THIS is one of the stories which that
good soul, my uncle's grandmother (whom Heaven take to glory), used
to tell; and, unless I have put on my spectacles upside down, I fancy
it will give you pleasure.
THERE was, once upon a time, a
woman named Pascadozzia, and one day, when she was standing at her
window, which looked into the garden of an ogress, she saw such a
fine bed of parsley that she almost fainted away with desire for some.
So when the ogress went out she could not restrain herself any longer,
but plucked a handful of it. The ogress came home and was going to
cook her pottage when she found that some one had been stealing the
parsley, and said, "Ill luck to me, but I'll catch this long-fingered
rogue and make him repent it; I'll teach him to his cost that every
one should eat off his own platter and not meddle with other folks'
cups."
The poor woman went again and again
down into the garden, until one morning the ogress met her, and in
a furious rage exclaimed, "Have I caught you at last, you thief,
you rogue; prithee, do you pay the rent of the garden that you come
in this impudent way and steal my plants? By my faith, I'll make you
do penance without sending you to Rome."
Poor Pascadozzia, in a terrible fright,
began to make excuses, saying that neither from gluttony nor the craving
of hunger had she been tempted by the devil to commit this fault,
but from her fear lest her child should be born with a crop of parsley
on its face.
"Words are but wind," answered
the ogress, "I am not to be caught with such prattle; you have
closed the balance-sheet of life, unless you promise to give me the
child, girl or boy, whichever it maybe."
The poor woman, in order to escape the
peril in which she found herself, swore, with one hand upon the other,
to keep the promise, and so the ogress let her go free. But when the
baby came it was a little girl, so beautiful that she was a joy to
look upon, who was named Parsley. The little girl grew from day to
day until, when she was seven years old, her mother sent her to school,
and every time she went along the street and met the ogress the old
woman said to her, "Tell your mother to remember her promise."
And she went on repeating this message so often that the poor mother,
having no longer patience to listen to the refrain, said one day to
Parsley, "If you meet the old woman as usual, and she reminds
you of the hateful promise, answer her, 'Take it.'"
When Parsley, who dreamt of no ill,
met the ogress again, and heard her repeat the same words, she answered
innocently as her mother had told her, whereupon the ogress, seizing
her by her hair, carried her off to a wood which the horses of the
Sun never entered, not having paid the toll to the pastures of those
Shades.Then she put the poor girl into a tower which she caused to
arise by her art, having neither gate nor ladder, but only a little
window through which she ascended and descended by means of Parsley's
hair, which was very long, just as sailors climb up and down the mast
of a ship.
Now it happened one day, when the ogress
had left the tower, that Parsley put her head out of the little window
and let loose her tresses in the sun, and the son of a Prince passing
by saw those two golden banners which invited all souls to enlist
under the standard of Beauty, and, beholding with amazement, in the
midst of those gleaming waves, a face that enchanted all hearts, he
fell desperately in love with such wonderful beauty; and, sending
her a memorial of sighs, she decreed to receive him into favor. She
told him her troubles, and implored him to rescue her. But a gossip
of the ogress, who was for ever prying into things that did not concern
her, and poking her nose into every corner, overheard the secret,
and told the wicked woman to be on the lookout, for Parsley had been
seen talking with a certain youth, and she had her suspicions.
The ogress thanked the gossip for the
information, and said that she would take good care to stop up the
road. As to Parsley, it was, moreover, impossible for her to escape,
as she had laid a spell upon her, so that unless she had in her hand
the three gall-nuts which were in a rafter in the kitchen it would
be labium lost to attempt to get away.
Whilst they were thus talking together,
Parsley, who stood with her ears wide open and had some suspicion
of the gossip, overheard all that had passed. And when Night had spread
out her black garments to keep them from the moth, and the Prince
had come as they had appointed, she let fall her hair; he seized it
with both hands, and cried, "Draw up." When he was drawn
up she made him first climb on to the rafters and find the gall-nuts,
knowing well what effect they would have, as she had been enchanted
by the ogress. Then, having made a rope-ladder, they both descended
to the ground, took to their heels, and ran off towards the city.
But the gossip, happening to see them come out, set up a loud "Halloo,"
and began to shout and make such a noise that the ogress awoke, and,
seeing that Parsley had run away, she descended by the same ladder,
which was still fastened to the window, and set off after the couple,
who, when they saw her coming at their heels faster than a horse let
loose, gave themselves up for lost.
But Parsley, recollecting the gall-nuts,
quickly threw one of the ground, and lo, instantly a Corsican bulldog
started up--O, mother, such a terrible beast!--which, with open jaws
and barking loud, flew at the ogress as if to swallow her at a mouthful.
But the old woman, who was more cunning and spiteful than ever, put
her hand into her pocket, and pulling out a piece of bread gave it
to the dog, which made him hang his tail and allay his fury.
Then she turned to run after the fugitives
again, but Parsley, seeing her approach, threw the second gall-nut
on the ground, and lo, a fierce lion arose, who, lashing the earth
with his tail, and shaking his mane and opening wide his jaws a yard
apart, was just preparing to make a slaughter of the ogress, when,
turning quickly back, she stripped the skin off an ass which was grazing
in the middle of a meadow and ran at the lion, who, fancying it a
real jackass, was so frightened that he bounded away as fast as he
could.
The ogress having leaped over this second
ditch turned again to pursue the poor lovers, who, hearing the clatter
of her heels, and seeing clouds of dust that rose up to the sky, knew
that she was coming again. But the old woman, who was every moment
in dread lest the lion should pursue her, had not taken off the ass's
skin, and when Parsley now threw down the third gall-nut there sprang
up a wolf, who, without giving the ogress time to play any new trick,
gobbled her up just as she was in the shape of a jackass.
So Parsley and the Prince, now freed
from danger, went their way leisurely and quietly to the Prince's
kingdom, where, with his father's free consent, they were married.
Thus, after all these storms of fate, they experienced the truth that--
"One hour in port, the sailor,
freed from fears,
Forgets the tempests of a hundred years."
The next story in Il
Pentamerone is The Three Sisters.