| There was once upon a time an old king who was ill and thought to | |
| himself 'I am lying on what must be my deathbed.' Then said he 'tell | |
| faithful John to come to me.' Faithful John was his favorite servant, | |
| and was so called, because he had for his whole life long been so | |
| true to him. When therefore he came beside the bed, the king said to | |
| him 'most faithful John, I feel my end approaching, and have no | |
| anxiety except about my son. He is still of tender age, and cannot | |
| always know how to guide himself. If you do not promise me to teach | |
| him everything that he ought to know, and to be his foster-father, I | |
| cannot close my eyes in peace.' Then answered faithful John 'I will | |
| not forsake him, and will serve him with fidelity, even if it should | |
| cost me my life.' At this, the old king said 'now I die in comfort | |
| and peace.' Then he added 'after my death, you shall show him the | |
| whole castle - all the chambers, halls, and vaults, and all the | |
| treasures which lie therein, but the last chamber in the long | |
| gallery, in which is the picture of the princess of the golden | |
| dwelling, shall you not show. If he sees that picture, he will fall | |
| violently in love with her, and will drop down in a swoon, and go | |
| through great danger for her sake, therefore you must protect him | |
| from that.' And when faithful John had once more given his promise to | |
| the old king about this, the king said no more, but laid his head on | |
| his pillow, and died. | |
| When the old king had been carried to his grave, faithful John told | |
| the young king all that he had promised his father on his deathbed, | |
| and said 'this will I assuredly keep, and will be faithful to you as | |
| I have been faithful to him, even if it should cost me my life.' When | |
| the mourning was over, faithful John said to him 'it is now time that | |
| you should see your inheritance. I will show you your father's | |
| palace.' Then he took him about everywhere, up and down, and let him | |
| see all the riches, and the magnificent apartments, only there was | |
| one room which he did not open, that in which hung the dangerous | |
| picture. The picture, however, was so placed that when the door was | |
| opened you looked straight on it, and it was so admirably painted | |
| that it seemed to breathe and live, and there was nothing more | |
| charming or more beautiful in the whole world. The young king | |
| noticed, however, that faithful John always walked past this one | |
| door, and said 'why do you never open this one for me.' 'There is | |
| something within it, he replied, 'which would terrify you.' But the | |
| king answered 'I have seen all the palace, and I want to know what is | |
| in this room also, and he went and tried to break open the door by | |
| force. Then faithful John held him back and said 'I promised your | |
| father before his death that you should not see that which is in this | |
| chamber, it might bring the greatest misfortune on you and on me.' | |
| 'Ah, no, replied the young king, 'if I do not go in, it will be my | |
| certain destruction. I should have no rest day or night until I had | |
| seen it with my own eyes. I shall not leave the place now until you | |
| have unlocked the door.' | |
| Then faithful John saw that there was no help for it now, and with a | |
| heavy heart and many sighs, sought out the key from the great bunch. | |
| When he opened the door, he went in first, and thought by standing | |
| before him he could hide the portrait so that the king should not see | |
| it in front of him. But what good was this. The king stood on | |
| tip-toe and saw it over his shoulder. And when he saw the portrait | |
| of the maiden, which was so magnificent and shone with gold and | |
| precious stones, he fell fainting to the ground. Faithful John took | |
| him up, carried him to his bed, and sorrowfully thought 'the | |
| misfortune has befallen us, Lord God, what will be the end of it.' | |
| Then he strengthened him with wine, until he came to himself again. | |
| The first words the king said were 'ah, the beautiful portrait. | |
| Whose it it.' 'That is the princess of the golden dwelling, answered | |
| faithful John. Then the king continued 'my love for her is so great, | |
| that if all the leaves on all the trees were tongues, they could not | |
| declare it. I will give my life to win her. You are my most | |
| faithful John, you must help me. | |
| The faithful servant considered within himself for a long time how to | |
| set about the matter, for it was difficult even to obtain a sight of | |
| the king's daughter. At length he thought of a way, and said to the | |
| king 'everything which she has about her is of gold - tables, chairs, | |
| dishes, glasses, bowls, and household furniture. Among your | |
| treasures are five tons of gold, let one of the goldsmiths of the | |
| kingdom fashion these into all manner of vessels and utensils, into | |
| all kinds of birds, wild beasts and strange animals, such as may | |
| please her, and we will go there with them and try our luck.' | |
| The king ordered all the goldsmiths to be brought to him, and they | |
| had to work night and day until at last the most splendid things were | |
| prepared. When everything was stowed on board a ship, faithful John | |
| put on the dress of a merchant, and the king was forced to do the | |
| same in order to make himself quite unrecognizable. Then they sailed | |
| across the sea, and sailed on until they came to the town wherein | |
| dwelt the princess of the golden dwelling. | |
| Faithful John bade the king stay behind on the ship, and wait for | |
| him. 'Perhaps I shall bring the princess with me, said he, | |
| 'therefore see that everything is in order, have the golden vessels | |
