There was once a woman who had nine sons. They were good boys and
loved her dearly, but there was one thing they were always complaining
about.
"Why haven't we a little sister?" they kept asking. "Do give us a little sister!"
When
the time came that another child was to be born, they said to their
mother, "If the baby is a boy we are going away and you will never see
us again, but if it is a little girl then we shall stay home and take
care of it."
The mother agreed that if the child were a
girl she would have her husband put a spindle outside on the gatepost
and, if it were a boy, an axe.
"Just wait," she said,
"and see what your father puts on the gatepost and then you will know
whether it is another brother God has sent you or a little sister." The
baby turned out to be a girl and the mother was overjoyed.
"Hurry, husband!" she cried, "and put a spindle on the gatepost so that our nine sons may know the good news!"
The
man did so and then quickly returned to the mother and baby. The
moment he was gone Suyettar slipped up and changed the tokens. She took
away the spindle and put in its place an axe. Then with an evil grin
she hurried off mumbling to herself, "Now we'll see what we'll see!"
She
hoped to bring trouble and grief and she succeeded. As soon as the
nine sons saw the axe on the gatepost, they thought their mother had
given birth to another son and at once they left home vowing never to
return.
The poor mother waited for them and waited.
"What is keeping my sons?" she cried at last. "Go out to the gate, husband, and see if they are coming."
The man went out and soon returned bringing back word that someone had changed the tokens.
"The spindle that I put on the gatepost is gone/ 5 he said, "and in its place is an axe."
"Alas!"
cried the poor mother, "some evil creature has done this to spite us!
Oh, if we could only get word to our sons of the little sister they
were so eager to have!"
But there was no way to reach them, for no one knew the way they had gone.
In
a short time the husband died and the poor woman, abandoned by her
nine sons, had only her little daughter left. She named the child
Kerttu. Kerttu was a dear little girl and her face was as beautiful as
her heart was good. Whenever she found her mother weeping alone she
tried to comfort her and, as she grew older, she wanted to know the
cause of her mother's grief. At last the mother told her about her nine
brothers and how they had gone away never to return owing to the trick
of some evil creature.
"My poor mother!" she cried,
"how sorry I am that I am the innocent cause of your loss! Let me go
out into the world and find my brothers! When once they hear the truth
they will gladly come home to you to care for you in your old age!"
At
first the mother would not consent to this. "You are all I have," she
said, "and I should indeed be miserable and lonely if anything happened
you!"
But Kerttu continued to weep every time she
thought of her poor brothers driven unnecessarily from home and at last
the mother, realizing that she would nevermore be happy unless she
were allowed to go in search of them, gave up opposing her.
"Very
well, my daughter, you may go and may God go with you and bring you
safely back to me. But before you go I must prepare you a bag of food
for the journey and bake you a magic cake that will show you the way."
So
she baked a batch of bread and at the same time mixed a little round
cake with Kerttu's own tears and baked it, too. Then she said, "Here
now, my child, are provisions for the journey and here is a magic cake
that will lead you to your brothers. All you have to do is throw it down
in front of you and say,
"Roll, roll, my little cake!
Show me the way that I must take
To find at last the brothers nine
Whose own true mother is also mine!"
Then
the little cake will start rolling and do you follow wherever it
rolls. But, Kerttu, my child, you must not start out alone. You must
have some friend or companion to go with you."
Now it happened tliat Kerttu had a little dog, Musti, that she loved dearly.
'Til
take Musti with me!" she said. "Musti will protect me." So she called
Musti and Musti wagged his tail and barked with joy at the prospect of
going out into the world with his mistress.
Then Kerttu threw down the magic cake in front of her and sang,
"Roll, roll, my little cake!
Show me the way that I must take
To find at last the brothers nine
Whose own true mother is also mine!"
At
once the cake rolled off like a little wheel and Kerttu and Musti
followed it. They walked till they were tired. Then Kerttu picked up the
little cake and they rested by the wayside. When they were ready again
to start the cake a-rolling, all Kerttu had to do was throw it down in
front of her and say the magic rime.
Their first day was without adventure. When night came they ate their supper and went to sleep in a field under a tree.
