WORLD OF STORIES FOR KIDS
DANISH FOLK TALES
Esben and the Witch
THERE WAS ONCE a man who had twelve sons: the eleven eldest were both big
and strong, but the twelfth, whose name was Esben, was only a little fellow. The
eleven eldest went out with their father to field and forest, but Esben preferred
to stay at home with his mother, and so he was never reckoned at all by the rest,
but was a sort of outcast among them.
When the eleven had grown up to be men they decided to go out into the
world to try their fortune, and they plagued their father to give them what they
required for the journey. The father was not much in favour of this, for he was
now old and weak, and could not well spare them from helping him with his work,
but in the long run he had to give in. Each one of the eleven got a fine white
horse and money for the journey, and so they said farewell to their father and
their home, and rode away.
As for Esben, no one had ever thought about him; his brothers had not even
said farewell to him.
After the eleven were gone Esben went to his father and said, "Father,
give me also a horse and money; I should also like to see round about me in the
world."
"You are a little fool," said his father. "If I could have let you go, and
kept your eleven brothers at home, it would have been better for me in my old
age."
"Well, you will soon be rid of me at any rate," said Esben.
As he could get no other horse, he went into the forest, broke off a
branch, stripped the bark off it, so that it became still whiter than his
brothers' horses, and, mounted on this. rode off after his eleven
brothers.
The brothers rode on the whole day, and towards evening they came to a
great forest, which they entered. Far within the wood they came to a little house,
and knocked at the door. There came an old, ugly, bearded hag, and opened it, and
they asked her whether all of them could get quarters for the night.
"Yes," said the old, bearded hag, "you shall all have quarters for the
night, and, in addition, each of you shall have one of my daughters."
The eleven brothers thought that they had come to very hospitable people.
They were well attended to, and when they went to bed, each of them got one of the
hag's daughters.
Esben had been coming along behind them, and had followed the same way,
and had also found the same house in the forest. He slipped into this, without
either the witch or her daughters noticing him, and hid himself under one of the
beds. A little before midnight he crept quietly out and wakened his brothers. He
told these to change night-caps with the witch's daughters. The brothers saw no
reason for this, but, to get rid of Esben's persistence, they made the exchange,
and slept soundly again.
When midnight came Esben heard the old witch come creeping along. She had
a broad-bladed axe in her hand, and went over all the eleven beds. It was so dark
that she could not see a hand's breadth before her, but she felt her way, and
hacked the heads off all the sleepers who had the men's night-caps onand
these were her own daughters. As soon as she had gone her way Esben wakened his
brothers, and they hastily took their horses and rode off from the witch's house,
glad that they had escaped so well. They quite forgot to thank Esben for what he
had done for them.
When they had ridden onwards for some time they reached a king's palace,
and inquired there whether they could be taken into service. Quite easily, they
were told, if they would be stablemen, otherwise the king had no use for them.
They were quite ready for this, and got the task of looking after all the king's
horses.
Long after them came Esben riding on his stick, and he also wanted to get
a place in the palace, but no one had any use for him, and he was told that he
could just go back the way he had come. However, he stayed there and occupied
himself as best he could. He got his food, but nothing more, and by night he lay
just where he could.
At this time there was in the palace a knight who was called Sir Red. He
was very well liked by the king, but hated by everyone else, for he was wicked
both in will and deed. This Sir Red became angry with the eleven brothers, because
they would not always stand at attention for him, so he determined to avenge
himself on them.
One day, therefore, he went to the king, and said that the eleven brothers
who had come to the palace a little while ago, and served as stablemen, could do a
great deal more than they pretended. One day he had heard them say that if they
liked they could get for the king a wonderful dove which had a feather of gold and
a feather of silver time about. But they would not procure it unless they were
threatened with death.
The king then had the eleven brothers called before him, and said to them,
"You have said that you can get me a dove which has feathers of gold and silver
time about."
All the eleven assured him that they had never said anything of the kind,
and they did not believe that such a dove existed in the whole world.
"Take your own mind of it," said the king; "but if you don't get that dove
within three days you shall lose your heads, the whole lot of you."
With that the king let them go, and there was great grief among them; some
wept and others lamented.
At that moment Esben came along, and, seeing their sorrowful looks, said
to them, "Hello, what's the matter with you?"
"What good would it do to tell you, you little fool? You can't help
us."
"Oh, you don't know that," answered Esben. "I have helped you
before."
In the end they told him how unreasonable the king was, and how he had
ordered them to get for him a dove with feathers of gold and silver time
about.