| set out and the whole ship decorated.' Then he gathered together in | |
| his apron all kinds of golden things, went on shore and walked | |
| straight to the royal palace. When he entered the courtyard of the | |
| palace, a beautiful girl was standing there by the well with two | |
| golden buckets in her hand, drawing water with them. And when she | |
| was just turning round to carry away the sparkling water she saw the | |
| stranger, and asked who he was. So he answered 'I am a merchant, and | |
| opened his apron, and let her look in. Then she cried 'oh, what | |
| beautiful golden things.' And put her pails down and looked at the | |
| golden wares one after the other. Then said the girl 'the princess | |
| must see these, she has such great pleasure in golden things, that | |
| she will buy all you have.' She took him by the hand and led him | |
| upstairs, for she was the waiting-maid. When the king's daughter saw | |
| the wares, she was quite delighted and said 'they are so beautifully | |
| worked, that I will buy them all from you.' But faithful John said 'I | |
| am only the servant of a rich merchant. The things I have here are | |
| not to be compared with those my master has in his ship. They are | |
| the most beautiful and valuable things that have ever been made in | |
| gold.' When she wanted to have everything brought up to her, he said | |
| 'there are so many of them that it would take a great many days to do | |
| that, and so many rooms would be required to exhibit them, that your | |
| house is not big enough.' Then her curiosity and longing were still | |
| more excited, until at last she said 'conduct me to the ship, I will | |
| go there myself, and behold the treasures of your master.' At this | |
| faithful John was quite delighted, and led her to the ship, and when | |
| the king saw her, he perceived that her beauty was even greater than | |
| the picture had represented it to be, and thought no other than that | |
| his heart would burst in twain. Then she boarded the ship, and the | |
| king led her within. Faithful John, however, remained with the | |
| helmsman, and ordered the ship to be pushed off, saying 'set all | |
| sail, till it fly like a bird in the air.' Within, the king showed | |
| her the golden vessels, every one of them, also the wild beasts and | |
| strange animals. Many hours went by whilst she was seeing | |
| everything, and in her delight she did not observe that the ship was | |
| sailing away. After she had looked at the last, she thanked the | |
| merchant and wanted to go home, but when she came to the side of the | |
| ship, she saw that it was on the high seas far from land, and | |
| hurrying onwards with all sail set. 'Ah, cried she in her alarm, 'I | |
| am betrayed. I am carried away and have fallen into the power of a | |
| merchant - I would rather die.' The king, however, seized her hand, | |
| and said 'I am not a merchant. I am a king, and of no meaner origin | |
| than you are, and if I have carried you away with subtlety, that has | |
| come to pass because of my exceeding great love for you. The first | |
| time that I looked on your portrait, I fell fainting to the ground.' | |
| When the princess of the golden dwelling heard this, she was | |
| comforted, and her heart was drawn to him, so that she willingly | |
| consented to be his wife. It so happened, while they were sailing | |
| onwards over the deep sea, that faithful John, who was sitting on the | |
| fore part of the vessel, making music, saw three ravens in the air, | |
| which came flying towards them. At this he stopped playing and | |
| listened to what they were saying to each other, for that he well | |
| understood. One cried 'oh, there he is carrying home the princess of | |
| the golden dwelling.' 'Yes, replied the second, 'but he has not got | |
| her yet.' Said the third 'but he has got her, she is sitting beside | |
| him in the ship.' Then the first began again, and cried 'what good | |
| will that do him. When they reach land a chestnut horse will leap | |
| forward to meet him, and the prince will want to mount it, but if he | |
| does that, it will run away with him, and rise up into the air, and | |
| he will never see his maiden more.' Spoke the second 'but is there no | |
| escape.' 'Oh, yes, if someone else mounts it swiftly, and takes out | |
| the pistol which he will find in its holster, and shoots the horse | |
| dead, the young king is saved. But who knows that. And whosoever | |
| does know it, and tells it to him, will be turned to stone from the | |
| toe to the knee.' Then said the second 'I know more than that, even | |
| if the horse be killed, the young king will still not keep his bride. | |
| When they go into the castle together, a wrought bridal garment will | |
| be lying there in a dish, and looking as if it were woven of gold and | |
| silver, it is, however, nothing but sulphur and pitch, and if he put | |
| it on, it will burn him to the very bone and marrow.' Said the third | |
| 'is there no escape at all.' 'Oh, yes, replied the second, 'if any | |
| one with gloves on seizes the garment and throws it into the fire and | |
| burns it, the young king will be saved. But what good will that do. | |
| Whosoever knows it and tells it to him, half his body will become | |
| stone from the knee to the heart.' Then said the third 'I know still | |
| more, even if the bridal garment be burnt, the young king will still | |
| not have his bride. After the wedding, when the dancing begins and | |
| the young queen is dancing, she will suddenly turn pale and fall down | |
| as if dead, and if some one does not lift her up and draw three drops | |
| of blood from her right breast and spit them out again, she will die. | |
| But if any one who knows that were to declare it, he would become | |
| stone from the crown of his head to the sole of his foot.' When the | |