The
second day they overtook an ugly old woman whom Kerttu disliked on
sight. But she said to herself, "Shame on you, Kerttu, not liking this
woman just because she's old and ugly!" and she made herself answer the
old woman's greetings politely and she made Musti stop snarling and
growling.
The old hag asked Kerttu who she was and where she was going and Kerttu told her.
"Ah!" said the old woman, "how fortunate that we have met each other!"
She
smiled and petted Kerttu's arm and Kerttu felt a shuddering. But she
restrained herself and told herself severely, "You're a wicked girl not
to feel more friendly to the poor old thing."
Musti
felt much as Kerttu did. He no longer growled, for Kerttu had told him
not to, but he drooped his tail between his legs and, pressing up close
to Kerttu, he trembled with fright. And well he might, too, for the
old hag was none other than Suyettar who had been waiting all these
years just for this very chance to do further injury to Kerttu and her
brothers.
Kerttu, poor child, was too good and innocent
to suspect evil in others. She said to Suyettar, "Very well, if our
ways he together then we can be comp anions."
So
Suyettar joined Kerttu and Musti and the three of them walked on
following the little cake. As the day advanced the sun grew hotter and
hotter and at last when they reached a lake Suyettar said, "My dear, let
us sit down here for a few moments and rest."
They all sat down and next Suyettar said: "Let us go bathing in the lake. That will refresh us."
Kerttu
would have agreed if Musti had not tugged at her skirts and warned her
not to. "Don't do it, dear mistress," Musti growled softly. "Don't go
in bathing with her! She'll bewitch you!"
So Kerttu said, "No, I don't want to go in bathing."
Suyettar
waited until they were again journeying on and then when Kerttu was
not looking she turned around and kicked Musti and broke one of the
poor little dog's legs. Thereafter Musti had to hop along on three
legs.
The next afternoon when they passed another lake, Suyettar tried again to tempt Kerttu into the water.
"The sun is very hot," she said, "and it would refresh us both to bathe. Come, Kerttu, my dear, don't refuse me this time!"
But
again Musti tugged at Kerttu's skirts and, licking her hand, whispered
the warning, "Don't do it, dear mistress! Don't go in bathing with her
or she will bewitch you!"
So again Kerttu said politely, "No, I don't feel like going in bathing. You go in alone and I'll wait for you here."
But
this was not what Suyettar wanted and she said, no, she did not care
to go in alone. She was furious, too, with Musti and later when Kerttu
was not looking she gave the poor little dog a kick that broke another
leg. Thereafter Musti had to hop along on two legs.
They
slept the third night by the wayside and the next day they went on
again always following the magic cake. In midafternoon they passed a
lake and Suyettar said, "Surely, my dear? you must be tired and hot. Let
us both bathe in this cool lake."
But Musti, hopping
painfully along on two legs, yelped weakly and said to Kerttu, "Don't
do it, dear mistress! Don't go in bathing with her or she'll bewitch
you!"
So for a third time Kerttu refused and later, when
she was not looking, Suyettar kicked Musti and broke the third of the
poor little dog's legs. Thereafter Musti hopped on as best he could on
only one leg,
Well, they went on and on. When night came
they slept by the roadside and then next morning they started on
again. The sun grew hot and by midafternoon Kerttu was tired and ready
to rest. When they reached a lake Suyettar again begged that they both
go in bathing. Kerttu was tempted to agree when poor Musti threw
himself panting at her feet and whimpered, "Don't do it, dear mistress!
Don't go in bathing with her or she will bewitch you!"
So Kerttu again refused.
"That's
right, dear mistress!" Musti panted, "don't do it! I shall soon be
dead, I know, for she hates me, but before I die I want to warn you one
last time never to go in bathing with her or she will bewitch you!"
"What's
that dog saying?" Suyettar demanded angrily, and without waiting for
an answer she picked up a heavy piece of wood and struck poor Musti
such a blow on the head that it killed him.
"What have you done to my poor little dog?" Kerttu cried.
"Don't mind him, my dear," Suyettar said. "He was sick and lame and it was better to put him out of his misery."
Suyettar
tried to soothe Kerttu and make her forget Musti, but all afternoon
Kerttu wept to think that she would never again see her faithful little
friend.
