As time went on all the promises of the fairies came true. The Princess grew up so beautiful, modest, kind, and clever that every one who saw her could not but love her. Now it happened that on the very day when she was fifteen years old the King and Queen were away from home, and the Princess was left quite alone in the castle. She wandered about over the whole place, looking at rooms and halls as she pleased, and at last she came to an old tower. She ascended a narrow, winding staircase and reached a little door. A rusty key was sticking in the lock, and when she turned it the door flew open. In a little room sat an old woman with a spindle, spinning her flax busily.
"Good day, Granny," said the Princess; "what are you doing?"
"I am spinning," said the old woman, and nodded her head.
"What is the thing that whirls round so merrily?" asked the Princess; and she took the spindle and tried to spin too.
But she had scarcely touched it before the curse was fulfilled, and she p.r.i.c.ked her finger with the spindle. The instant she felt the p.r.i.c.k she fell upon the bed which was standing near, and lay still in a deep sleep which spread over the whole castle.
The King and Queen, who had just come home and had stepped into the hall, went to sleep, and all their courtiers with them. The horses went to sleep in the stable, the dogs in the yard, the doves on the roof, the flies on the wall; yes, even the fire flickering on the hearth grew still and went to sleep, and the roast meat stopped crackling; the cook, who was pulling the scullion"s hair because he had made some mistake, let him go and went to sleep. The wind dropped, and on the trees in front of the castle not a leaf stirred.
But round the castle a hedge of briar roses began to grow up; every year it grew higher, till at last it surrounded the whole castle so that nothing could be seen of it, not even the flags on the roof.
But there was a legend in the land about the lovely sleeping Briar Rose, as the King"s daughter was called, and from time to time princes came and tried to force a way through the hedge into the castle. They found it impossible, for the thorns, as though they had hands, held them fast, and the princes remained caught in them without being able to free themselves, and so died a miserable death.
[Ill.u.s.tration: But round the castle a hedge of briar roses began to grow up.]
After many, many years a Prince came again to the country and heard an old man tell of the castle which stood behind the briar hedge, in which a most beautiful maiden called Briar Rose had been asleep for the last hundred years, and with her slept the King, Queen, and all her courtiers. He knew also, from his grandfather, that many princes had already come and sought to pierce through the briar hedge, and had remained caught in it and died a sad death.
Then the young Prince said, "I am not afraid; I am determined to go and look upon the lovely Briar Rose."
[Ill.u.s.tration: {The young Prince said, "I am not afraid; I am determined to go and look upon the lovely Briar Rose."}]
The good old man did all in his power to dissuade him, but the Prince would not listen to his words.
Now, however, the hundred years were just ended, and the day had come when Briar Rose was to wake up again. When the Prince approached the briar hedge it was in blossom, and was covered with beautiful large flowers which made way for him of their own accord and let him pa.s.s unharmed, and then closed up again into a hedge behind him.
In the courtyard he saw the horses and brindled hounds lying asleep, on the roof sat the doves with their heads under their wings: and when he went into the house the flies were asleep on the walls, and near the throne lay the King and Queen; in the kitchen was the cook, with his hand raised as though about to strike the scullion, and the maid sat with the black fowl in her lap which she was about to pluck.
He went on further, and all was so still that he could hear his own breathing. At last he reached the tower, and opened the door into the little room where Briar Rose was asleep. There she lay, looking so beautiful that he could not take his eyes off her; he bent down and gave her a kiss. As he touched her, Briar Rose opened her eyes and looked lovingly at him. Then they went down together; and the King woke up, and the Queen, and all the courtiers, and looked at each other with astonished eyes. The horses in the stable stood up and shook themselves, the hounds leaped about and wagged their tails, the doves on the roof lifted their heads from under their wings, looked round, and flew into the fields; the flies on the walls began to crawl again, the fire in the kitchen roused itself and blazed up and cooked the food, the meat began to crackle, and the cook boxed the scullion"s ears so soundly that he screamed aloud, while the maid finished plucking the fowl. Then the wedding of the Prince and Briar Rose was celebrated with all splendour, and they lived happily till they died.
