Andrew Lang

Big Book of Fairytales (Illustrated Edition)


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my bread.”

      The monster soon found the poor young man, and pulled him from his hole. And when he had got him out he told him that if he could answer him three questions his life should be spared. The first was: Whether Ireland or Scotland was first inhabited? The second was: Whether man was made for woman, or woman for man? The third was: Whether men or brutes were made first? The lad not being able to answer one of these questions, the Red Etin took a mace and knocked him on the head, and turned him into a pillar of stone.

      On the morning after this happened the younger brither took out the knife to look at it, and he was grieved to find it a’ brown wi’ rust. He told his mother that the time was now come for him to go away upon his travels also; so she requested him to take the can to the well for water, that she might bake a cake for him. The can being broken, he brought hame as little water as the other had done, and the cake was as little. She asked whether he would have the hale cake wi’ her malison, or the half wi’ her blessing; and, like his brither, he thought it best to have the hale cake, come o’ the malison what might. So he gaed away; and everything happened to him that had happened to his brother!

      The other widow and her son heard of a’ that had happened frae a fairy, and the young man determined that he would also go upon his travels, and see if he could do anything to relieve his twa friends. So his mother gave him a can to go to the well and bring home water, that she might bake him a cake for his journey. And he gaed, and as he was bringing hame the water, a raven owre abune his head cried to him to look, and he would see that the water was running out. And he was a young man of sense, and seeing the water running out, he took some clay and patched up the holes, so that he brought home enough water to bake a large cake. When his mother put it to him to take the half-cake wi’ her blessing, he took it in preference to having the hale wi’ her malison; and yet the half was bigger than what the other lads had got a’thegither.

      So he gaed away on his journey; and after he had traveled a far way he met wi’ an auld woman, that asked him if he would give her a bit of his bannock. And he said he would gladly do that, and so he gave her a piece of the bannock; and for that she gied him a magical wand, that she said might yet be of service to him if he took care to use it rightly. Then the auld woman, who was a fairy, told him a great deal that whould happen to him, and what he ought to do in a’ circumstances; and after that she vanished in an instant out o’ his sight. He gaed on a great way farther, and then he came up to the old man herding the sheep; and when he asked whose sheep these were, the answer was:

      “The Red Etin of Ireland

       Ance lived in Bellygan,

       And stole King Malcolm’s daughter,

       The King of fair Scotland.

       He beats her, he binds her,

       He lays her on a band;

       And every day he dings her

       With a bright silver wand.

       Like Julian the Roman,

       He’s one that fears no man,

       But now I fear his end is near,

       And destiny at hand;

       And you’re to be, I plainly see,

       The heir of all his land.”

      (Repeat the same inquiries to the man attending the swine and the man attending the goats, with the same answer in each case.)

      When he came to the place where the monstrous beasts were standing, he did not stop nor run away, but went boldly through among them. One came up roaring with open mouth to devour him, when he struck it with his wand, and laid it in an instant dead at his feet. He soon came to the Etin’s castle, where he knocked, and was admitted. The auld woman that sat by the fire warned him of the terrible Etin, and what had been the fate of the twa brithers; but he was not to be daunted. The monster soon came in, saying:

      “Snouk but and snouk ben,

       I find the smell of an earthly man;

       Be he living, or be he dead,

       His heart shall be kitchen to my bread.”

      THE RED FAIRY BOOK

       Table of Contents

       Preface

       The Twelve Dancing Princesses

       The Princess Mayblossom

       Soria Moria Castle

       The Death of Koshchei the Deathless

       The Black Thief and Knight of the Glen.

       The Master Thief

       Brother and Sister

       Princess Rosette

       The Enchanted Pig

       The Norka

       The Wonderful Birch

       Jack and the Beanstalk

       The Little Good Mouse

       Graciosa and Percinet

       The Three Princesses of Whiteland

       The