The next afternoon when Suyettar begged her to
go in bathing there was no Musti to warn her against it and at last
Kerttu allowed herself to be persuaded. She was tired from her many
days' wandering and it was true that the first touch of the cool water
refreshed her.
"Now splash water in my face!" Suyettar cried.
But
Kerttu did not want to splash water into Suyettar 's face, for she
supposed Suyettar was an old woman and she thought it would be
disrespectful to splash water into the face of an old woman.
"Do you hear me!" screamed Suyettar.
When
Kerttu still hesitated, Suyettar looked at her with such a terrible,
threatening expression that Kerttu did as she was bidden. She splashed
water into Suyettar 's face and, as the water touched Suyettar's eyes,
Suyettar cried out,
"Your bonny looks give up to me
And you take mine for all to see!"
At
once they two changed appearance: Suyettar looked young and beautiful
like Kerttu, and Kerttu was changed to a hideous old hag. Then too late
she realized that the awful old woman to whom she had been so polite
was Suyettar. "Oh, why,"Kerttu cried, "why did not I heed poor Musti's
warning!"
Suyettar dragged her roughly out of the water.
"Come along!" she said. "Dress yourself in those rags of mine and
start that cake a-rolling! We ought to reach your brothers' house by
tonight."
So poor Kerttu had to dress herself in
Suyettar's filthy old garments, while Suyettar, looking like a fresh
young girl, decked herself out in Kerttu's pretty bodice and skirt.
Unwillingly now and with a heavy heart Kerttu threw down the cake and said,
"Roll, roll, my little cake!
Show me the way that I must take
To find at last the brothers nine
Whose own true mother is also mine!''
Off
rolled the little cake and they two followed it, Kerttu weeping
bitterly and Suyettar taunting her with ugly laughs. Then suddenly
Kerttu forgot to weep, for Suyettar took from her her memory and her
tongue.
The little cake led them at last to a farmhouse
before which it stopped. This was where the nine brothers were living.
Eight of them were out working in the fields but the youngest was at
home. He opened the door and when Suyettar told him that she was
Kerttu, his sister, he kissed her tenderly and made her welcome. Then
he invited her inside and they sat side by side on the bench and talked
and Suyettar told him all she had heard from Kerttu about his mother
and about the tokens which had been changed at Kerttu's birth. The
youngest brother listened eagerly and Suyettar told her story so glibly
that of course he supposed that she was his own true sister.
"And who is the awful looking old hag that has come with you?" he asked pointing at Kerttu.
"That?
Oh, that's an old serving woman that our mother sent with me to bear
me company. She's dumb and foolish, but she's a good herd and we can
let her drive the cow out to pasture every day."
The
older brothers when they came home were greatly pleased to find what
they thought was their sister. They began to love her at once and to
pet her and they said that now she must stay with them and keep house
for them. She told them that was what she wanted to do and she said
that now she was here the youngest brother need no longer stay at home
but could go out every morning with the rest of them to work in the
fields.
So now began a new life for poor Kerttu. In the
morning after the brothers were gone Suyettar would scold and abuse
her. She would bake a cake for her dinner to be eaten in the fields and
she would fill the cake with stones and sticks and filth. Then she
would take Kerttu as far as the gate where she would give her back her
tongue and her memory and order her roughly to drive the cow to pasture
and look after it all day long. In the late afternoon when Kerttu
drove home the cow, Suyettar would meet her at the gate and take from
her her tongue and her memory, and then in the evening the brothers
would see her as a foolish old woman who couldn't talk. Every morning
and every evening Kerttu begged Suyettar to show her a little mercy,
but far from showing her any mercy, Suyettar grew more cruel from day
to day.
Suyettar was very proud to think that nine
handsome young men took her for a beautiful girl and she felt sure they
would never find out their mistake, for only Kerttu knew who she
really was and Kerttu was entirely in her power.
At
night seated in the shadow in a far corner of the kitchen with her nine
brothers laughing and talking Kerttu felt no sorrow for at such times
of course she had no memory. But during the day it was different. Then
when she was alone in the meadow she had her memory and her tongue and
she thought about her poor mother at home anxiously awaiting her return
and she thought of her nine sturdy brothers all of whom might now
through her mistake fall victims to Suyettar. These thoughts made her
weep with grief and as the days went by she put this grief into a song
which she sang constantly,
"I've found at last the brothers nine
Whose own true mother is also mine.
