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The Sick Kite

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  1872

  FAIRY TALES OF HANS CHRISTIAN1 ANDERSEN

  JACK2 THE DULLARD

  AN OLD STORY TOLD ANEW

  by Hans Christian Andersen

  FAR in the interior of the country lay an old baronial hall, and

  in it lived an old proprietor3, who had two sons, which two young men

  thought themselves too clever by half. They wanted to go out and woo the King's daughter; for the maiden4 in question had publicly announced that she would choose for her husband that youth who could arrange his words best.

  So these two geniuses prepared themselves a full week for the

  wooing- this was the longest time that could be granted them; but it

  was enough, for they had had much preparatory information, and

  everybody knows how useful that is. One of them knew the whole Latin dictionary by heart, and three whole years of the daily paper of the little town into the bargain, and so well, indeed, that he could

  repeat it all either backwards5 or forwards, just as he chose. The

  other was deeply read in the corporation laws, and knew by heart

  what every corporation ought to know; and accordingly he thought he

  could talk of affairs of state, and put his spoke6 in the wheel in

  the council. And he knew one thing more: he could embroider7 suspenders with roses and other flowers, and with arabesques8, for he was a tasty, light-fingered fellow.

  "I shall win the Princess!" So cried both of them. Therefore their

  old papa gave to each of them a handsome horse. The youth who knew the dictionary and newspaper by heart had a black horse, and he who knew all about the corporation laws received a milk-white steed. Then they rubbed the corners of their mouths with fish-oil, so that they might become very smooth and glib9. All the servants stood below in the courtyard, and looked on while they mounted their horses; and just by chance the third son came up. For the proprietor had really three sons, though nobody counted the third with his brothers, because he was not so learned as they, and indeed he was generally known as "Jack the Dullard."

  "Hallo!" said Jack the Dullard, "where are you going? I declare

  you have put on your Sunday clothes!"

  "We're going to the King's court, as suitors to the King's

  daughter. Don't you know the announcement that has been made all

  through the country?" And they told him all about it.

  "My word! I'll be in it too!" cried Jack the Dullard; and his

  two brothers burst out laughing at him, and rode away.

  "Father, dear," said Jack, "I must have a horse too. I do feel

  so desperately10 inclined to marry! If she accepts me, she accepts me;

  and if she won't have me, I'll have her; but she shall be mine!"

  "Don't talk nonsense," replied the old gentleman. "You shall

  have no horse from me. You don't know how to speak- you can't

  arrange your words. Your brothers are very different fellows from

  you."

  "Well," quoth Jack the Dullard, "If I can't have a horse, I'll

  take the Billy-goat, who belongs to me, and he can carry me very

  well!"

  And so said, so done. He mounted the Billy-goat, pressed his heels

  into its sides, and galloped11 down the high street like a hurricane.

  "Hei, houp! that was a ride! Here I come!" shouted Jack the

  Dullard, and he sang till his voice echoed far and wide.

  But his brothers rode slowly on in advance of him. They spoke

  not a word, for they were thinking about the fine extempore speeches

  they would have to bring out, and these had to be cleverly prepared

  beforehand.

  "Hallo!" shouted Jack the Dullard. "Here am I! Look what I have

  found on the high road." And he showed them what it was, and it was

  a dead crow.

  "Dullard!" exclaimed the brothers, "what are you going to do

  with that?"

  "With the crow? why, I am going to give it to the Princess."

  "Yes, do so," said they; and they laughed, and rode on.

  "Hallo, here I am again! just see what I have found now: you don't

  find that on the high road every day!"

  And the brothers turned round to see what he could have found now.

  "Dullard!" they cried, "that is only an old wooden shoe, and the

  upper part is missing into the bargain; are you going to give that

  also to the Princess?"

  "Most certainly I shall," replied Jack the Dullard; and again

  the brothers laughed and rode on, and thus they got far in advance

  of him; but-

  "Hallo- hop12 rara!" and there was Jack the Dullard again. "It is

  getting better and better," he cried. "Hurrah13! it is quite famous."

  "Why, what have you found this time?" inquired the brothers.

