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ONCE upon a time a king went out
hunting, and after he had been hunting in the
forest for a long time without finding anything,
he found himself suddenly in an open plain, in
which there was a huge lake, and in the midst of
the lake he saw there a bird swimming about, the
like of which he had never seen before. It was a
swan.
Drawing his bow, he wanted to shoot it. To his
surprise it spoke to him in a human voice, and
said, "Do not kill me."
So he tried his best to catch it, and succeeded.
Pleased with the capture of the bird, he carried
it home alive, and gave it to the cook to kill it
to make a meal of it for him. The cook was a
Gypsy. She whetted her knife and went to the bird
to cut its throat, when, to her astonishment, the
bird turned three somersaults, and there stood
before her a most beautiful maiden, more beautiful
than she had ever seen before. So she ran to the
king and told him what had happened.
The king, who first thought that the cook was
trying to play some trickery with him, did not
listen to her, but when she persisted in her tale,
the king, driven by curiosity, went into the
kitchen, and there he saw a girl more beautiful
than any that he had ever yet set his eyes upon.
He asked her who she was, and she said she was the
swan who was swimming on the lake, that she had
willfully gone away from her mother, who lived in
the land of fairies, and that she had left two
sisters behind. So the king took her into the
palace and married her. The Gypsy, who was a
pretty wench, had thought that the king would
marry her, and when she saw what had happened, she
was very angry. But she managed to conceal her
anger, and tried to be kind to the new queen,
biding her time all the while.
The king and queen lived on for a while in
complete happiness, and after a time a child was
born unto her.
It so happened that the king had to go on a long
journey, leaving the wife and child in the care of
the Gypsy. One day the Gypsy came to the queen,
and said to her, "Why do you always sit in the
palace? Come, let us walk a little in the garden,
to hear the birds singing, and to see the
beautiful flowers."
The queen, who had no suspicion, took the advice
of the Gypsy, and went with her for a walk into
the garden. In the middle of the garden there was
a deep well, and the Gypsy said artfully to the
young queen, "Just bend over the well, and look
into the water below, and see whether your face
has remained so beautiful as it was on the first
day when you turned into a maiden from being a
swan."
The queen bent over the well to look down into the
depths, and that was what the Gypsy was waiting
for, for no sooner did the queen bend over the
well, than, getting hold of her by her legs, she
threw her down head foremost into the well and
drowned her.
When the king came home and did not find the
queen, he asked what had happened, and where she
was. The Gypsy, who had meanwhile taken charge of
the child, and looked after it very carefully,
said to the king that the young queen, pining for
her old home, had turned again into a swan and
flown away.
The king was deeply grieved when he heard this,
but believing what the Gypsy had told him, he
thought that nothing could be done, and resigned
himself to the loss of his wife.
They Gypsy woman looked after the child with great
care, hoping thereby that she might win the king's
love, and that he would marry her. A month, a year
passed, and nothing was heard of the wife. And the
king, seeing the apparent affection of the Gypsy
for the child, decided at last to marry her, and
fixed the day of the wedding.
Out of the fountain into which the queen had been
thrown, there grew a willow tree with three
branches, one stem in the middle and two branching
out right and left. Not far from the garden there
lived a man who had a large flock of sheep. One
day he sent his boy to lead the sheep to the
field. On his way the boy passed the king's garden
with the well in the middle of it.
As the boy had left his flute at home, when he saw
the willow he thought he would cut one of the
branches and make a flute. Going into the garden,
he cut the middle stem, and made a flute of it.
When he put it to his lips, the flute by itself
began to play as follows, "O boy, do not blow too
hard, for my heart is aching for my little babe
which I left behind in the cradle, and to suckle
at the black breast of a Gypsy."
When the boy heard what the flute was playing, not
understanding what it meant, he was greatly
astonished, and ran home to tell his father what
had happened with the flute. The father, angry
that he had left the sheep alone, scolded him, and
took away the flute. Then he tried to see whether
the boy had told the truth. As soon as he put it
to his mouth the flute started playing the same
tune as when the boy had tried to play it. The
father said nothing, and wondering at the meaning
of the words he hid the flute away in a cupboard.
When the king's wedding day drew near, all the
musicians of the kingdom were invited to come and
play at the banquet. Some of them passed the old
man's house, and hearing from them that they were
going to play at the king's banquet, he remembered
the marvelous flute, and asked whether he could
not go also, as he could play the flute so
wonderfully well.
His son -- the young boy -- had meanwhile gone
into the garden in the hope of getting another
flute, as the willow had three branches. So he cut
one of the branches and made a flute of it. Now
this flute did not play at all.