"Give me a bag of peas' said Esben, "and I shall see what I can do for
you."
Esben got his bag of peas; then he took his white stick, and
said,
Fly quick, my little stick, Carry me across the stream.
Straightway the stick carried him across the river and straight into the
old witch's courtyard. Esben had noticed that she had such a dove; so when he
arrived in the courtyard he shook the peas out of the bag, and the dove came
fluttering down to pick them up. Esben caught it at once, put it into the bag, and
hurried off before the witch caught sight of him; but the next moment she came
running, and shouted after him, "Hey, is that you, Esben?"
"Yees!"
"Is it you that has taken my dove?"
"Yees!"
"Was it you that made me kill my eleven daughters?"
"Yees!"
"Are you coming back again?"
"That may be," said Esben.
"Then you"ll catch it," shouted the witch.
The stick carried Esben with the dove back to the king's palace, and his
brothers were greatly delighted. The king thanked them many times for the dove,
and gave them in return both silver and gold. At this Sir Red became still more
embittered, and again thought of how to avenge himself on the brothers.
One day he went to the king and told him that the dove was by no means the
best thing that the brothers could get for him; for one day he had heard them
talking quietly among themselves, and they had said that they could procure a boar
whose bristles were of gold and silver time about.
The king again summoned the brothers before him, and asked whether it was
true that they had said that they could get for him a boar whose bristles were of
gold and silver time about.
"No," said the brothers; they had never said nor thought such a thing, and
they did not believe that there was such a boar in the whole world.
"You must get me that boar within three days," said the king, "or it will
cost you your heads."
With that they had to go. This was still worse than before, they thought.
Where could they get such a marvellous boar? They all went about hanging their
heads; but when only one day remained of the three Esben came along. When he saw
his brothers' sorrowful looks he cried, "Hallo, what's the matter now?"
"Oh, what's the use of telling you?" said his brothers. "You can't help
us, at any rate."
"Ah, you don't know that," said Esben; "I"ve helped you before."
In the end they told him how Sir Red had stirred up the king against them,
so that he had ordered them to get for him a boar with bristles of gold and silver
time about.
"That's all right," said Esben; "give me a sack of malt, and it is not
quite impossible that I may be able to help you."
Esben got his sack of malt; then he took his little white stick, set
himself on it, and said,
Fly quick, my little stick, Carry me across the stream.
Off went the stick with him, and very soon he was again in the witch's
courtyard. There he emptied out the malt, and next moment came the boar, which had
every second bristle of gold and of silver. Esben at once put it into his sack and
hurried off before the witch should catch sight of him; but the next moment she
came running, and shouted after him, "Hey! is that you, Esben?"
"Yees!"
"Is it you that has taken my pretty boar?"
"Yees!"
"It was also you that took my dove?"
"Yees!"
"And it was you that made me kill my eleven daughters?"
"Yees!"
"Are you coming back again?"
"That may be," said Esben.
"Then you"ll catch it," said the witch.
Esben was soon back at the palace with the boar, and his brothers scarcely
knew which leg to stand on, so rejoiced were they that they were safe again. Not
one of them, however, ever thought of thanking Esben for what he had done for
them.
The king was still more rejoiced over the boar than he had been over the
dove, and did not know what to give the brothers for it. At this Sir Red was again
possessed with anger and envy, and again he went about and planned how to get the
brothers into trouble.
One day he went again to the king and said, "These eleven brothers have
now procured the dove and the boar, but they can do much more than that; I know
they have said that if they liked they could get for the king a lamp that can
shine over seven kingdoms."
"If they have said that," said the king, "they shall also be made to bring
it to me. That would be a glorious lamp for me."
Again the king sent a message to the brothers to come up to the palace.
They went accordingly, although very unwillingly, for they suspected that Sir Red
had fallen on some new plan to bring them into trouble.
As soon as they came before the king he said to them,
"You brothers have said that you could, if you liked, get for me a lamp
that can shine over seven kingdoms. That lamp must be mine within three days, or
it will cost you your lives."
The brothers assured him that they had never said so, and they were sure
that no such lamp existed, but their words were of no avail.
"The lamp!" said the king, "or it will cost you your heads."
The brothers were now in greater despair than ever. They did not know what
to do, for such a lamp no one had ever heard of. But just as things looked their
worst along came Esben.
"Something wrong again?" said he. "What's the matter with you
now?"
"Oh, it's no use telling you," said they. "You can't help us, at any
rate."
