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rider and replaced
him with their own messenger who carried a note to the tsar
which read: "your wife, the queen, has borne neither a son nor
daughter, neither a mouse nor a frog, but had given birth to an
unknown little creature." When he read this message, the tsar
was mortified and sent a letter back telling his wife to wait
for his return before taking any action. The scheming sisters
met the rider on the way back, got him drunk, and replaced the
tsar's actual letter with a fake one that ordered the queen and
her baby to be put into a barrel and thrown into the sea.
Of course,
there was no way to disobey an order from the tsar, so the
palace guards put the queen and her son into the barrel and
rolled it into the water. As the queen wept inside the barrel,
her son grew stronger, not by the day, but by the minute. He
begged the waves to wash them onto dry land. The waves obeyed
and he and his mother found themselves washed ashore on a
deserted island. By now they were quite hungry, so the son made
himself a bow and arrow, using small branches from a tree, and
went hunting. Near the sea, he heard a screech and saw a poor
swan struggling against a huge black hawk. Just as the hawk was
about to bury its beak in the swan's neck, the youth shot an
arrow, killing the hawk and spilling the bird's blood into the
sea. The white swan swam up to the lad, thanked him and said,
"you didn't kill a hawk at all, but a wicked wizard. For saving
my life, I will serve you forever."
The son
returned to his mother and told her of his adventure, and then
they both fell soundly asleep, even though they were still
hungry and thirsty. The next morning they awoke and saw a
wondrous city standing before them where there had been nothing
before! The two marveled at the golden domes of the monasteries
and churches behind the city's white walls. "My, look at all the
swan has done!" the lad thought. The two walked into the city
and throngs of people greeted them and crowned the young man a
prince, proclaiming him Prince Gvidon. One day a merchant ship
was sailing near the island when its sailors caught a glimpse of
the amazing walled city. The city's cannons signaled the ship to
come ashore. Prince Gvidon welcomed them and offered them food
and drink. He asked what they had for sale and where they were
going. "Our trade is in furs", they said, "and we are headed
past the island of Buyan to the kingdom of Tsar Saltan."
Gvidon asked
the merchant sailors to convey his respects to the tsar, even
though his mother had earlier told him about the note that led
to their expulsion from the tsar's kingdom. Still, Prince Gvidon
thought the best of people and could never quite believe that
his father could do such a thing. As the merchant sailors were
preparing to leave the island, the prince became sad when
thinking about his father. "What is wrong? Why are you so
gloomy," the swan said. "I so wish to see my father, the tsar",
Gvidon replied. Then, with a splash of water, the swan turned
the prince into a small gnat so that he could hide himself in a
crack of the mast of the ship en route to see the tsar.
When the ship
arrived at the Tsar Saltan's kingdom, the tsar greeted the
merchant sailors and asked them to tell of the lands they had
seen. The sailors told the tsar about the island and the walled
city, and spoke of the hospitable Prince Gvidon. The tsar did
not know that this Prince Gvidon was his son, but expressed a
wish to see this beautiful city anyway. The two sisters and the
old Barbarika did not want to let him go, however, and acted as
if there were nothing to marvel at in the sailors' tale. "What
is really amazing," they said, "is a squirrel that sits under a
fir tree, cracking golden nuts containing kernels of pure
emerald, and singing a song. That's something which is truly
extraordinary!" Hearing this, the gnat, really Prince Gvidon,
got angry and stung the old woman's right eye. After he flew
back to the island, Gvidon told the swan the story he heard
about the remarkable squirrel. Then the prince walked into his
courtyard and, lo and behold, there was the singing squirrel,
sitting under a fir tree, cracking golden nuts! The prince
rejoiced at this and ordered that a crystal house be built for
the little animal. He placed a guard there to stand watch and
ordered a scribe to record every shell. Profit for the prince,
honor for the squirrel!
Some time
later, a second ship came to the island enroute to the tsar and
the prince again told the swan that he wished to see his father
again. This time, the swan turned the prince into a fly so that
he could hide in a crack of the ship. After the vessel arrived
in the kingdom, the sailors told Tsar Saltan about the wondrous
squirrel they had seen. Saltan again wanted to visit this fabled
city but was talked out of it when the two sisters and Barbarika
ridiculed the sailors' story and spoke themselves of a greater
wonder--of thirty-three handsome young knights, led by old
Chernomor, rising from out of the raging sea. The fly, Gvidon,
became quite angry with the women and stung Barbarika's left eye
before flying back to the island.
