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"Good luck and victory follow you, lad !" said the king's
daughter. "I am safe for one night, but the beast will come again and again,
until the other two heads come off it." He caught the beast's head, and he
drew a knot through it, and he told her to bring it with her there tomorrow.
She gave him a gold ring, and went home with the head on her shoulder, and the
herd betook himself to the cows. But she had not gone far when this great
General saw her, and he said to her, "I will kill you if you do not say
that 'twas I took the head off the beast."
"Oh!" says she, " 'tis I will say it ; who else took the head
off the beast but you! " They reached the king's house, and the head was
on the General's shoulder. But here was rejoicing, that she should come home
alive and whole, and this great captain with the beast's head full of blood in
his hand. On the morrow they went away, and there was no question at all but
that this hero would save the king's daughter.
They reached the same place, and they were not long there when the fearful
Laidly Beast stirred in the midst of the loch, and the hero slunk away as he
did on yesterday, but it was not long after this when the man of the black
horse came, with another dress on. No matter; she knew that it was the very
same lad. "It is I am pleased to see you," said she. "I am in
hopes you will handle your great sword to-day as you did yesterday. Come up and
take breath." But they were not long there when they saw the beast
steaming in the midst of the loch.
At once he went to meet the beast, but there was Cloopersteich and
Claperstich, spluttering, splashing, raving, and roaring on the beast ! They kept
at it thus for a long time, and about the mouth of night he cut another head
off the beast. He put it on the knot and gave it to her. She gave him one of
her earrings, and he leaped on the black horse, and he betook himself to the
herding. The king's daughter went home with the heads. The General met her, and
took the heads from her, and he said to her, that she must tell that it was he
who took the head off the beast this time also. "Who else took the head
off the beast but you?" said she. They reached the king's house with the
heads. Then there was joy and. gladness.
About the same time on the morrow, the two went away. The officer hid
himself as he usually did. The king's daughter betook herself to the bank of
the loch. The hero of the black horse came, and if roaring and raving were on
the beast on the days that were passed, this day it was horrible. But no
matter, he took the third head off the beast, and drew it through the knot, and
gave it to her. She gave him her other earring, and then she went home with the
heads. When they reached the king's house, all were full of smiles, and the
General was to marry the king's daughter the next day. The wedding was going
on, and every one about the castle longing till the priest should come. But
when the priest came, she would marry only the one who could take the heads off
the knot without cutting it. "Who should take the heads off the knot but
the man that put the heads on?" said the king.
The General tried them, but he could not loose them and at last there was no
one about the house but had tried to take the heads off the knot, but they
could not. The king asked if there were any one else about the house that would
try to take the beads off the knot. They said that the herd had not tried them
yet. Word went for the herd; and he was not long throwing them hither and
thither. "But stop a bit, my lad," said the king's daughter ;
"the man that took the heads off the beast, he has my ring and my two
earrings." The herd put his hand in his pocket, and he threw them on the
board. "Thou art my man," said the king's daughter. The king was not
so pleased when he saw that it was a herd who was to marry his daughter, but he
ordered that he should be put in a better dress; but his daughter spoke, and
she said that he had a dress as fine as any that ever was in his castle; and
thus it happened. The herd put on the giant's golden dress, and they married
that same day.
They were now married, and everything went on well. But one day, and it was
the namesake of the day when his father had promised him to the sea-maiden,
they were sauntering by the side of the loch, and lo and behold ! she came and
took him away to the loch without leave or asking. The king's daughter was now
mournful, tearful, blind-sorrowful for her married man; she was always with her
eye on the loch. An old soothsayer met her, and she told how it had befallen
her married mate. Then he told her the thing to do to save her mate, and that
she did.
She took her harp to the sea-shore, and sat and played; and the sea-maiden
came up to listen, for sea-maidens are fonder of music than all other
creatures. But when the wife saw the sea-maiden she stopped. The sea-maiden
said, "Play on !" but the princess said, "No, not till I see my
man again." So the sea-maiden put up his head out of the loch. Then the
princess played again, and stopped till the sea-maiden put him up to the waist.
Then the princess played and stopped again, and this time the sea-maiden put
him all out of the loch, and he called on the falcon and became one and flew on
shore. But the sea-maiden took the princess, his wife.
Sorrowful was each one that was in the town on this night. Her man was
mournful, tearful, wandering down and up about the banks of the loch, by day
and night. The old soothsayer met him. The soothsayer told him that there was
no way of killing the sea-maiden but the one way, and this is it - " In
the island that is in the midst of the loch is the white-footed hind of the
slenderest legs and the swiftest step, and though she he caught, there will
spring a hoodie out of her, and though the hoodie should be caught, there will
spring a trout out of her, but there is an egg in the mouth of the trout, and
the soul of the sea-maiden is in the egg, and if the egg breaks, she is
dead."
Now, there was no way of getting to this island, for the sea-maiden would
sink each boat and raft that would go on the loch. He thought he would try to
leap the strait with the black horse, and even so he did. The black horse
leaped the strait. He saw the hind, and he let the black dog after her, but
when he was on one side of the island, the hind would he on the other side.
"Oh! would the black dog of the carcass of flesh were here!" No
sooner spoke he the word than the grateful dog was at his side; and after the hind
he went, and they were not long in bringing her to earth. But he no sooner
caught her than a hoodie sprang out of her. "Would that the falcon grey,
of sharpest eye and swiftest wing, were here!" No sooner said he this than
the falcon was after the hoodie, and she was not long putting her to earth; and
as the hoodie fell on the bank of the loch, out of her jumps the trout.
"Oh ! that thou wert by me now, oh otter !" No sooner said than the
otter was at his side, and out on the loch she leaped, and brings the trout
from the midst of the loch; but no sooner was the otter on shore with the trout
than the egg came from his mouth. He sprang and he put his foot on it. 'Twas
then the sea-maiden appeared, and she said, "Break not the egg, and you
shall get all you ask." "Deliver to me my wife !" In the wink of
an eye she was by his side. When he got hold of her hand in both his bands, he
let his foot down on the egg, and the sea-maiden died.
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