The Greyhound and the Green Girl
There was once a King in the Highlands who had a quarrel with a wizard. Now
wizards are uncanny people to quarrel with, and if the Queen been alive she
would no doubt have persuaded the King to " let sleeping dogs lie," as they
say. Instead of which the King called the wizard a scoundrel and declared
that he would be revenged on him.
How it happened we do not know---whether the wizard killed the King or
whether he only willed his death---but the King died very suddenly, leaving
his son Fergus and his daughter Fiona alone. They had a big old castle, but
not much money---for the King was poor, as kings go; and they had few
friends, and no servants---so they felt very desolate indeed.
The wizard came to see them, and he said pityingly: "Poor young things!
Although your father, the King, quarrelled with me, I should like to be your
friend," and Fiona was grateful for his kindness.
But Fergus distrusted the wizard, and felt sure that he only wanted to get
possession of the golden sceptre and the inlaid sword that were the dead
King's greatest treasures. So he stole out in the night, carrying the sword
and the sceptre. He made for Beinn Ghloine, the nearest mountain, which was
a very difficult hill to climb, because at all times of the year it had a
glassy surface like ice.
But Fergus knew it well, and he soon reached the cairn on the top. He pulled
the cairn down, stone by stone, placed the sceptre and the sword at its
base, and rebuilt it. And then, tired out with all his exertion, he lay down
and fell asleep.
The wizard, meanwhile, had wakened, and finding Fergus' bed empty, he
thought:
"What can that lad be doing at this time of night? I must go after him and
find out."
He traced Fergus by his footprints on the dewy grass right to the foot of
Beinn Ghloine, which he proceeded to climb. He took a very long time to
reach the mountaintop, but when he got up, there was Fergus, lying sound
asleep, and at his mercy.
"Aha! I have you now! " he snarled, and he began to chant a horrid spell, as
he made some waving motions over the sleeping boy.
And poor Fergus woke to find that the wizard had turned him into a
greyhound, and in that form he had to retrace his way down the
mountain-side.
The wizard now turned his attention to Fiona, who was a very pretty girl
with a skin like milk and roses. He did not change her form, but he changed
her colour to grass green, and he roared with laughter when he saw the
result.
"Look you!" he said to the brother and sister. "Look at the bonny pair of
you now! You will never become as you were, unless and until---and indeed it
is not very likely to happen---you, Fergus, can find a beautiful girl who
will of her own free will marry a greyhound! And until you, Fiona, have
nursed three children of a King's son, and got a kiss from a King's lips.
Until that happens, the bones of your father must lie unburied ! "
Time went on, and the King of a far-away region of the Highlands set out
with his followers to make war on a neighboring King. They were marching
among the hills when a great mist came down and veiled the mountains, so
that they could not tell in what direction the were going at all. One
wandered here to seek the road, and another wandered there; and although the
King kept calling to them to keep together, they soon got separated.
The first time he called, three hundred voices answered him. The second
time, only thirty replied; then only three; and at last, none at all ! So
there he was---a King without a single follower, and he not even knowing
where his kingdom lay! He wandered up and down, and at last he came to the
Castle where the greyhound and the green girl lived.
They gave him food and a bed, and the tired King slept for many hours. Next
day, when he was looking about the Castle grounds, he saw some bones lying
in a corner and he began to kick them idly. To his surprise the greyhound
sprang at him angrily, and, finding his tongue, he said to the King: "Touch
not the bones of my father!"
"But why do you not bury your father's bones?" asked the astonished King.
"Alas! there is a spell upon me," said the greyhound, "and I may not bury
the bones until some girl will, of her own free will, marry me as I am. Look
at me and tell me if that is likely to happen!"
"Well," said the King, "I have three daughters who are all beautiful. When I
go back to my kingdom I will try to convince one of them to come here and
break the spell by marrying you. Shall I go and fetch one of them now?"
"No, no!" said the greyhound. "We might never set eyes on you again! I'll
tell you what---I shall keep you here as a hostage and send a message to
your daughters to come and free you. My sister will put on her shoes that
run by themselves where they are bidden, and she will soon bring them to
you!"
So the green girl put on the shoes that run by themselves and, covering her
face with a veil, she set out for the far-away kingdom. And, in response to
the King's urgent message, his three daughters returned with the green girl.
When he told them why he had sent for them the two eldest were very
indignant. "Really, father! You must be in your dotage to imagine that one
of us would consent to marry a greyhound!" they said. "In any case, you have
only his word that marriage would restore him to human form---and besides
which he is nothing to us."
But the youngest daughter, who loved her father dearly, said she would
remain at the Castle as a hostage until the end of the year, when surely one
of her sisters would be willing to take her place. So she stayed on, and she
and the green girl slept in the same room, guarded every night by the
greyhound.
When the King returned at the end of the year he was alone, and the youngest
daughter said: "Why have you not brought one of my sisters to take my
place?"
