just; for he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</SPAN></span>
had only done what he had been asked to do, and had
defended himself as best he knew how.</p>
<p>But the king said that this made no difference to
him; yet if Esben could manage to fill the big brewing-cauldron
till it ran over, he would spare his life.</p>
<p>The job would be neither long nor hard, said
Esben, he thought he could warrant that, and he began
to tell about the old woman with her nose in
the tree-trunk, and in between he said, “I must make
up plenty of stories, to fill the cauldron,”—and then
he told of the whistle, and the chamber-maid who
came to him and wanted to buy the whistle for a
hundred dollars, and about all the kisses that she
had had to give him to boot, up on the hillock by
the forest; and then he told about the princess, how
she had come and kissed him so sweetly for the
whistle’s sake, because no one could see or hear it
in the forest—“I must make up plenty of stories,
in order to fill the cauldron,” said Esben. Then he
told of the queen, and of how stingy she had been
with her money, and how liberal with her busses—“for
I must make up plenty of stories in order to
fill the cauldron,” said Esben.</p>
<p>“But I think it must be full now!” said the queen.</p>
<p>“O, not a sign of it!” said the king.</p>
<p>Then Esben began to tell how the king had come
to him, and about the white mare who was grazing on
the moor, “and since he insisted on having the whistle
he had to—he had to—well, with all due respect,
I have to make up plenty of stories in order to fill
the cauldron,” said Esben.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Stop, stop! It is full, fellow!” cried the king.
“Can’t you see that it is running over?”</p>
<p>The king and the queen were of the opinion that
it would be best for Esben to receive the princess
and half the kingdom; there did not seem anything
else to do.</p>
<p>“Yes, it was a magnificent whistle!” said Esben.</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p class="center">NOTE</p>
<p>“The King’s Hares” (Asbjörnsen, N.F.E., p. 190, No. 98. After
different variants from Röken, Aadal, Bier and Asker, Riugerike and
Hardanger) is the story of the cauldron full of lies, which has probably
found special favor in Norway because of its outcome, not very
flattering for the king and queen. It is noticeable that in Northern
fairy-tales those kings who will not give up their daughters to the
heroes at any cost are handled with considerable disrespect.</p>
</div>
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