A woodcutter was chopping wood in front of the king's
house, while the princess was standing at a window above and observing him.
When noon arrived, he sat down in the shadows and wanted to rest. Now the
princess was able to see that he was very handsome and fell in love with him.
So she had him summoned to her, and as soon as he caught sight of her and saw
how beautiful she was, he fell in love with her. Soon they were united in their
love for one another, but the king learned that the princess was in love with a
woodcutter, and as soon as he knew this, he went to her and said: "You
know that you may only wed the man who brings me the three golden hairs from
the devil's head, whether he be a prince or a woodcutter."
The king thought that there had never been a prince
courageous enough to accomplish this task, and therefore, an inferior man like
the woodcutter would certainly not succeed. The princess was distressed because
many princes who had tried to fetch the devil's three golden hairs had died.
Since there was nothing else she could do, she told the woodcutter what her
father had said. However, the woodcutter was not at all depressed by this and
said: "I'll certainly succeed. Stay true to me until I return. Early
tomorrow I shall set out."
Indeed, the woodcutter began his journey to the devil the
next day and soon came to a big city. In front of the gate, a guard asked him what kind of craft he
practiced and what he knew.
"I know everything," answered
the woodcutter.
"If you know everything," the gatekeeper said,
"then make our princess healthy again. No doctor in the world has been
able to cure her."
"When I return."
In the second city he was also asked
what he knew.
"I know everything."
"Then tell us why our beautiful
well at the marketplace has become dry."
"When I return," said the
woodcutter, and he refused to be detained.
After a while he came to a fig tree that was rotting, and
nearby stood a man who asked him what he knew.
"I know everything,"
"Then tell me why the fig tree is
rotting and no longer bearing any fruit."
"When I return."
The woodcutter traveled on and encountered a ferryman who
had to transport him across a river, and he asked him what he knew.
"I know everything."
"So tell me when will I be finally relieved and when
someone else will transport people across the river?"
"When
I return."
After the woodcutter was on the other side, he entered
hell. Everything appeared black and sooty. However, the devil was not home.
Only his wife was sitting there. The woodcutter said to her, "Good day,
Mrs. Devil, I've come here to take three golden hairs that your husband has on
his head, and I'd like to know why a princess cannot be cured, why a deep well
at a marketplace doesn't have any water, why a fig tree doesn't bear any fruit,
and why a ferryman has not been relieved from his work."
The wife was horrified and said, "When the devil comes
and finds you here, he'll eat you right away, and you'll never be able to get
the three golden hairs. But since you are so young, I feel sorry for you, and
I'll see if I can save you."
The woodcutter had to lay down beneath the bed, and no
sooner did he do this than the devil came home.
"Good evening, wife," he said and proceeded to
take off his clothes. Then he burst out saying, "What's going on in this
room? I smell, I smell the flesh of a man. I've got to look around."
"What are you going to smell?" his wife asked.
"You've got the sniffles, and the smell of human flesh is still stuffed up
in your nose. Don't mess up everything. I've just cleaned the house."
"I won't make any noise. I'm tired this evening, and
you won't even begrudge me some little thing to eat."
Upon saying that the devil laid himself
down in the bed, and his wife had to lie down beside him. Soon he fell asleep. First he blew, then he snored. At the
beginning he did this softly, and then he was so loud that the windows
trembled. When his wife saw that he was sound asleep, she grabbed hold of one
of the three golden hairs, ripped it out, and threw it to the woodcutter
beneath the bed. The devil jumped up: "What are you doing, wife? Why are
you tearing out my hair?"
"Oh,
I had a nightmare! I must have done it because I was afraid."
"What did you dream about?"
"I dreamed about a princess who was deathly sick, and
no doctor in the world could cure her."
"Well, why don't they get rid of
the white toad that's sitting under her bed?"
After saying that the devil turned to his other side and
fell asleep again. When his wife heard him snoring, she grabbed hold of a
second hair, ripped it out, and threw it under the bed. The devil jumped up.
"Hey, what are you doing? Have you gone mad? You've
been terrible ripping my hair!"
"Oh, listen my dear husband! I was standing before a
large well at a marketplace, and people were yammering because there was no
longer any water in it. They asked me if I knew if there was any way to help
them. Well, I looked down the well, but it was so deep that I became dizzy. I
wanted to stop myself, and then I got entangled in your hair."
"You should have told them that they had to pull out
the white stone lying at the bottom of the well, and now leave me in peace with
all your dreams!"
