Friday, April 20, 2018
“Saint Bridget and the King's Wolf” by Abbie Farwell Brown (1900)
“Saint Bridget and the King's Wolf”
by Abbie Farwell Brown
EVERY one has heard of Bridget, the little girl saint of Ireland. Her
name is almost as well known as that of Saint Patrick, who drove all the snakes
from the Island. Saint Bridget had long golden hair; and she was very
beautiful. Many wonderful things happened to her that are written in famous books.
But I suspect that you never heard what she did about the King's Wolf. It is a
queer story.
This is how it happened. The King of Ireland had a tame wolf which some
hunters had caught for him when it was a wee baby. And this wolf ran around as
it pleased in the King's park near the palace, and had a very good time. But
one morning he got over the high wall which surrounded the park, and strayed a
long distance from home, which was a foolish thing to do. For in those days
wild wolves were hated and feared by the people, whose cattle they often stole;
and if a man could kill a wicked wolf he thought himself a very smart fellow
indeed. Moreover, the King himself had offered a prize to any man who
should bring him a dead wolf. For he wanted his kingdom to be a peaceful, happy
one, where the children could play in the woods all day without fear of big
eyes or big teeth.
Of course you can guess what happened to the King's wolf? A big, silly
country fellow was going along with his bow and arrows, when he saw a great
brown beast leap over a hedge and dash into the meadow beyond. It was only the
King's wolf running away from home and feeling very frisky because it was the
first time that he had done such a thing. But the country fellow did not know
all that.
"Aha!" he said to himself. "I'll soon have you, my fine
wolf, and the King will give me a gold piece that will buy me a hat and a new
suit of clothes for the holidays." And without stopping to think about it
or to look closely at the wolf, who had the King's mark upon his ear, the
fellow shot his arrow straight as a string. The King's wolf gave one great leap
into the air and then fell dead on the grass, poor fellow.
The countryman was much pleased. He dragged his prize straight up to
the King's palace and thumped on the gate.
"Open!" he cried. "Open to the valiant hunter who has
shot a wolf for the King. Open, that I may go in to receive the reward."
So, very respectfully, they bade him enter; and the Lord Chamberlain
escorted him before the King himself, who sat on a great red velvet throne in
the Hall. In came the fellow, dragging after him by the tail the limp body of
the King's wolf.
"What have we here?" growled the King, as the Lord Chamberlain
made a low bow and pointed with his staff to the stranger. The King had a bad
temper and did not like to receive callers in the morning. But the silly
countryman was too vain of his great deed to notice the King's disagreeable
frown.
"You have here a wolf, Sire," he said proudly. "I have
shot for you a wolf, and I come to claim the promised reward."
But at this unlucky moment the King started up with an angry cry. He had
noticed his mark on the wolf's right ear.
"Ho! Seize the villain!" he shouted to his soldiers.
"He has slain my tame wolf; he has shot my pet! Away with him to prison;
and to-morrow he dies."
It was useless for the poor man to scream and cry and try to explain
that it was all a mistake. The King was furious. His wolf was killed, and the
murderer must die.
In those days this was the way kings punished men who displeased them in
any way. There were no delays; things happened very quickly. So they dragged
the poor fellow off to a dark, damp dungeon and left him there howling and
tearing his hair, wishing that wolves had never been saved from the flood by
Noah and his Ark.
Now not far from this place little Saint Bridget lived. When she chose
the beautiful spot for her home there were no houses near, only a great
oak-tree, under which she built her little hut. It had but one room and the
roof was covered with grass and straw. It seemed almost like a doll's
playhouse, it was so small; and Bridget herself was like a big, golden-haired
wax doll,—the prettiest doll you ever saw.
She was so beautiful and so good that people wanted to live near
her, where they could see her sweet face often and hear her voice. When they
found where she had built her cell, men came flocking from all the country
round about with their wives and children and their household goods, their cows
and pigs and chickens; and camping on the green grass under the great oak-tree
they said, "We will live here, too, where Saint Bridget is."
So house after house was built, and a village grew up about her little
cell; and for a name it had Kildare, which in Irish means "Cell of the
Oak." Soon Kildare became so fashionable that even the King must have a
palace and a park there. And it was in this park that the King's wolf had been
killed.
Now Bridget knew the man who had shot the wolf, and when she heard into
what terrible trouble he had fallen she was very sorry, for she was a
kind-hearted little girl. She knew he was a silly fellow to shoot the tame
wolf; but still it was all a mistake, and she thought he ought not to be
punished so severely. She wished that she could do some- [6] thing to help him,
to save him if possible. But this seemed difficult, for she knew what a bad
temper the King had; and she also knew how proud he had been of that wolf. who
was the only tame one in all the land.
