The Bird 'Grip'

The Bird 'Grip'

The Bird 'Grip' is a Swedish fairy tale. Andrew Lang included it "The Pink Fairy Book". It is Aarne-Thompson type 550, the quest for the golden bird/firebird.

ynopsis

A king lost his sight. An old woman said that the song of the bird Grip would restore it. The king's eldest son offered to bring it, from where it was kept in a cage by another king, but on the way, he stayed at a merry inn, where he enjoyed himself so much that he forgot his journey. His two brothers followed; the second also stayed, but the youngest said that he had to fetch the bird Grip and went on.

He stayed at a house in the woods and heard shrieks in the night. He asked after them. A girl told that they came from a dead man, whom the innkeeper had killed for not being able to pay, and whom he refused to bury without the money for the funeral, and beat every night. The prince paid, but was afraid to stay longer, so he asked the girl to help him escape in the night. She told him the host kept the key to the stables under his pillow, but she would help him if he would take her with him. He did so, and got her a place at a good inn before he went on.

He met a fox, which told him it could help him. When they got to the castle where the bird was, it gave him three grains: one for the guardroom, one for the room with the cage, one for the cage itself. Then he could take the bird, but he must not stroke it. He obeyed with the grains, but stroke the bird, and it woke and screamed. He was captured. In prison, the fox appeared and told him to answer Yes to everything at the trial. He was asked whether he was a master thief and answered yes. The king offered to pardon him if he carried off the world's most beautiful princess, from the next kingdom.

The fox gave him three grains again, for the guardroom, the princess's chamber, and her bed, and warned him not to kiss the princess, but he failed again at the kiss. Again at the trial, was asked whether he was a master thief and answered yes. The king offered to pardon him if he carried off the horse with the four golden shoes, from the next kingdom.

The fox gave him three grains again, for the guardroom, the stable, and the horse's stall, and warned him against the golden saddle, and that this time, he could not help him. He reached for it, but something struck his arm, and he led out the horse without it. He confessed to the fox, who said that it had been he who struck his arm. Returning to the princess's castle, he confessed that he would gladly take her to his father's castle on the horse, and so the fox gave him the grains again, and this time he carried the princess off. He asked the fox if he could try the bird again, and this time, he succeeded.

The fox warned him against ransoming anyone with the money. The prince rode on and discovered that his brothers had gone into debt at the inn and were to be hanged. He paid off the debt. His brothers, jealous, threw him into a den of lions and took the bird, the horse, and the princess, threatening to kill her if she did not say they had won them. They told their father that their youngest had been hanged for debt. But the bird did not sing, the horse would let no one in the stall, and the princess wept unceasingly.

In the lions' den, the prince found the fox; the lions did not harm him, and the fox led him out, saying only that sons that would forget their father would also betray their brother. The fox asked him to cut off his head. The prince tried to refuse, but the fox insisted that he would kill the prince if he did not. The prince did, and the fox told him that he was the dead man whose debts he had paid.

The prince disguised himself as a horse-shoer and went to the castle. He put shoes on the horse with four golden shoes, and hearing the bird Grip would not sing, declared that it lacked something and if he could see it, he could learn what it was. He called the bird by name. It began to sing, and the princess, to smile. The king's sight recovered, and he recognized the horse-shoer as his youngest son. He banished the older sons, but the youngest married the princess and lived happily ever after.

ee also

*The Greek Princess and the Young Gardener
*The Water of Life
*The Bold Knight, the Apples of Youth, and the Water of Life
*The Golden Mermaid
*Laughing Eye and Weeping Eye
*How Ian Direach got the Blue Falcon
*The Golden Bird
*The Little Green Frog

*The Brown Bear of the Green Glen
*The Story of Bensurdatu

*Fair Brow

External links

* [http://www.mythfolklore.net/andrewlang/412.htm "The Bird Grip"]


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