  "Oh," said Jack the Dullard, "I can hardly tell you. How glad

  the Princess will be!"

  "Bah!" said the brothers; "that is nothing but clay out of the

  ditch."

  "Yes, certainly it is," said Jack the Dullard; "and clay of the

  finest sort. See, it is so wet, it runs through one's fingers." And he

  filled his pocket with the clay.

  But his brothers galloped on till the sparks flew, and

  consequently they arrived a full hour earlier at the town gate than

  could Jack. Now at the gate each suitor was provided with a number,

  and all were placed in rows immediately on their arrival, six in

  each row, and so closely packed together that they could not move

  their arms; and that was a prudent14 arrangement, for they would

  certainly have come to blows, had they been able, merely because one of them stood before the other.

  All the inhabitants of the country round about stood in great

  crowds around the castle, almost under the very windows, to see the

  Princess receive the suitors; and as each stepped into the hall, his

  power of speech seemed to desert him, like the light of a candle

  that is blown out. Then the Princess would say, "He is of no use! Away with him out of the hall!"

  At last the turn came for that brother who knew the dictionary

  by heart; but he did not know it now; he had absolutely forgotten it

  altogether; and the boards seemed to re-echo with his footsteps, and

  the ceiling of the hall was made of looking-glass, so that he saw

  himself standing15 on his head; and at the window stood three clerks and a head clerk, and every one of them was writing down every single word that was uttered, so that it might be printed in the newspapers, and sold for a penny at the street corners. It was a terrible ordeal16, and they had, moreover, made such a fire in the stove, that the room seemed quite red hot.

  "It is dreadfully hot here!" observed the first brother.

  "Yes," replied the Princess, "my father is going to roast young

  pullets today."

  "Baa!" there he stood like a baa-lamb. He had not been prepared

  for a speech of this kind, and had not a word to say, though he

  intended to say something witty17. "Baa!"

  "He is of no use!" said the Princess. "Away with him!"

  And he was obliged to go accordingly. And now the second brother

  came in.

  "It is terribly warm here!" he observed.

  "Yes, we're roasting pullets to-day," replied the Princess.

  "What- what were you- were you pleased to ob-" stammered18 he- and

  all the clerks wrote down, "pleased to ob-"

  "He is of no use!" said the Princess. "Away with him!"

  Now came the turn of Jack the Dullard. He rode into the hall on

  his goat.

  "Well, it's most abominably19 hot here."

  "Yes, because I'm roasting young pullets," replied the Princess.

  "Ah, that's lucky!" exclaimed Jack the Dullard, "for I suppose

  you'll let me roast my crow at the same time?"

  "With the greatest pleasure," said the Princess. "But have you

  anything you can roast it in? for I have neither pot nor pan."

  "Certainly I have!" said Jack. "Here's a cooking utensil20 with a

  tin handle."

  And he brought out the old wooden shoe, and put the crow into it.

  "Well, that is a famous dish!" said the Princess. "But what

  shall we do for sauce?"

  "Oh, I have that in my pocket," said Jack; "I have so much of it

  that I can afford to throw some away;" and he poured some of the

  clay out of his pocket.

  "I like that!" said the Princess. "You can give an answer, and you

  have something to say for yourself, and so you shall be my husband.

  But are you aware that every word we speak is being taken down, and

  will be published in the paper to-morrow? Look yonder, and you will

  see in every window three clerks and a head clerk; and the old head

  clerk is the worst of all, for he can't understand anything."

  But she only said this to frighten Jack the Dullard; and the

  clerks gave a great crow of delight, and each one spurted21 a blot22 out

  of his pen on to the floor.

  "Oh, those are the gentlemen, are they?" said Jack; "then I will

  give the best I have to the head clerk." And he turned out his

  pockets, and flung the wet clay full in the head clerk's face.

  "That was very cleverly done," observed the Princess. "I could not

  have done that; but I shall learn in time."

  And accordingly Jack the Dullard was made a king, and received a

  crown and a wife, and sat upon a throne. And this report we have wet

  from the press of the head clerk and the corporation of printers-

  but they are not to be depended upon in the least.

  THE END

  LastIndexNext

  Written By Anderson

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