Mighty Mikko: A Book of Finnish Fairy Tales and Folk Tales. Fillmore Parker

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Mighty Mikko: A Book of Finnish Fairy Tales and Folk Tales - Fillmore Parker


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day,” the Fox said politely. “Whose men are you?”

      “Our master is known as the Worm,” the woodsmen told him.

      “My poor, poor lads!” the Fox said, shaking his head sadly.

      “What’s the matter?” the woodsmen asked.

      For a few moments the Fox pretended to be too overcome with emotion to speak. Then he said:

      “My poor lads, don’t you know that the King is coming with a great force to destroy the Worm and all his people?”

      The woodsmen were simple fellows and this news threw them into great consternation.

      “Is there no way for us to escape?” they asked.

      The Fox put his paw to his head and thought.

      “Well,” he said at last, “there is one way you might escape and that is by telling every one who asks you that you are the Mighty Mikko’s men. But if you value your lives never again say that your master is the Worm.”

      “We are Mighty Mikko’s men!” the woodsmen at once began repeating over and over. “We are Mighty Mikko’s men!”

      A little farther on the road the Fox met twenty grooms, dressed in the same blue smocks, who were tending a hundred beautiful horses. The Fox talked to the twenty grooms as he had talked to the woodsmen and before he left them they, too, were shouting:

      “We are Mighty Mikko’s men!”

      Next the Fox came to a huge flock of a thousand sheep tended by thirty shepherds all dressed in the Worm’s blue smocks. He stopped and talked to them until he had them roaring out:

      “We are Mighty Mikko’s men!”

      Then the Fox trotted on until he reached the castle of the Worm. He found the Worm himself inside lolling lazily about. He was a huge dragon and had been a great warrior in his day. In fact his castle and his lands and his servants and his possessions had all been won in battle. But now for many years no one had cared to fight him and he had grown fat and lazy.

      “Good day,” the Fox said, pretending to be very breathless and frightened. “You’re the Worm, aren’t you?”

      “Yes,” the dragon said, boastfully, “I am the great Worm!”

      The Fox pretended to grow more agitated.

      “My poor fellow, I am sorry for you! But of course none of us can expect to live forever. Well, I must hurry along. I thought I would just stop and say good-by.”

      Made uneasy by the Fox’s words, the Worm cried out:

      “Wait just a minute! What’s the matter?”

      The Fox was already at the door but at the Worm’s entreaty he paused and said over his shoulder:

      “Why, my poor fellow, you surely know, don’t you? that the King with a great force is coming to destroy you and all your people!”

      “What!” the Worm gasped, turning a sickly green with fright. He knew he was fat and helpless and could never again fight as in the years gone by.

      “Don’t go just yet!” he begged the Fox. “When is the King coming?”

      “He’s on the highway now! That’s why I must be going! Good-by!”

      “My dear Fox, stay just a moment and I’ll reward you richly! Help me to hide so that the King won’t find me! What about the shed where the linen is stored? I could crawl under the linen and then if you locked the door from the outside the King could never find me.”

      “Very well,” the Fox agreed, “but we must hurry!”

      So they ran outside to the shed where the linen was kept and the Worm hid himself under the linen. The Fox locked the door, then set fire to the shed, and soon there was nothing left of that wicked old dragon, the Worm, but a handful of ashes.

      The Fox now called together the dragon’s household and talked them over to Mikko as he had the woodsmen and the grooms and the shepherds.

      Meanwhile the King and his party were slowly covering the ground over which the Fox had sped so quickly. When they came to the ten woodsmen in blue smocks, the King said:

      “I wonder whose woodsmen those are.”

      One of his attendants asked the woodsmen and the ten of them shouted out at the top of their voices:

      “We are Mighty Mikko’s men!”

      Mikko said nothing and the King and all the Court were impressed anew with his modesty.

      A little farther on they met the twenty grooms with their hundred prancing horses. When the grooms were questioned, they answered with a shout:

      “We are Mighty Mikko’s men!”

      “The Fox certainly spoke the truth,” the King thought to himself, “when he told me of Mikko’s riches!”

      A little later the thirty shepherds when they were questioned made answer in a chorus that was deafening to hear:

      “We are Mighty Mikko’s men!”

      The sight of the thousand sheep that belonged to his son-in-law made the King feel poor and humble in comparison and the courtiers whispered among themselves:

      “For all his simple manner, Mighty Mikko must be a richer, more powerful lord than the King himself! In fact it is only a very great lord indeed who could be so simple!”

      At last they reached the castle which from the blue smocked soldiers that guarded the gateway they knew to be Mikko’s. The Fox came out to welcome the King’s party and behind him in two rows all the household servants. These, at a signal from the Fox, cried out in one voice:

      “We are Mighty Mikko’s men!”

      Then Mikko in the same simple manner that he would have used in his father’s mean little hut in the woods bade the King and his followers welcome and they all entered the castle where they found a great feast already prepared and waiting.

      The King stayed on for several days and the more he saw of Mikko the better pleased he was that he had him for a son-in-law.

      When he was leaving he said to Mikko:

      “Your castle is so much grander than mine that I hesitate ever asking you back for a visit.”

      But Mikko reassured the King by saying earnestly:

      “My dear father-in-law, when first I entered your castle I thought it was the most beautiful castle in the world!”

      The King was flattered and the courtiers whispered among themselves:

      “How affable of him to say that when he knows very well how much grander his own castle is!”

      When the King and his followers were safely gone, the little red Fox came to Mikko and said:

      “Now, my master, you have no reason to feel sad and lonely. You are lord of the most beautiful castle in the world and you have for wife a sweet and lovely Princess. You have no longer any need of me, so I am going to bid you farewell.”

      Mikko thanked the little Fox for all he had done and the little Fox trotted off to the woods.

      So you see that Mikko’s poor old father, although he had no wealth to leave his son, was really the cause of all Mikko’s good fortune, for it was he who told Mikko in the first place to carry home alive anything he might find caught in the snares.

      THE THREE CHESTS

      There was once an honest old farmer who had three daughters. His farm ran down to the shores of a deep lake. One day as he leaned over the water to take a drink, wicked old Wetehinen reached up from the bottom of the lake and clutched him by the beard.

      “Ouch! Ouch!” the farmer cried. “Let me go!”

      Wetehinen only held on more tightly.

      “Yes, I’ll let you go,” he said, “but only on this condition: that you give me one of your daughters for wife!”

      “Give


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