"Oh, you might at least tell me," said Esben; "I have helped you
before."
In the end they told him that the king had ordered them to bring him a
lamp which could shine over seven kingdoms, but such a lamp no one had ever heard
tell of.
"Give me a bushel of salt," said Esben, "and we shall see how matters
go."
He got his bushel of salt, and then mounted his little white stick, and
said,
Fly quick, my little stick, Carry me across the stream.
With that both he and his bushel of salt were over beside the witch's
courtyard. But now matters were less easy, for he could not get inside the yard,
as it was evening and the gate was locked. Finally he hit on a plan; he got up on
the roof and crept down the chimney.
He searched all round for the lamp, but could find it nowhere, for the
witch always had it safely guarded, as it was one of her most precious treasures.
When he became tired of searching for it he crept into the baking- oven, intending
to lie down there and sleep till morning; but just at that moment he heard the
witch calling from her bed to one of her daughters, and telling her to make some
porridge for her. She had grown hungry, and had taken such a fancy to some
porridge. The daughter got out of bed, kindled the fire, and put on a pot with
water in it.
"You mustn't put any salt in the porridge, though," cried the
witch.
"No, neither will I," said the daughter; but while she was away getting
the meal Esben slipped out of the oven and emptied the whole bushel of salt into
the pot. The daughter came back then and put in the meal, and after it had boiled
a little she took it in to her mother. The witch took a spoonful and tasted
it.
"Uh!" said she; "didn't I tell you not to put any salt in it, and it's
just as salt as the sea."
So the daughter had to go and make new porridge, and her mother warned her
strictly not to put any salt in it. But now there was no water in the house, so
she asked her mother to give her the lamp, so that she could go to the well for
more.
"There you have it, then," said the witch; "but take good care of
it."
The daughter took the lamp which shone over seven kingdoms, and went out
to the well for water, while Esben slipped out after her. When she was going to
draw the water from the well she set the lamp down on a stone beside her. Esben
watched his chance, seized the lamp, and gave her a push from behind, so that she
plumped head first into the well. Then he made off with the lamp. But the witch
got out of her bed and ran after him, crying:
"Hey! is that you again, Esben?"
"Yees!"
"Was it you that took my dove?"
"Yees!"
"Was it also you that took my boar?"
"Yees!"
"And it was you that made me kill my eleven daughters?"
"Yees!"
"And now you have taken my lamp, and drowned my twelfth daughter in the
well?"
"Yees!"
"Are you coming back again?"
"That may be," said Esben.
"Then you"ll catch it," said the witch.
It was only a minute before the stick had again landed Esben at the king's
palace, and the brothers were then freed from their distress. The king gave them
many fine presents, but Esben did not get even so much as thanks from
them.
Never had Sir Red been so eaten up with envy as he was now, and he racked
his brain day and night to find something quite impossible to demand from the
brothers.
One day he went to the king and told him that the lamp the brothers had
procured was good enough, but they could still get for him something that was far
better. The king asked what that was.
"It is," said Sir Red, "the most beautiful coverlet that any mortal ever
heard tell of. It also has the property that, when anyone touches it, it sounds so
that it can be heard over eight kingdoms."
"That must be a splendid coverlet," said the king, and he at once sent for
the brothers.
"You have said that you know of a coverlet, the most beautiful in the
whole world, and which sounds over eight kingdoms when anyone touches it. You
shall procure it for me, or else lose your lives," said he.
The brothers answered him that they had never said a word about such a
coverlet, did not believe it existed, and that it was quite impossible for them to
procure it. But the king would not hear a word; he drove them away, telling them
that if they did not get it very soon it would cost them their heads.
Things looked very black again for the brothers, for they were sure there
was no escape for them. The youngest of them, indeed, asked where Esben was, but
the others said that that little fool could scarcely keep himself in clothes, and
it was not to be expected that he could help them. Not one of them thought it
worth while to look for Esben, but he soon came along of himself.
"Well, what's the matter now?" said he.
"Oh, what's the use of telling you?" said the brothers. "You can't help
us, at any rate."
"Ah! who knows that?" said Esben. "I have helped you before."
In the end the brothers told him about the coverlet which, when one
touched it, sounded so that it could be heard over eight kingdoms. Esben thought
that this was the worst errand that he had had yet, but he could not do worse than
fail, and so he would make the attempt.
He again took his little white stick, set himself on it, and
said,
Fly quick, my little stick, Carry me across the stream.
