WORLD OF STORIES FOR KIDS
NORWEGIAN FOLK TALES
Tatterhood
THERE WAS A KING and a queen who had no children, and that gave the
queen
much grief; she hardly had one happy hour. She was always bewailing and
bemoaning herself, and saying how dull and lonesome it was in the palace.
"If we had children there'd be life enough,"
she said.
Wherever she went in all her realm she found
Snout's blessings in children, even in the vilest hut; and wherever she
came she heard the Goodies scolding the young ones, and saying how they
had done that and that wrong. All this the queen heard, and thought it
would be so nice to do as other women did. At last the king and queen
took into their palace a stranger lassie to rear up, that they might have
her always with them, to love her if she did well, and scold her if she
did wrong, like their own child.
So one day the little lassie whom they had
taken as their own, ran down into the palace-yard, and was playing with a
gold apple. Just then an old beggar wife came by, who had a little girl
with her, and it wasn't long before the little lassie and the beggar's
child were great friends, and began to play together, and to toss the
gold apple about between them. When the queen saw this, as she sat at a
window in the palace, she tapped on the pane for her foster-daughter to
come up. She went at once, but the beggar-girl went up too; and as they
went into the queen's bower, each held the other by the hand. Then the
queen began to scold the little lady, and to say,
"You ought to be above running about and
playing with a tattered beggar's brat."
And so she wanted to drive the lassie
down-stairs.
"If the queen only knew my mother's power,
she'd not drive me out," said the little lassie; and when the queen asked
what she meant more plainly, she told her how her mother could get her
children if she chose. The queen wouldn't believe it, but the lassie held
her own, and said every word of it was true, and bade the queen only to
try and make her mother do it. So the queen sent the lassie down to fetch
up her mother.
"Do you know what your daughter says?" asked
the queen of the old woman, as soon as ever she came into the room.
No; the beggar-wife knew nothing about it.
"Well, she says you can get me children if
you will," answered the queen.
"Queens shouldn't listen to beggar lassies'
silly stories," said the old wife, and strode out of the room.
Then the queen got angry, and wanted again to
drive out the little lassie, but she declared that every word that she
had said was true and more than that.
"Let the queen only give my mother a drop to
drink," said the lassie; "when she gets merry she'll soon find out a way
to help you."
The queen was ready to try this; so the
beggar wife was fetched up again once more, and treated both with wine
and mead as much as she chose; and so it was not long before her tongue
began to wag. Then the queen came out again with the same question she had
asked before.
"One way to help you perhaps I know," said
the beggar wife. "Your Majesty must make them bring in two pails of water
some evening before you go to bed. In each of them you must wash
yourself, and afterwards throw away the water under the bed. When you look
under the bed next morning, two flowers will have sprung up, one fair and
one ugly. The fair one you must eat, the ugly one you must let stand; but
mind you don't forget the last."
That was what the beggar wife said.
Yes; the queen did what the beggar wife
advised her to do; she had the water brought up in two pails, washed
herself in them, and emptied them under the bed; and lo! when she looked
under the bed next morning, there stood two flowers; one was ugly and
foul, and had black leaves; but the other was so bright, and fair, and
lovely, she had never seen its like; so she ate it up at once. But the
pretty flower tasted so sweet, that she couldn't help herself. She ate
the other up too, for, she thought," it can't hurt or help one much either
way, I'll be bound."
Well, sure enough, after a while the queen
was brought to bed. First of all, she had a girl who had a wooden spoon
in her hand, and rode upon a goat; horrible and ugly she was, and the
very moment she came into the world she bawled out "Mamma."
"If I'm your mamma," said the queen, "Snout
give me grace to mend my ways."
"Oh, don't be sorry," said the girl, who rode
on the goat, "for one will soon come after me who is better looking."
So, after a while, the queen had another girt
who was so fair and sweet, no one had ever set eyes on such a lovely
child, and with her you may fancy the queen was very well pleased. vThe
elder twin they called "Tatterhood" because she was always so ugly and
ragged, and because she had a hood which hung about her ears in tatters.
The queen could hardly bear to look at her, and the nurses tried to shut
her up in a room by herself, but it was all no good; where the younger
twin was, there she must also be, and no one could ever keep them apart.
Well, one Christmas eve, when they were half
grown up, there rose such a frightful noise and clatter in the gallery
outside the queen's bower. So Tatterhood asked what it was that dashed
and crashed so out in the passage.
"Oh!" said the queen, "it isn't worth asking
about!"
But Tatterhood wouldn't give over till she
found out all about it; and so the queen told her it was a pack of Trolls
and witches who had come there to keep Christmas. So Tatterhood said
she'd just go out and drive them away; and in spite of all they could say,
and however much they begged and prayed her to let the trolls alone, she
must and would go out to drive the witches off; but she begged the queen
to mind and keep all the doors close shut, so that not one of them came
so much as the least bit ajar. Having said this, off she went with her
wooden spoon, and began to hunt and sweep away the hags; and all this
while there was such a pother out in the gallery, the like of it was
never heard. The whole palace creaked and groaned as if every joint and
beam were going to be torn out of its place. Somehow or other one door
did get the least bit ajar, then her twin sister just peeped out to see
how things were going with Tatterhood, and put her head a tiny bit
through the opening. But, POP! up came an old witch, and whipped off her
head, and stuck a calf's head on her shoulders instead; and so the
princess ran back into the room on all-fours, and began to "moo" like a
calf. When Tatterhood came back and saw her sister, she scolded them all
round, and was very angry because they hadn't kept better watch, and
asked them what they thought of their heedlessness now, when her sister
was turned into a calf.