Bridget called for her coachman with her chariot and pair of white
horses, and started for the King's palace, wondering what she should do to
satisfy the King and make him release the man who had meant to do no harm,
But lo and behold! as the horses galloped along over the Irish bogs of
peat, Saint Bridget saw a great white shape racing towards her. At first she
thought it was a dog. But no: no dog was as large as that. She soon saw that it
was a wolf, with big eyes and with a red tongue lolling out of his mouth. At
last he overtook the frightened horses, and with a flying leap came plump into
the chariot where Bridget sat, and crouched at her feet, quietly as a dog
would. He was no tame wolf, but a wild one, who had never before felt a human
being's hand upon him. Yet he let Bridget pat and stroke him, and say nice
things into his great ear. And he kept perfectly still by her side until
the chariot rumbled up to the gate of the palace.
Then Bridget held out her hand and called to him; and the great white
beast followed her quietly through the gate and up the stair and down the long
hall until they stood before the red-velvet throne, where the King sat looking
stern and sulky.
They must have been a strange-looking pair, the little maiden in her
green gown with her golden hair falling like a shower down to her knees; and
the huge white wolf standing up almost as tall as she, his yellow eyes glaring
fiercely about, and his red tongue panting. Bridget laid her hand gently on the
beast's head which was close to her shoulder, and bowed to the King. The King
only sat and stared, he was so surprised at the sight; but Bridget took that as
a permission to speak.
"You have lost your tame wolf, O King," she said. "But I
have brought you a better. There is no other tame wolf in all the land, now
yours is dead. But look at this one! There is no white wolf to be found
anywhere, and he is both tame and white. I have tamed him, my King. I, a little
maiden, have tamed him so that he is gentle as you see. Look, I can pull
his big ears and he will not snarl. Look, I can put my little hand into his
great red mouth, and he will not bite. Sire, I give him to you. Spare me then
the life of the poor, silly man who unwittingly killed your beast. Give his
stupid life to me in exchange for this dear, amiable wolf," and she smiled
pleadingly.
The King sat staring first at the great white beast, wonderfully pleased
with the look of him, then at the beautiful maiden whose blue eyes looked so
wistfully at him. And he was wonderfully pleased with the look of them, too.
Then he bade her tell him the whole story, how she had come by the creature,
and when, and where. Now when she had finished he first whistled in surprise,
then he laughed. That was a good sign,—he was wonderfully pleased with Saint
Bridget's story, also. It was so strange a thing for the King to laugh in the
morning that the Chamberlain nearly fainted from surprise; and Bridget felt
sure that she had won her prayer. Never had the King been seen in such a good
humor. For he was a vain man, and it pleased him mightily to think of
owning all for himself this huge beast, whose like was not in all the land, and
whose story was so marvelous.
And when Bridget looked at him so beseechingly, he could not refuse
those sweet blue eyes the request which they made, for fear of seeing them fill
with tears. So, as Bridget begged, he pardoned the countryman, and gave his
life to Bridget, ordering his soldiers to set him free from prison. Then when
she had thanked the King very sweetly, she bade the wolf lie down beside the
red velvet throne, and thenceforth be faithful and kind to his new master. And
with one last pat upon his shaggy head, she left the wolf and hurried out to
take away the silly countryman in her chariot, before the King should have time
to change his mind.
The man was very happy and grateful. But she gave him a stern lecture on
the way home, advising him not to be so hasty and so wasty next time.
"Sirrah Stupid," she said as she set him down by his cottage
gate, "better not kill at all than take the lives of poor tame creatures. I have saved your life this once, but next time you will have to suffer.
Remember, it is better that two wicked wolves escape than that one kind beast
be killed. We cannot afford to lose our friendly beasts, Master Stupid. We can
better afford to lose a blundering fellow like you." And she drove away to
her cell under the oak, leaving the silly man to think over what she had said,
and to feel much ashamed.
But the King's new wolf lived happily ever after in the palace park; and
Bridget came often to see him, so that he had no time to grow homesick or
lonesome.
Source: The Book of Saints and Friendly Beasts by Abbie Farwell Brown (1900). Chapter One.
Image: Illustrated by Fanny Y. Cory
Found on The Baldwin Project site. This work is in the public domain.
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2 comments:
I have never heard of this book but I love the story and the illustration! Thank you for sharing it! I would love to own a copy of this book! I bet the other illustrations are just as beautiful.
I'm glad you like it!
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