Next moment he was across the river and beside the witch's house. It was
evening, and the door was locked, but he knew the way down the chimney. When he
had got into the house, however, the worst yet remained to do, for the coverlet
was on the bed in which the witch lay and slept. He slipped into the room without
either she or her daughter wakening; but as soon as he touched the coverlet to
take it it sounded so that it could be heard over eight kingdoms. The witch awoke,
sprang out of bed, and caught hold of Esben. He struggled with her, but could not
free himself, and the witch called to her daughter, "Come and help me; we shall
put him into the little dark room to be fattened. Ho, ho! now I have
him!"
Esben was now put into a little dark hole, where he neither saw sun nor
moon, and there he was fed on sweet milk and nut-kernels. The daughter had enough
to do cracking nuts for him, and at the end of fourteen days she had only one
tooth left in her mouth; she had broken all the rest with the nuts. In this time
however, she had taken a liking to Esben, and would willingly have set him free,
but could not.
When some time had passed the witch told her daughter to go and cut a
finger off Esben, so that she could see whether he was nearly fat enough yet. The
daughter went and told Esben, and asked him what she should do. Esben told her to
take an iron nail and wrap a piece of skin round it: she could then give her
mother this to bite at.
The daughter did so, but when the witch bit it she cried, "Uh! no, no!
This is nothing but skin and bone; he must be fattened much longer yet."
So Esben was fed for a while longer on sweet milk and nut-kernels, until
one day the witch thought that now he must surely be fat enough, and told her
daughter again to go and cut a finger off him. By this time Esben was tired of
staying in the dark hole, so he told her to go and cut a teat off a cow, and give
it to the witch to bite at. This the daughter did, and the witch cried, "Ah! now
he is fatso fat that one can scarcely feel the bone in him. Now he shall be
killed."
Now this was just the very time that the witch had to go to Troms Church,
where all the witches gather once every year, so she had no time to deal with
Esben herself. She therefore told her daughter to heat up the big oven while she
was away, take Esben out of his prison, and roast him in there before she came
back. The daughter promised all this, and the witch went off on her
journey.
The daughter then made the oven as hot as could be, and took Esben out of
his prison in order to roast him. She brought the oven spade, and told Esben to
seat himself on it, so that she could shoot him into the oven. Esben accordingly
took his seat on it, but when she had got him to the mouth of the oven he spread
his legs out wide, so that she could not get him pushed in.
"You mustn't sit like that," said she.
"How then?" said Esben.
"You must cross your legs," said the daughter; but Esben could not
understand what she meant by this.
"Get out of the way," said she, "and I will show you how to place
yourself."
She seated herself on the oven spade, but no sooner had she done so than
Esben laid hold of it, shot her into the oven, and fastened the door of it. Then
he ran and seized the coverlet, but as soon as he did so it sounded so that it
could be heard over eight kingdoms, and the witch, who was at Troms Church, came
flying home, and shouted, "Hey! is that you again, Esben ?"
"Yees!"
"It was you that made me kill my eleven daughters?"
"Yees!"
"And took my dove?"
"Yees!"
"And my beautiful boar?"
"Yees!"
"And drowned my twelfth daughter in the well, and took my lamp?"
"Yees!"
"And now you have roasted my thirteenth and last daughter in the oven, and
taken my coverlet?"
"Ye-e-s!"
"Are you coming back again?"
"No, never again," said Esben.
At this the witch became so furious that she sprang into numberless pieces
of flint, and from this come all the flint stones that one finds about the
country.
Esben had found again his little stick, which the witch had taken from
him, so he said,
Fly quick, my little stick, Carry me across the stream.
Next moment he was back at the king's palace. Here things were in a bad
way, for the king had thrown all the eleven brothers into prison, and they were to
be executed very shortly because they had not brought him the coverlet. Esben now
went up to the king and gave him the coverlet, with which the king was greatly
delighted. When he touched it it could be heard over eight kingdoms, and all the
other kings sat and were angry because they had not one like it.
Esben also told how everything had happened, and how Sir Red had done the
brothers all the ill he could devise because he was envious of them. The brothers
were at once set at liberty, while Sir Red, for his wickedness, was hanged on the
highest tree that could be found, and so he got the reward he deserved.
Much was made of Esben and his brothers, and these now thanked him for all
that he had done for them. The twelve of them received as much gold and silver as
they could carry, and betook themselves home to their old father. When he saw
again his twelve sons, whom he had never expected to see more, he was so glad that
he wept for joy. The brothers told him how much Esben had done, and how he had
saved their lives, and from that time forward he was no longer the butt of the
rest at home.
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