"But still I'll see if I can't set her free,"
she said.
Then she asked the king for a ship in full
trim, and well fitted with stores; but captain and sailors she wouldn't
have. No; she would sail away with her sister all alone; and as there was
no holding her back, at last they let her have her own way.
Then Tatterhood sailed off, and steered her
ship right under the land where the witches dwelt, and when she came to
the landing-place, she told her sister to stay quite still on board the
ship; but she herself rode on her goat up to the witches' castle. When she
got there, one of the windows in the gallery was open, and there she saw
her sister's head hung up on the window frame; so she leapt her goat
through the window into the gallery, snapped up the head, and set off
with it. After her came the witches to try to get the head again, and
they flocked about her as thick as a swarm of bees or a nest of ants; but
the goat snorted and puffed, and butted with his horns, and Tatterhood
beat and banged them about with her wooden spoon; and so the pack of
witches had to give it up. So Tatterhood got back to her ship, took the
calf's head off her sister, and put her own on again, and then she became
a girl as she had been before. After that she sailed a long, long way, to
a strange king's realm.
Now the king of that land was a widower, and
had an only son. So when he saw the strange sail, he sent messengers down
to the strand to find out whence it came, and who owned it; but when the
king's men came down there, they saw never a living soul on board but
Tatterhood, and there she was, riding round and round the deck on her
goat at full speed, till her elf locks streamed again in the wind. The
folk from the palace were all amazed at this sight, and asked were there
not more on board. Yes, there were; she had a sister with her, said
Tatterhood. Her, too, they wanted to see, but Tatterhood said "No," -
"No one shall see her, unless the king comes
himself," she said; and so she began to gallop about on her goat till the
deck thundered again.
So when the servants got back to the palace,
and told what they had seen and heard down at the ship, the king was for
setting out at once, that he might see the lassie that rode on the goat.
When he got down, Tatterhood led out her sister, and she was so fair and
gentle, the king fell over head and ears in love with her as he stood. He
brought them both back with him to the palace, and wanted to have the
sister for his queen; but Tatterhood said "No;" the king couldn't have
her in any way, unless the king's son chose to have Tatterhood. That you
may fancy the prince was very loath to do, such an ugly hussy as
Tatterhood was; but at last the king and all the others in the palace
talked him over, and he yielded, giving his word to take her for his
queen; but it went sore against the grain, and he was a doleful man.
Now they set about the wedding, both with
brewing and baking; and when all was ready, they were to go to bakery;
but the prince thought it the weariest bakery round he had ever had in
all his life. First, the king drove off with his bride, and she was so
lovely and so grand, all the people stopped to look after her all along
the road, and they stared at her till she was out of sight. After them
came the prince on horseback by the side of Tatterhood, who trotted along
on her goat with her wooden spoon in her fist, and to look at him, it was
more like going to a burial than a wedding, and that his own; so
sorrowful he seemed, and with never a word to say.
"Why don't you talk?" asked Tatterhood, when
they had ridden a bit.
"Why, what should I talk about?" answered the
prince.
"Well, you might at least ask me why I ride
upon this ugly goat," said Tatterhood.
"Why do you ride on that ugly goat?" asked
the prince.
"Is it an ugly goat? why, it's the grandest
horse bride ever rode on," answered Tatterhood; and in a trice the goat
became a horse, and that the finest the prince had ever set eyes on.
Then they rode on again a bit, but the prince
was just as woeful as before, and couldn't get a word out. So Tatterhood
asked him again why he didn't talk, and when the prince answered, he
didn't know what to talk about, she said,
"You can at least ask me why I ride with this
ugly spoon in my fist."
"Why do you ride with that ugly spoon?" asked
the prince.
"Is it an ugly spoon? why, it's the loveliest
silver wand bride ever bore," said Tatterhood; and in a trice it became a
silver wand, so dazzling bright, the sunbeams glistened from it.
So they rode on another bit, but the prince
was just as morose, and said never a word. In a little while Tatterhood
asked him again why he didn't talk, and bade him ask why she wore that
ugly grey hood on her head.
"Why do you wear that ugly grey hood on your
head?" asked the prince.
"Is it an ugly hood? why, it's the brightest
golden crown bride ever wore," answered Tatterhood, and it became a crown
on the spot.
Now they rode on a long while again, and the
prince was so woeful, that he sat without sound or speech, just as
before. So his bride asked him again why he didn't talk. and bade him ask
right now why her face was so ugly and ashen-grey. It was needed.
"Ah!" asked the prince, "why is your face so
ugly and ashen-grey?"
"Am I really ugly?" said the bride; "you
think my sister is pretty, but I am ten times prettier;" and lo! when the
prince looked at her, she was so lovely, he thought there never was so
lovely a woman in all the world. After that, I shouldn't wonder if the
prince found his tongue, and no longer rode along hanging down his head.
Or maybe he should.
So they drank the bridal cup both deep and
long. After that, both prince and king set out with their brides to the
princess's father's palace, and there they had another bridal feast, and
drank anew, both deep and long. There was no end to the fun, and a story
is left for you. Don't wish for the impossible. Good night.
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