| ravens had spoken of this together, they flew onwards, and faithful | |
| John had well understood everything, but from that time forth he | |
| became quiet and sad, for if he concealed what he had heard from his | |
| master, the latter would be unfortunate, and if he disclosed it to | |
| him, he himself must sacrifice his life. At length, however, he said | |
| to himself 'I will save my master, even if it bring destruction on | |
| myself.' When therefore they came to shore, all happened as had been | |
| foretold by the ravens, and a magnificent chestnut horse sprang | |
| forward. 'Good, said the king, 'he shall carry me to my palace, | |
| and was about to mount it when faithful John got before him, jumped | |
| quickly on it, drew the pistol out of the holster, and shot the | |
| horse. Then the other attendants of the king, who were not very fond | |
| of faithful John, cried 'how shameful to kill the beautiful animal, | |
| that was to have carried the king to his palace.' But the king said | |
| 'hold your peace and leave him alone, he is my most faithful John. | |
| Who knows what good may come of this.' They went into the palace, and | |
| in the hall there stood a dish, and therein lay the bridal garment | |
| looking no otherwise than as if it were made of gold and silver. The | |
| young king went towards it and was about to take hold of it, but | |
| faithful John pushed him away, seized it with gloves on, carried it | |
| quickly to the fire and burnt it. The other attendants again began | |
| to murmur, and said 'behold, now he is even burning the king's bridal | |
| garment.' But the young king said 'who knows what good he may have | |
| done, leave him alone, he is my most faithful John.' And now the | |
| wedding was solemnized - the dance began, and the bride also took | |
| part in it, then faithful John was watchful and looked into her face, | |
| and suddenly she turned pale and fell to the ground as if she were | |
| dead. On this he ran hastily to her, lifted her up and bore her into | |
| a chamber - then he laid her down, and knelt and sucked the three | |
| drops of blood from her right breast, and spat them out. Immediately | |
| she breathed again and recovered herself, but the young king had seen | |
| this, and being ignorant why faithful John had done it, was angry and | |
| cried 'throw him into a dungeon.' Next morning faithful John was | |
| condemned, and led to the gallows, and when he stood on high, and was | |
| about to be executed, he said 'every one who has to die is permitted | |
| before his end to make one last speech, may I too claim the right.' | |
| 'Yes, answered the king, 'it shall be granted unto you.' Then said | |
| faithful John 'I am unjustly condemned, and have always been true to | |
| you, and he related how he had hearkened to the conversation of the | |
| ravens when on the sea, and how he had been obliged to do all these | |
| things in order to save his master. Then cried the king 'oh, my most | |
| faithful John. Pardon, pardon - bring him down.' But as faithful | |
| John spoke the last word he had fallen down lifeless and become a | |
| stone. | |
| Thereupon the king and the queen suffered great anguish, and the king | |
| said 'ah, how ill I have requited great fidelity.' And ordered the | |
| stone figure to be taken up and placed in his bedroom beside his bed. | |
| And as often as he looked on it he wept and said 'ah, if I could | |
| bring you to life again, my most faithful John.' | |
| Some time passed and the queen bore twins, two sons who grew fast and | |
| were her delight. Once when the queen was at church and the father | |
| was sitting with his two children playing beside him, he looked at | |
| the stone figure again, sighed, and full of grief he said 'ah, if I | |
| could but bring you to life again, my most faithful John.' Then the | |
| stone began to speak and said 'you can bring me to life again if you | |
| will use for that purpose what is dearest to you.' Then cried the | |
| king 'I will give everything I have in the world for you.' The stone | |
| continued 'if you will cut off the heads of your two children with | |
| your own hand, and sprinkle me with their blood, I shall be restored | |
| to life.' | |
| The king was terrified when he heard that he himself must kill his | |
| dearest children, but he thought of faithful John's great fidelity, | |
| and how he had died for him, drew his sword, and with his own hand | |
| cut off the children's heads. And when he had smeared the stone with | |
| their blood, life returned to it, and faithful John stood once more | |
| safe and healthy before him. He said to the king 'your truth shall | |
| not go unrewarded, and took the heads of the children, put them on | |
| again, and rubbed the wounds with their blood, at which they became | |
| whole again immediately, and jumped about, and went on playing as if | |
| nothing had happened. Then the king was full of joy, and when he saw | |
| the queen coming he hid faithful John and the two children in a great | |
| cupboard. When she entered, he said to her 'have you been praying in | |
| the church.' 'Yes, answered she, 'but I have constantly been thinking | |
| of faithful John and what misfortune has befallen him through us.' | |
| Then said he 'dear wife, we can give him his life again, but it will | |
| cost us our two little sons, whom we must sacrifice.' The queen | |
| turned pale, and her heart was full of terror, but she said 'we owe | |
| it to him, for his great fidelity.' Then the king was rejoiced that | |
| she thought as he had thought, and went and opened the cupboard, and | |
| brought forth faithful John and the children, and said 'God be | |
| praised, he is delivered, and we have our little sons again also, | |
| and told her how everything had occurred. Then they dwelt together | |
| in much happiness until their death. | |