![]() ![]() The black horse then told him to take looking-glass, a brush and a riding-whip, and ride off on him. The black horse told him to saddle and bridle it, to use an ointment that made his hair like gold, and to pile all the wood he could on the fire. Frightened, the prince threw another log on it and nursed it back. One day, the prince nearly let the fire go out and the old man stormed in. The old man was a magician and the fire was the source of his power, though he did not tell the prince. The old man set him to keep the stove lit, to fetch the firewood from the forest, and to take care of the black horse in the stables. He told how he had become lost and offered to enter his service. Then he found an old man, who asked him who he was. Synopsis Ī king's three sons went hunting, and the youngest got lost. Andrew Lang included it in The Grey Fairy Book under the title The Magician's Horse. The Prince Who Worked as Satan's Servant and Saved the King from Hell ( Lithuanian: Apė karaliūnaitį, kur pas šėtoną slūžyjo ir karalių išgelbėjo iš peklos) is a Lithuanian fairy tale collected by German linguists August Leskien and Karl Brugmann. Litauische Volkslieder und Märchen by August Leskien (1882).The Prince Who Worked as Satan's Servant and Saved the King from Hell Lithuanian fairy tale The Magician's Horse ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |