Thindelina, or The Three Swans
It
was once there were three sisters. The youngest was Thindelina and she bore the
brunt of her sisters' cruelty and bad temper.
She
was a lovely girl with a most pleasant disposition. She got along with
everyone. This upset her sisters, especially the oldest one, greatly.
The
oldest sister, Wrenda, thought it a great joke to scare Thindelina and make her
cry. She did it almost every day.
"Thindy!
Thindy! Carried off by the windy! Never seen again-dy!" And she laughed and
laughed at the thought of the young girl being carried away forever.
The
middle sister liked to get along with everyone, but found it trying. Because it
was important to get along with Wrenda most of all, she joined in the cruelty and
tormented her baby sister for fun.
One
day Thindelina ran way to cry by herself underneath a great oak tree in the
centre of forest. She sat down between its great gnarled roots and leaned back
against the thick rough bark of the venerable tree's trunk.
An
elf, disturbed by her crying, popped out of hole at the oak's base.
"Stop
making that infernal racket," the elf demanded. "Can't you see I need
my sleep?"
The
girl sniffed hard and rubbed her eyes. "I'm sorry. I didn't mean to harm
your sleep."
"Never
mind. Never mind." said the elf hopping about on one foot. "At least
my foot's still sleeping."
He
stopped hopping and began stomping. "Wake up. Wake up you silly
thing." And he stomped and stomped until he wore a path in the moss.
"Now
see what I've done. What I'd done do you see? A path in the moss from
disturbing my sleep."
Thindelina
rubbed her eyes some more and sniffed a few more times.
"Well,
what've you got to say for yourself? Say anything for yourself, have you?"
"No."
She didn't know what else to say. She'd already apologized. She'd learned if
you had nothing to say you should get about not saying it.
"Not
surprising. Not at all. Dull as a child we say," he glared up fixing his
gaze on her eyes.
He
threw himself on the ground in front of her. "Why do you come to my tree?
Do you want something from me?"
The
girl told the elf why she was at his tree and apologized once again for good
measure.
"That's
good. That's good. You've got some manners for a child, and a human one at
that. You've awakened most of me from a sound sleep and I'd like to get back to
it. What do you need to leave?"
She
didn't understand what the little green fellow meant and said so.
He
picked up an acorn shell and balanced it on his head.
"What
do you mean what do I mean? Are you silly as well as dull? Put an acorn on your
head. Then you'll understand."
She
did as the elf said, but the small shell got lost in her thick blond curls.
"What
to do with you? The girl can't wear an acorn shell without losing it. There's
no reasoning with you. None at all. Do you need me to give you a present so
you'll leave?"
Thindelina
felt more lost with the conversation that she'd ever felt at the cruel hands of
her sisters. She decided to not think about the question. It was too confusing.
Instead she said, "Yes."
"Now
we're going somewhere. Going somewhere finally," said the elf.
He
jumped up on one of the oak roots and shook a finger at her.
"If
you want to be happy this is what you'll do. You want to be happy do you?"
"Oh,
yes, cried the girl.
"Thank
you, said the elf. "If you are happy, then you won't be crying at my oak.
I won't have that again. Not again. Not again. I won't have you crying here
again."
"Three
swans swim on a pond. Each has black feet but only one has a black beak. Get
the shortest tail feather from the swan and put it in your hair. When a poor
boy says hello you must give it to him."
The
girl had an awful time with the directive.
She
found many ponds with swans. One pond had too many, yet another too few, and
the third pond had the right number but their beaks were black and only one had
black feet.
"This
is impossible," cried the girl.
"It's
only impossible if you let it," came a voice behind her.
She
turned to see a roan-coated fox lounging by the side of the path.
"We're
you there all along, fox?"
"You
walked right by me with out so much as a How-do-you -do," said the fox.
"I'm
sorry," said the girl. As she said it she realized she's been saying she
was sorry to every creature she'd met since she left home.
I must be the sorriest person ever, she thought.
"How
do you do?"
"Better
than you it would seem," said the fox who set about licking a paw as
though he were all alone.
"What
is so impossible?"
So
the girl told the fox what the elf had said.
"I
see," said the fox. "How does this make you happy?"
"I
don't know," admitted the girl. "The elf told me. I believed
him."
"Oh,
my dear," said the fox in his smoothest voice. "I think the elf was
trying to get rid of you. How about if I help you instead?"