When the old man came to the palace, there was
much rejoicing and singing. At last his turn came
to play. As soon as he put the flute to his lips,
the flute sang, "O man, do not blow so hard, for
my heart aches for my little babe left in the
cradle to be suckled by a black Gypsy."
The Gypsy, who was the king's bride and sat at the
head of the table, at once understood the saying
of the flute, although she did not know what the
flute had to do with the queen whom she had
killed.
The king, who marveled greatly at the flute and at
the tune which it was singing, took a gold piece
and gave it to the man for the flute, and when he
started blowing it, the flute began to sing, "O my
dear husband, do not blow so hard, for my heart
aches for our little babe whom I left in the
cradle to be sucked by the black Gypsy. Quickly,
quickly, do away with this cruel Gypsy, as
otherwise you will lose your wife."
The guests who were present marveled at the song,
and no one understood its meaning. The Gypsy,
however, who understood full well what it meant,
turning to the king, said, "Illustrious king, do
not blow this flute and make yourself ridiculous
before your guests. Throw it into the fire."
But the king, who felt offended by the words of
the Gypsy, made her take up the flute and blow.
With great difficulty she submitted to the order
of the king, and she was quite justified in
refusing to play it, for no sooner had she put the
flute to her lips when it sang, "You enemy of
mine, do not blow hard, for my heart aches for my
little babe left in the cradle to be suckled by
you, you evil-minded Gypsy. You have thrown me
into the well, and there put an end to my life,
but God had pity on me, and he has preserved me to
be again the true wife of this illustrious king."
Furious at these words, the Gypsy threw the flute
away with so much force that she thought it would
break into thousands of splinters. But it was not
to be as she thought, for by this very throw the
flute was changed into a beautiful woman, more
beautiful, indeed, than any had ever seen before.
She was the very queen whom the Gypsy had thrown
into the well.
When the king saw her, he embraced her and kissed
her, and asked her where she had been such a long
time. She told him that she had slept at the
bottom of the well, into which she had been thrown
by the Gypsy, who had hoped to become the queen,
and this would have come to pass had it not been
for the boy cutting a flute out of the stem of the
willow tree. "And now, punish the Gypsy as she
deserves, otherwise your wife must leave you."
When the king heard these words, he called the boy
and asked him whether he had cut himself a flute
from the stem of the willow tree which had grown
out of the well in the garden.
"It is so, O illustrious king," said the boy, "and
may I be forgiven for the audacity of going into
the king's garden. I went and cut for myself a
flute from the stem of the willow tree, and when I
began to blow it, it played, 'Do not blow so hard,
O boy, for my heart is aching within me,' etc."
Then he told him he had gone back to his father,
who instead of praising him for the marvelous
flute, gave him a good shaking. He had then gone a
second time into the garden, and had cut off one
of the branches to make a flute, but this did not
play like the first one. The king gave the boy a
very rich gift, and he ordered the Gypsy to be
killed.
Some time afterwards, the queen came to the king
and asked leave to go to her mother to tell her
all that had happened to her, and to say good-bye
for ever now, as she henceforth would live among
human beings. The king reluctantly gave way. She
then made three somersaults, and again became a
swan, as she had been when the king found her for
the first time on the waters of the lake.
Spreading her wings she flew far away until she
reached the house of her mother, who was quite
alone. Her two sisters were not there. They had
left her some time ago and no one knew whither
they had gone. The young queen did not go into the
house. She was probably afraid lest her mother
would not let her go back again, so she settled on
the roof, and there she sang, "Remain in health,
good mother mine, as the joy is no longer granted
you to have me with you in your house, for you
will only see me again when I lose my kingdom,
dear mother mine, not before, and not till then."
And without waiting for the answer of her mother
she returned back again to her husband. Sitting on
the window sill, she sang again, "Rise up, O
husband, open the doors, wake up the servants and
let them be a witness of my faithfulness to you,
for since I have married you I have left my
mother, and my sisters have gone away from me, and
from a swan I have become a true wife to live in
happiness with you. Henceforth I shall no longer
be a swan, but you must take care of me that I do
not go hence from you. I do not know whether my
fate will be a better one by being a queen in this
world. O sweet water, how I long to bathe in you!
And my white feathers, they will belong to my
sisters. Since I am to leave them forever, and my
mother with them, O Lord, what have I done? Shall
I be able to live upon the earth, and shall I keep
the kingdom? Thou, O Lord, O merciful, hearken
unto me and grant that this kingdom may not be in
vain." And turning again head over heals, she
became a woman as before, and entering the palace
she lived there with her husband -- the king --
and if they have not died since, they are still
alive.
Gaster, M. Rumanian Bird and Beast Stories. London: Folk-Lore Society, 1915. no. 83, pp.
249-254.
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