Mighty Mikko - novelonlinefull.com
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Then he turned to Veikko.
"And you, Veikko, has your sweetheart not given you a sample of her weaving?"
Veikko handed his father a nutsh.e.l.l at sight of which his brothers burst out laughing.
"Ha! Ha! Ha!" they laughed. "Veikko's sweetheart gives him a nut when he asks for a sample of her weaving."
But their laughter died as the farmer opened the nutsh.e.l.l and began shaking out a great web of the finest linen.
"Why, Veikko, my boy!" he cried, "however did your sweetheart get threads for so fine a web?"
Veikko answered modestly:
"She rang a little silver bell and ordered her servants to bring her in fibers of finest flax. They did so and after they had spun the flax and carded it, my sweetheart wove the web you see."
"Wonderful!" gasped the farmer. "I have never known such a weaver! The other girls will be all right for farmers' wives but Veikko's sweetheart might be a Princess! Well," concluded the farmer, "it's time that you all brought your sweethearts home. I want to see them with my own eyes. Suppose you bring them to-morrow."
"She's a good little mouse and I'm very fond of her," Veikko thought to himself as he went out to the forest, "but my brothers will certainly laugh when they find she is only a mouse! Well, I don't care if they do laugh! She's been a good little sweetheart to me and I'm not going to be ashamed of her!"
So when he got to the hut he told the little mouse at once that his father wanted to see her.
The little mouse was greatly excited.
"I must go in proper style!" she said.
She rang the little silver bell and ordered her coach and five. The coach when it came turned out to be an empty nutsh.e.l.l and the five prancing steeds that were drawing it were five black mice. The little mouse seated herself in the coach with a coachman mouse on the box in front of her and a footman mouse on the box behind her.
"Oh, how my brothers will laugh!" thought Veikko.
But he didn't laugh. He walked beside the coach and told the little mouse not to be frightened, that he would take good care of her. His father, he told her, was a gentle old man and would be kind to her.
When they left the forest they came to a river which was spanned by a foot bridge. Just as Veikko and the nutsh.e.l.l coach had reached the middle of the bridge, a man met them coming from the opposite direction.
"Mercy me!" the man exclaimed as he caught sight of the strange little coach that was rolling along beside Veikko. "What's that?"
He stooped down and looked and then with a loud laugh he put out his foot and pushed the coach, the little mouse, her servants, and her five prancing steeds--all off the bridge and into the water below.
"What have you done! What have you done!" Veikko cried. "You've drowned my poor little sweetheart!"
The man thinking Veikko was crazy hurried away.
Veikko with tears in his eyes looked down into the water.
[Ill.u.s.tration: _She beckoned to Veikko_]
"You poor little mouse!" he said. "How sorry I am that you are drowned! You were a faithful loving sweetheart and now that you are gone I know how much I loved you!"
As he spoke he saw a beautiful coach of gold drawn by five glossy horses go up the far bank of the river. A coachman in gold lace held the reins and a footman in pointed cap sat up stiffly behind. The most beautiful girl in the world was seated in the coach. Her skin was as red as a berry and as white as snow, her long golden hair gleamed with jewels, and she was dressed in pearly velvet. She beckoned to Veikko and when he came close she said:
"Won't you come sit beside me?"
"Me? Me?" Veikko stammered, too dazed to think.
The beautiful creature smiled.
"You were not ashamed to have me for a sweetheart when I was a mouse,"
she said, "and surely now that I am a Princess again you won't desert me!"
"A mouse!" Veikko gasped. "Were you the little mouse?"
The Princess nodded.
"Yes, I was the little mouse under an evil enchantment which could never have been broken if you had not taken me for a sweetheart and if another human being had not drowned me. Now the enchantment is broken forever. So come, we will go to your father and after he has given us his blessing we will get married and go home to my kingdom."
And that's exactly what they did. They drove at once to the farmer's house and when Veikko's father and his brothers and his brothers'
sweethearts saw the Princess' coach stopping at their gate they all came out bowing and sc.r.a.ping to see what such grand folk could want of them.
"Father!" Veikko cried, "don't you know me?"
The farmer stopped bowing long enough to look up.
"Why, bless my soul!" he cried, "it's our Veikko!"
"Yes, father, I'm Veikko and this is the Princess that I'm going to marry!"
"A Princess, did you say, Veikko? Mercy me, where did my boy find a Princess?"
"Out in the forest where my tree pointed."
"Well, well, well," the farmer said, "where your tree pointed! I've always heard that was a good way to find a bride."
The older brothers shook their heads gloomily and muttered:
"Just our luck! If only our trees had pointed to the forest we, too, should have found princesses instead of plain country wenches!"
But they were wrong: it wasn't because his tree pointed to the forest that Veikko got the Princess, it was because he was so simple and good that he was kind even to a little mouse.
Well, after they had got the farmer's blessing they rode home to the Princess' kingdom and were married. And they were happy as they should have been for they were good and true to each other and they loved each other dearly.
[Decoration]
THE ENCHANTED GROUSE
[Decoration]
_The Story of h.e.l.li and the Little Locked Box_