But they know me not from stick or stone!
They leave me here 'to weep alone.
While Suyettar sits in my place
With stolen looks and stolen face!
She snared me first with evil guile
And now she mocks me all the while:
By night she takes my tongue away.
She feeds me sticks and stones by day . . .
Oh, little they guess, the brothers nine,
That their own true mother is also mine!"
The brothers as they worked in nearby fields used to hear the song and they wondered about it.
"Strange!"
they said to one another. "Can that be the old woman singing? In the
evening at home she never opens her mouth and our dear sister always
says that she's dumb and foolish."
One afternoon when
Kerttu's song sounded particularly sad, the youngest brother crept
close to the meadow where Kerttu was sitting in order to hear the
words. He listened carefully and then hurried back to the others and
with frightened face told them what he had heard.
"Nonsense!"
the older brothers said. "It cannot be so!" However, they, too, wanted
to hear for themselves the words of the strange song, so they all
crept near to listen.
It looked like an old hag who was
singing but the voice that came out of the withered mouth was the voice
of a young girl. As they listened they, too, grew pale,
I've found at last the brothers nine
Whose own true mother is also mine,
But they know me not from stick or stone!
They leave me here to weep alone,
While Suyettar sits In my place
With stolen looks and stolen face!
She snared me first with evil guile
And now she mocks me all the while:
By night she takes my tongue away,
She feeds me sticks and stones by day! . . .
Oh, little they guess, the brothers nine,
That their own true mother is also mine."
"Can
it be true?" they said, whispering together. They sent the youngest
brother to question Kerttu, and when he had heard her story, he
believed it true. Then the other brothers went to her one by one and
questioned her and finally they were all convinced of the truth of her
story.
"It is well for us," they said, "if we do not all
fall into the power of that awful creature! How can we rescue our poor
little sister!"
"I can never get back my own
looks,"Kerttu said, "unless Suyettar splashes water into my eyes and
unless I cry out a magic rime as she does it."
The brothers discussed one plan after another and at last agreed on one that they thought might deceive Suyettar.
They
had Kerttu inflame her eyes with dust and come groping home one
midday. The brothers, too, were at home and as Kerttu came stumbling
into the kitchen they said to Suyettar, "Oh, sister, sister, see the
poor old woman! Something ails her! Her eyes are all red and swollen!
Get some water and bathe them!"
"Nonsense!" Suyetter said. "The old hag is well enough! Let her be! She doesn't need any attention!"
"Oh,
sister!" the youngest brother said, reproachfully, "is that any way
for a human, kindhearted girl like you to talk? If you won't bathe the
old creature's eyes, I will myself!"
Then Suyettar who
wanted them to think that she was a human, kindhearted girl said, no,
she would bathe them. So she took a basin of water over to Kerttu and
told her to lean down her head. As she splashed the first drop of water
into Kerttu's eyes, Kerttu cried out,
"My own true looks give back to me
And take your own for all to see."
At
once Suyettar was again a hideous old hag though still dressed in
Kerttu's pretty bodice and skirt, and Kerttu was herself again, young
and fresh and sweet, though still incased in Suyettar's rags. But the
brothers pretended that they saw no difference and kept on talking to
Suyettar as though they still thought her Kerttu. And Suyettar because
her eyes were blinded with the dust supposed that they were still
deceived.
Then one of the brothers said to Suyettar, "Sister dear, the sauna is all heated and ready. Don't you want to bathe?"
Suyettar
thought that this would be a fine chance to wash the dust from her
eyes, so she let them lead her to the sauna. Once they got her inside
they locked the door and set the sauna afire. Oh, the noise she made
then when she found she had been trapped! She kicked and screamed and
cursed and threatened! But Kerttu and the brothers paid no heed to her.
They left her burning in the sauna while they hurried homewards. They
found their poor old mother seated at the window weeping, for she
thought that now Kerttu as well as her sons was lost forever. As Kerttu
and the nine handsome young men came in the gate, she did not recognize
them until Kerttu sang out,
"I bring at last the brothers nine
Whose own true mother is also mine!"
Then she knew who they were and with thanks to God she welcomed them home.
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