"Because they both refused to accompany me," the King answered.
And the youngest daughter said bravely: "Well, father, I might be worse off
than I am. The green girl is certainly ugly, but she cannot help it; and she
and the greyhound have both been very kind to me. So, my dear father, for
your sake I will marry the greyhound and you can return to your kingdom."
The green girl joyfully fetched a priest, and while the marriage ceremony
was going on the youngest daughter stood with her eyes closed, that she
might not see her strange bridegroom. And when she heard him say, " Look at
me, my little wife," it was an effort for her to open them. But they opened
very wide indeed, for there stood before her the handsomest young man she
had ever seen! Her consent to marry him had restored his own shape to the
greyhound, who was once more Fergus, the King's son, and the bride was now
full of happiness.
Fergus went and fetched two treasures to show to his father-in-law---the
golden sceptre and the inlaid sword that he had buried under the cairn on
Beinn Ghloine. And he was thankful that he could now bury his father's
bones.
When the King returned, well pleased, to his kingdom and told his elder
daughters how happy their sister was, they were full of envy. One of them
said spitefully:"Well, she may have got her Prince, but it will be very
unpleasant to have to live with a grass-green sister-in-law! "
But the King told them that the green girl was no longer in the Castle, for
she had gone to live at the foot of Beinn Ghloine.
The two jealous sisters made a wicked plan---that, if a child should come to
their sister, one of them would steal it away from her. And sure enough,
when a babe was born to Fergus and his wife, the eldest sister came secretly
to the Castle and stole to the room where the baby was. She opened the door
stealthily, and was creeping up to the cradle in which it lay, when a green
hand came in at the window and lifted out the child before she could reach
it. So the eldest sister had to return home and confess that her plot had
failed.
The same thing happened in the case of two other babes, the green girl
rescuing them from the envious sisters just in time; and with the rescue of
the third babe half the spell that the wizard had put upon Fiona was broken,
because now she had nursed three babes of a King's son.
She gave back the children to the young couple, who were frantic with joy at
their recovery, and when they heard the story the youngest sister said: "Our
father must be told what my sisters have done," and she asked the green girl
to carry a message to the King, asking him to return with her.
So Fiona once more put on the shoes that run by themselves and went off to
fetch the King.
When they were nearing the Castle the King said to Fiona: "A heaviness has
come over me. I must lie down and sleep for a while." And he lay down at the
foot of Beinn Ghloine and went off to sleep.
Scarcely had his eyes closed when a gentle voice from the top of the
mountain said:
"Fiona, I have long watched for a chance to help you, and now it has come !
I am the fairy of the mist that hovers round Beinn Ghloine, and if you will
climb the mountain I will give you a cup of wine distilled from mist, which
is one of the things that the wizard has no control over. Then, if you can
get back to the King and make him drink the wine on his awaking, the
wizard's spell may be broken. You must also get the King to give you a kiss
before you can regain your old form, but that you can manage for yourself!"
Fiona, of course, began to climb Beinn Ghloine at once, and though she often
slid back she reached the top at last; and there, in the mist that hovers
around the mountain-top, stood a cup of golden wine.
She looked about for the fairy, but a voice said: "You need not look for me,
Fiona. I am an invisible fairy, the spirit of the mist. So take the cup and
return as fast as possible, for I think the King is about to waken."
And the green girl, holding the cup with its precious contents very
carefully, slid down the mountain-side and reached the King just as his
eyelids began to flicker.
"Oh dear! I am so thirsty!" he murmured.
"Then drink, sire!" said the green girl tremulously as she held out the cup
of wine. He drank it, and lying back with closed eyes, he said:
"If only you were not green, I should give you a kiss for that delicious
wine. It has made me feel quite young again!
"You could kiss me without looking at me," said poor Fiona, terrified that
the fairy's plans would not succeed.
"So I could and so I will," said the King, "for something in the wine told
me to."
Closing his eyes he drew Fiona to him and kissed her lips; and when he
opened his eyes, expecting to see the green girl, what was his amazement to
see instead a lovely blushing creature with a skin of milk and roses!
"Where is the green girl ? " he asked, looking about him.
"I am she," said the happy Fiona. " I am free now from the spell that the
wizard cast over me, for I have nursed the three babes of a King's son, and
I have received a kiss from a King's lips!"
"Fiona," said the King wistfully, "if I were not too old for you, I should
like to make you my Queen, for I love you!"
"But, sire," said Fiona shyly, "you look every bit as young as my brother,
Fergus."
And a voice said from the mist that hovered round Beinn Ghloine:
"Take your bride, O King, for I have lifted half your years from you that
you may make Fiona happy. The wizard can never again harm her, for both of
his spells have been broken. And from now onwards the fairy of the mist that
hovers round Beinn Ghloine will make life golden for the girl with the skin
of milk and roses that was known as The Green Girl."
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