The Three Feathers

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 The Three Feathers
 
 
      There was once upon a time a King who had three sons, of whom two were
 clever and wise, but the third did not speak much and was simple, and was
 called the Simpleton. When the King had become old and weak, and was thinking
 of his end, he did not know which of his sons should inherit the kingdom after
 him. Then he said to them. "Go forth, and he who brings me the most beautiful
 carpet shall be King after my death." And that there should be no dispute
 amongst them, he took them outside his castle, blew three feathers in the air,
 and said, "You shall go as they fly." One feather flew to the east, the other
 to the west, but the third flew straight up and did not fly far, but soon fell
 to the ground. And now one brother went to the right, and the other to the
 left, and they mocked Simpleton, who was forced to stay where the third
 feather had fallen. He sat down and was sad, then all at once he saw that
 there was a trap-door close by the feather. He raised it up, found some
 steps, and went down them, and then he came to another door, knocked at it,
 and heard somebody inside calling,
 
 
 "Little green maiden small,
 Hopping hither and thither,
 Hop to the door,
 And quickly see who is there."
 
 
      The door opened, and he saw a great, fat toad sitting, and round about
 her a crowd of little toads. The fat toad asked what he wanted? He answered,
 "I should like to have the prettiest and finest carpet in the world." Then she
 called a young one and said,
 
 
 "Little green maiden small,
 Hopping hither and thither,
 Hop quickly and bring me
 The great box here."
 
 
      The young toad brought the box, and the fat toad opened it, and gave
 Simpleton a carpet out of it, so beautiful and so fine, that on the earth
 above, none could have been woven like it. Then he thanked her, and ascended
 again. The two others had, however, looked on their youngest brother as so
 stupid that they believed he would find and bring nothing at all. "Why should
 we give ourselves a great deal of trouble to search?" said they, and got some
 coarse handkerchiefs from the first shepherds' wives whom they met, and
 carried them home to the King. At the same time Simpleton also came back, and
 brought his beautiful carpet, and when the King saw it he was astonished, and
 said, "If justice be done, the kingdom belongs to the youngest." But the two
 others let their father have no peace and said that it was impossible that
 Simpleton, who in everything lacked understanding, should be King, and
 entreated him to make a new agreement with them. Then the father said, "He who
 brings me the most beautiful ring shall inherit the kingdom," and led the
 three brothers out, and blew into the air three feathers, which they were to
 follow. Those of the two eldest again went east and west, and Simpleton's
 feather flew straight up, and fell down near the door into the earth. Then he
 went down again to the fat toad, and told her that he wanted the most
 beautiful ring. She at once ordered her great box to be brought, and gave him
 a ring out of it, which sparkled with jewels, and was so beautiful that no
 goldsmith on earth would have been able to make it. The two eldest laughed at
 Simpleton for going to seek a golden ring. They gave themselves no trouble,
 but knocked the nails out of an old carriage-ring, and took it to the King;
 but when Simpleton produced his golden ring, his father again said, "The
 kingdom belongs to him." The two eldest did not cease from tormenting the King
 until he made a third condition, and declared that the one who brought the
 most beautiful woman home, should have the kingdom. He again blew the three
 feathers into the air, and they flew as before.
 
 
      Then Simpleton without more ado went down to the fat toad, and said, "I
 am to take home the most beautiful woman!" "Oh," answered the toad, "the most
 beautiful woman! She is not at hand at the moment, but still thou shalt have
 her." She gave him a yellow turnip which had been hollowed out, to which six
 mice were harnessed. The Simpleton said quite mournfully, "What am I to do
 with that?" The toad answered, "Just put one of my little toads into it." Then
 he seized one at random out of the circle, and put her into the yellow coach,
 but hardly was she seated inside it than she turned into a wonderfully
 beautiful maiden, and the turnip into a coach, and the six mice into horses.
 So he kissed her, and drove off quickly with the horses, and took her to the
 King. His brothers came afterwards; they had given themselves no trouble at
 all to seek beautiful girls, but had brought with them the first peasant women
 they chanced to meet. When the King saw them he said, "After my death the
 kingdom belongs to my youngest son." But the two eldest deafened the King's
 ears afresh with their clamour, "We cannot consent to Simpleton's being King,"
 and demanded that the one whose wife could leap through a ring which hung in
 the centre of the hall should have the preference. They thought, "The peasant
 women can do that easily; they are strong enough, but the delicate maiden will
 jump herself to death." The aged King agreed likewise to this. Then the two
 peasant women jumped, and jumped through the ring, but were so stout that they
 fell, and their coarse arms and legs broke in two. And then the pretty maiden
 whom Simpleton had brought with him, sprang, and sprang through as lightly as
 a deer, and all opposition had to cease. So he received the crown, and has
 ruled wisely for a length of time.