The Jew among the Thorns
There was once a rich Man, and he had a Servant who served him well and faithfully. He was first up in the morning, and last to go to bed at night. If there was any hard work to be done which no one else would do, he was always ready to undertake it. He never made any complaint, but was always merry and content.
When his year of service was over, his Master did not give him any wages, thinking: "This is my wisest plan. I save by it, and he is not likely to run away."
The Servant said nothing, and served the second year like the first.
And when at the end of the second he again received no wages, he still appeared contented, and stayed on. When the third year had pa.s.sed, the Master bethought himself, and put his hand into his pocket, but he brought it out empty.
At last the Servant said: "Master, I have served you well and truly for three years; please pay me my wages. I want to go away and look about the world a bit."
The Miser answered: "Yes, my good fellow, you have served me honestly, and you shall be liberally rewarded."
Again he put his hand into his pocket, and counted three farthings, one by one, into the Servant"s hand, and said: "There, you have a farthing for every year; that is better wages than you would get from most masters."
The good Servant, who knew little about money, put away his fortune, and thought: "Now my pocket is well filled, I need no longer trouble myself about work." Then he left and went singing down the hill, and dancing, in the lightness of his heart.
Now it so happened that as he was pa.s.sing a thicket, that a little Mannikin came out and cried: "Whither away, my merry fellow? I see your troubles are not too heavy to be borne."
"Why should I be sad?" answered the Servant. "I have three years"
wages in my pocket."
"And how much is your treasure?" asked the Mannikin.
"How much? Why, three good farthings."
"Listen!" said the Mannikin. "I am a poor needy fellow; give me your three farthings. I can"t work any more; but you are young, and can easily earn your bread."
Now the Servant had a good heart, and he was sorry for the poor little man, so he gave him his three farthings, and said:
"Take them, in the name of heaven! I shall not miss them."
"Then," said the Mannikin, "I see what a good heart you have. I will give you three wishes, one for each farthing; and every wish shall be fulfilled."
"Aha!" said the Servant, "you are a wonder-worker I see. Very well, then. First, I wish for a gun which will hit everything I aim at; secondly, for a fiddle which will make every one dance when I play; and, thirdly, if I ask anything of any one, that he shall not be able to refuse my request."
"You shall have them all," said the Mannikin, diving into the bushes, where, wonderful to relate, lay the gun and the fiddle ready, just as if they had been ordered beforehand. He gave them to the Servant, and said: "No one will be able to refuse anything you ask."
"Heart alive! what more can one desire," said the Servant to himself, as he went merrily on.
Soon after, he met a Jew with a long goat"s beard, who was standing still listening to the song of a bird sitting on the top of a tree.
"Good heavens!" he was saying, "what a tremendous noise such a tiny creature makes. If only it were mine! If one could but put some salt upon its tail!"
"If that is all," said the Servant, "the bird shall soon come down."
He took aim, and down fell the bird into a quickset hedge.
"Go, you rogue," he said to the Jew, "and pick up the bird."
"Leave out the "rogue," young man. I will get the bird sure enough, as you have killed it for me," said the Jew.
He lay down on the ground and began to creep into the hedge.
[Ill.u.s.tration: The Jew was forced to spring up and begin to dance.]
When he had got well among the thorns, a spirit of mischief seized the Servant, and he began to play his fiddle with all his might. The Jew was forced to spring up and begin to dance, and the more the Servant played, the faster he had to dance. The thorns tore his shabby coat, combed his goat"s beard, and scratched him all over.
"Merciful Heavens!" cried the Jew. "Leave off that fiddling! I don"t want to dance, my good fellow."
But the Servant paid no attention to him, but thought: "You have fleeced plenty of people in your time, my man, and the thorns shan"t spare you now!" And he played on and on, so that the Jew had to jump higher and higher, till his coat hung in ribbons about him.
"I cry "enough!"" screamed the Jew. "I will give you anything you like if you will only stop. Take the purse, it is full of gold."
"Oh, well, if you are so open-handed," said the Servant, "I am quite ready to stop my music, but I must say in praise of your dancing, that it has quite a style of its own." Then he took the purse and went on his way.