Once home
again, he told the swan about old Chernomor and the thirty-three
knights, and lamented that he had never seen such a wonder.
"These knights are from the great waters that I know," the swan
said. "Don't be sad, for these knights are my brothers and they
will come to you." Later, the prince went back and climbed a
tower of his palace and gazed at the sea. Suddenly, a giant wave
rose high and deep onto the shore, and when it receded,
thirty-three knights in armor, led by old Chernomor, emerged,
ready to serve Prince Gvidon. They promised that they would come
out of the sea each day to protect the city.
A few months
later, a third ship came to the island. In his customary
fashion, the prince again made the sailors feel welcome and told
them to send his respects to the tsar. As the sailors prepared
themselves for their journey, the prince told the swan that he
still couldn't get his father out of his mind and wished to see
him again. This time the swan turned the prince into a
bumblebee. The ship arrived in the kingdom and the sailors told
Tsar Saltan about the wondrous city they had seen and how every
day thirty-three knights and old Chernomor would emerge from the
sea to protect the island.
The tsar
marveled at this and wanted to see this extraordinary land, but
once again was talked out of it by the two sisters and old
Barbarika. They belittled the sailors' tale and said that what
was really amazing was that beyond the seas lived a princess so
stunning that you couldn't take your eyes off of her. "The light
of day pales against her beauty, the darkness of night is lit up
by it. When she speaks it is like the murmur of a tranquil
brook. Now that's a marvel!" they said. Gvidon, the bumblebee,
got angry at the women once more and stung Barbarika on her
nose. They tried to catch him, but to no avail. He was safely on
his journey back home.
After his
arrival there, Gvidon strolled out to the seashore until he was
met by the white swan. "Why so gloomy this time?" the swan
asked. Gvidon said that he was sad because he did not have a
wife. He related the tale he had heard of the beautiful princess
whose beauty lit up the darkness, whose words flowed like a
murmuring brook. The swan was silent for awhile, then said that
there was such a princess. "But a wife," the swan continued, "is
no glove that one can simply cast from one's hand." Gvidon said
he understood but that he was prepared to walk the rest of his
life and to all corners of the world to search for the wondrous
princess. At this, the swan sighed and said:
There's no need to travel,
There's no need to tire.
The woman that you desire,
Is now yours to spy.
The princess is I.
With this, she flapped her wings and turned into the beautiful
woman that the prince had heard about. The two passionately
embraced and kissed, and Gvidon took her to meet his mother. The
prince and the beautiful maiden were married that very same
evening. A short time later, another ship came to the island. As
usual, Prince Gvidon welcomed the sailors and, as they were
leaving, he asked the sailors to send his greetings to the tsar
and to extend an invitation to him to visit. Being happy with
his new bride, Gvidon decided not to leave the island this time.
When the ship
arrived at the kingdom of Tsar Sultan, the sailors again told
the tsar of the fantastic island they had seen, of the singing
squirrel cracking the golden nuts, of the thirty-three armored
knights rising out of the sea, and of the lovely princess whose
beauty was beyond compare. This time the tsar would not listen
to the snide remarks of the sisters and Barbarika. He called his
fleet and set sail for the island immediately.
When he reached
the island, Prince Gvidon was there to meet the tsar. Saying
nothing, Gvidon led him, along with his two sisters-in-law and
Barbarika, to the palace. Along the way, the tsar saw everything
that he had heard so much about. There at the gates were the
thirty-three knights and old Chernomor standing guard. There in
the courtyard was the remarkable squirrel, singing a song and
gnawing on a golden nut. There in the garden was the beautiful
princess, Gvidon's wife. And then the tsar saw something
unexpected: there standing next to the princess was Gvidon's
mother, the tsar's long-lost wife. The tsar recognized her
immediately. With tears streaming down his cheeks, he rushed to
embrace her, and years of heartache were now forgotten. He then
realized that Prince Gvidon was his son, and the two threw their
arms around each other as well. A merry feast was held. The two
sisters and Barbarika hid in shame, but eventually they were
found. They burst into tears, confessing everything. But the
tsar was so happy that he let them all go. The tsar and the
queen and Prince Gvidon and the princess lived the rest of their
days in happiness.
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