Czechoslovak Fairy Tales - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"_Look not inside until you're home!
Look not inside until you're home!_"
As she said these words she was gone as if a wind had blown her away.
Betushka wanted awfully to peep inside but she was afraid to. The basket was so light that she wondered whether there was anything at all in it. Was the lovely lady only fooling her? Halfway home she peeped in to see.
Imagine her feelings when she found the basket was full of birch leaves! Then indeed did Betushka burst into tears and reproach herself for being so simple. In her vexation she threw out a handful of leaves and was going to empty the basket when she thought to herself:
"No, I'll keep what's left as litter for the goats."
She was almost afraid to go home. She was so quiet that again the little goats wondered what ailed their shepherdess.
Her mother was waiting for her in great excitement.
"For heaven's sake, Betushka, what kind of a spool did you bring home yesterday?"
"Why?" Betushka faltered.
"When you went away this morning I started to reel that yarn. I reeled and reeled and the spool remained full. One skein, two skeins, three skeins, and still the spool was full. 'What evil spirit has spun that?' I cried out impatiently, and instantly the yarn disappeared from the spindle as if blown away. Tell me, what does it mean?"
So Betushka confessed and told her mother all she knew about the beautiful maiden.
"Oh," cried her mother in amazement, "that was a wood maiden! At noon and midnight the wood maidens dance. It is well you are not a little boy or she might have danced you to death! But they are often kind to little girls and sometimes make them rich presents. Why didn't you tell me? If I hadn't grumbled, I could have had yarn enough to fill the house!"
Betushka thought of the little basket and wondered if there might be something under the leaves. She took out the spindle and unspun flax and looked in once more.
"Mother!" she cried. "Come here and see!"
Her mother looked and clapped her hands. The birch leaves were all turned to gold!
Betushka reproached herself bitterly: "She told me not to look inside until I got home, but I didn't obey."
"It's lucky you didn't empty the whole basket," her mother said.
The next morning she herself went to look for the handful of leaves that Betushka had thrown away. She found them still lying in the road but they were only birch leaves.
But the riches which Betushka brought home were enough. Her mother bought a farm with fields and cattle. Betushka had pretty clothes and no longer had to pasture goats.
But no matter what she did, no matter how cheerful and happy she was, still nothing ever again gave her quite so much pleasure as the dance with the wood maiden. She often went to the birch wood in the hope of seeing the maiden again. But she never did.
THE GOLDEN SPINNING WHEEL
THE STORY OF KING DOBROMIL AND THE GOOD DOBRUNKA
[Ill.u.s.tration: {A spinning wheel}]
THE GOLDEN SPINNING WHEEL
There was once a poor woman who had twin daughters. The girls were exactly alike in face and feature but utterly different in disposition. Dobrunka was kind, industrious, obedient, and everything a good girl ought to be. Zloboha, her sister, was spiteful, disobedient, lazy, and proud. In fact, she had just about as many faults as a person could have. Yet strange to say the mother loved Zloboha much better and made everything easy for her.
[Ill.u.s.tration: _Alike in Feature but Utterly Different in Disposition_]
They lived in a cottage a few miles from town. The cottage stood by itself in a little clearing in the woods. Hardly any one ever pa.s.sed it except occasionally some man who had lost his way in the woods.
The mother put her favorite, Zloboha, out to service so that she might learn city ways, but she kept Dobrunka at home to do the housework and take care of the garden. Dobrunka always began the day by feeding the goats, then she prepared the breakfast, swept the kitchen, and when everything else was done she sat down at her spinning wheel and spun.
She seldom benefited from the yarn she spun so carefully, for her mother always sold it in town and spent the money on clothes for Zloboha. Yet Dobrunka loved her mother although she never had a kind word or a kind look from her the whole day long. She always obeyed her mother instantly and without a frown and no one ever heard her complain about all the work she had to do.
One day when her mother was going to town Dobrunka went part of the way with her, carrying her yarn wrapped up in a kerchief.
"Now see that you're not lazy while I'm away," her mother said, crossly.
"You know, mother, you never have to nag at me. Today when I finish the housework, I'll spin so industriously that you'll be more than satisfied when you get home."
She handed her yarn to her mother and went back to the cottage. Then when she had put the kitchen in order, she sat down to her wheel and began to spin. Dobrunka had a pretty voice, as pretty as any of the song-birds in the forest, and always when she was alone she sang. So today as she sat spinning she sang all the songs she knew, one after the other.
Suddenly she heard outside the trample of a horse. "Some one is coming," she thought to herself, "someone who has lost his way in the woods. I'll go see."
She got up from her wheel and peeped out through the small window. A young man was just dismounting from a spirited horse.
"Oh," thought Dobrunka to herself, "what a handsome young lord he is!
How well his leather coat fits him! How well his cap with its white feather looks on his black hair! Ah, he is tying his horse and is coming in. I must slip back to my spinning."
The next moment the young man opened the door and stepped into the kitchen. All this happened a long time ago, you see, when there were no locks or bars on the doors, and there didn't have to be because nothing was ever stolen.
"Good day to you, my girl," the young man said to Dobrunka.
"Good day, sir," Dobrunka answered. "What is it, sir, you want?"
"Will you please get me a little water. I'm very thirsty."
"Certainly," Dobrunka said. "Won't you sit down while I'm getting it?"
She ran off, got the pitcher, rinsed it out, and drew some fresh water from the well.
"I wish I could give you something better, sir."
"Nothing could taste better than this," he said, handing her back the empty pitcher. "See, I have taken it all."
Dobrunka put the pitcher away and the young man, while her back was turned, slipped a leather bag, full of money, into the bed.
"I thank you for the drink," he said, as he rose to go. "I'll come again tomorrow if you'll let me."
"Come if you want to," Dobrunka said, modestly.