He lay down once more and soon began snoring atrociously as
before. His wife thought: "I've got to dare once more," and sure
enough, she ripped the third golden hair out and threw it down to the
woodcutter. The devil leapt into the air and wanted to teach her a nasty
lesson, but his wife calmed him down, kissed him, and said, "What horrible
dreams! A man showed me a fig tree that was wilting, and he complained that it
was no longer bearing any fruit. Then I wanted to shake the tree to see if
something would fall off it, and the next thing I knew I was shaking your
hair."
"That would have been in vain. There is a mouse
gnawing at the roots of the tree. If it's not killed, then the tree will be
lost. Once the mouse is dead, the tree will be fresh, regain its health, and
bear fresh fruit. So, now stop plaguing me with all your dreams. I want to
sleep, and if you wake me one more time, I'll give you a good slap in your
face!"
His wife was very much afraid of the devil's anger, but the
poor woodcutter had to know one more thing that only the devil knew. So the
wife pulled his nose and lifted him up into the air. The devil jumped up as
though he were out of his mind and gave her a smack in the face that resounded
all over the place. His wife began to weep and said: "Do you want me to
fall into the water and drown? The ferryman brought me across the river, and as
the barge approached the other side, it bumped into the bank, and I was afraid
that I might fall and wanted to grab hold of the anchor which was attached to a
chain. That's why I grabbed hold of your nose."
"How come you didn't pay attention?
The barge does this all the time."
"The ferryman complained to me that nobody has come to
relieve him, and there's no end to his work."
"All he has to do is get the first man who comes to
take over the ferrying from him until a third man comes who relieves him. This is
the way that he can help himself. But your dreams are really strange.
Everything you've told me about the ferryman is true, and everything else as
well. Now don't wake me again. Soon it will be morning, and I want to sleep a
little more. Otherwise, I'll make you pay if you disturb me."
After the woodcutter had heard everything and the devil was
snoring again, he thanked the devil's wife and departed. When he arrived at the
barge, the ferryman wanted some information.
"First take me across."
When the woodcutter was on the other side, he said to the
ferryman: "The next person who comes and wants to be taken across the
river, keep him there until he takes over your job and continues your work
until another man comes to relieve him."
Soon thereafter the woodcutter came to the man with the
wilted fig tree, and he said to him: "All you have to do is kill the white
mouse that's gnawing on the roots. Then your tree will bear fruit again just as
it did in the past."
"What
do you demand for a reward?" asked the man.
"I want a troop of soldiers," and no sooner did
he say this than a troop began marching behind him.
The woodcutter thought that things were going well and
arrived in the city where the well at the marketplace had run dry.
"Fetch the white stone that's lying
at the bottom of the well."
So someone climbed down and fetched the stone, and no
sooner was he above than the well was once again filled with the clearest
water.
"How
should we reward you?" the mayor asked.
"Give me a regiment of cavalry
officers."
And as the woodcutter went through the city gate, a
regiment of cavalry officers rode behind him. This was how he entered the other
city where the princess whom no doctor could cure was lying on her sick bed.
"All you have to do is kill the
white toad that's hiding beneath the princess's bed."
And when that was done, the princess began to recuperate
and became healthy and rosy.
"What
do you want for a reward?" asked the king.
"Four wagons loaded with
gold," said the woodcutter.
Finally, the woodcutter reached home, and behind him were a
troop of infantrymen, a regiment of cavalry officers, and four wagons loaded
entirely with gold. The three golden hairs of the devil, however, were carried
by himself. He ordered his regiments to wait in front of the royal gate. They
were to enter quickly if he gave them a signal from the castle. Then he went to
the father of his beloved princess and handed him the devil's three golden hairs and asked him to give him the princess for his bride in
keeping with the promise he had made. The king was astonished and said that the
woodcutter had done quite right with regard to the devil's three golden hairs.
Nevertheless, the king stated he would have to think about whether he would
give him the princess for his bride. As soon as the woodcutter heard this, he
moved to the window and whistled to his companions. All of a sudden the troops
of infantrymen and regiments of cavalry officers and four heavily loaded wagons
marched and rolled through the gate.
"My king," said the woodcutter, "take a look
at my people whom I have brought along with me, and over there is all my wealth
in those wagons full of gold. Don't you want to give me the princess?"
The
king was terrified and said: "Yes, with all my heart."
Then the woodcutter and the princess were married and lived
in bliss.
This is why whoever is not afraid of the devil can tear out
his hair and win the entire world.
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