"Why
should you help me?" Thindelina was surprised at her tone and wanted
immediately to apologize.
She
was about to do just that when the fox said, "Bring me a swan for my
dinner and I will grant you anything you want."
This
did not seem right to the girl. A feather was one thing. A swan could get by.
Granting a wish she hadn't even decided on wasn't worth it.
"No,"
said the girl. She was surprised by her firmness. She had never said no to
anyone even her sisters when they were cruel to her.
"Suit
yourself," said the fox who went back to licking his paw.
The
girl continued walking through the forest until she came to a small clearing
with a pond in the middle. Three swans glided over the surface of the water
barely breaking a ripple.
The
water was so clear she could see right to the bottom, and she could see they
all had black feet.
She
drew closer and closer until she was at the water's edge. The swans swam by
her. Their feathers were immaculate, their necks held high in a majestic arch,
and their eyes closed as though they were sleeping.
Of
the three only the last swan had a black beak.
"If
I can get a feather a poor boy will say 'hello,' she remembered.
She
reached out as far as she could and tried to grasped a tail feather. But it was
too far and she tumbled into the water.
The
swans flapped their wings and chattered from the commotion. The last swan dived
down toward the girl. He grabbed the arm of her dress in his beak and hauled
her to shore.
She
sputtered and panted and coughed.
"Are
you all right, child?" asked the swan. "You've taken a terrible tumble."
"Thank
you for saving me, swan."
The
other two drew closer to the shore and asked her why she'd fallen into the
pond.
The
girl was embarrassed to admit she was trying to steal a feather. She done
nothing but get into trouble since she'd run away to cry. Now she'd never get a
chance to have a poor boy say hello so she could be happy.
She
told her story and apologized over and over to the swan and thanked him again
for saving her.
"I
would give you as tail feather freely, child, but it won't do you a lick of
good. The elf was lying to you to get rid of you. Poor boys will say hello to
any they chose with no need of a feather to entice them. Is this what you
really want?"
"No,"
said the girl
"What
do you want?"
No
one had ever asked her what she wanted, not even the elf, really. She had to
think about it for a moment. But when she did her answer came right away.
"I
want to be free of my sisters torment every day."
She
told them about the threat of being carried away by the wind and how she feared
it was true. She heard it every day. Their parents did not correct her sisters
so it must be so.
The
swans turn their delicate necks away from the girl to confer in privacy.
When
they turned back the third swan said, "We will help you. Go home and wait
for us. When your sisters torment you about the wind say this: Wind, wind, sail
me away. I won't stay another day."
She
made her way home. Her parents were happy to see her at first, but they were
busy so left her in the charge of her older sisters.
No
sooner were the parents about their work when the two older girls began their
awful teasing.
Instead of crying Thumbelina stood her ground. She
looked at her sisters and then at the sky and said what the swan told her to
say.
The two sisters laughed at her, but soon three swans
appeared above them. They glided down to where the girls were standing.
The lead swan reached out a wing. He picked Thindelina
up and drew her to his side.
"You've time to say your good-byes if you
like."
But the girl remained quiet.
The swans circled around once about the two girls and
then flew away never to be seen again.
When the parents came in from their chores they asked
their daughters about Thindelina.
"Did she run off crying again?" asked their
mother.
"No," the girls said. "The wind came up
and carried her off."
"Well," said the mother. "You warned
her."
The swans carried Thindelina away to their favourite
pond deep in the forest.
She was cared for and happy all her days.
She never saw her sisters again and never once in all
her life did she fear the wind would carry her away.
10 comments:
"She'd learned if you had nothing to say you should get about not saying it." Love love love that line.
You really are good: I hadn't intended to read the story right this minute, but to load up some tabs and then go do the vacuuming. But here I am, at the bottom of the page commenting. Thank you for sharing your talent.
Mary Anne in Kentucky
Mary Anne, thank you so very much for reading me. It's quite a compliment to find you were compelled to read it right then and there.
I really quite enjoyed that.
I also like this photo with your curls showing.
Thanks, Reb.
The curls don't get out so much since I've kept my hair short.
You have the trick of making me want to be carried away by the swans.
So very kind of you to say, Messymimi.
Another excellent tale - you are planning a book of fairy tales, aren't you?
Thanks, Cousin. I'd love to do a book of faery tales.
wonderful tale-more please!
Thank you, Kathe. Tune in on Tuesday for more.
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