Section 1
Dapplegrim explained simply
Dapplegrim by Andrew Lang
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There was once upon a time a couple of rich folks who had twelve sons, and when the youngest was grown up he would not stay at home any longer, but would go out into the world and seek his fortune. His father and mother said that they thought he was very well off at home, and tha...
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There was once upon a time a couple of rich folks who had twelve sons,
and when the youngest was grown up he would not stay at home any
longer, but would go out into the world and seek his fortune. His
father and mother said that they thought he was very well off at home,
and that he was welcome to stay with them; but he could not rest, and
said that he must and would go, so at last they had to give him leave.
When he had walked a long way, he came to a King’s palace. There he
asked for a place and got it.
Now the daughter of the King of that country had been carried off into
the mountains by a Troll, and the King had no other children, and for
this cause both he and all his people were full of sorrow and
affliction, and the King had promised the Princess and half his kingdom
to anyone who could set her free; but there was no one who could do it,
though a great number had tried. So when the youth had been there for
the space of a year or so, he wanted to go home again to pay his
parents a visit; but when he got there his father and mother were dead,
and his brothers had divided everything that their parents possessed
between themselves, so that there was nothing at all left for him.
‘Shall I, then, receive nothing at all of my inheritance?’ asked the
youth.
‘Who could know that you were still alive—you who have been a wanderer
so long?’ answered the brothers. ‘However, there are twelve mares upon
the hills which we have not yet divided among us, and if you would like
to have them for your share, you may take them.’
So the youth, well pleased with this, thanked them, and at once set off
to the hill where the twelve mares were at pasture. When he got up
there and found them, each mare had her foal, and by the side of one of
them was a big dapple-grey foal as well, which was so sleek that it
shone again.
‘Well, my little foal, you are a fine fellow!’ said the youth.
‘Yes, but if you will kill all the other little foals so that I can
suck all the mares for a year, you shall see how big and handsome I
shall be then!’ said the Foal.
So the youth did this—he killed all the twelve foals, and then went
back again.
Next year, when he came home again to look after his mares and the
foal, it was as fat as it could be, and its coat shone with brightness,
and it was so big that the lad had the greatest difficulty in getting
on its back, and each of the mares had another foal.
‘Well, it’s very evident that I have lost nothing by letting you suck
all my mares,’ said the lad to the yearling; ‘but now you are quite big
enough, and must come away with me.’
‘No,’ said the Colt, ‘I must stay here another year; kill the twelve
little foals, and then I can suck all the mares this year also, and you
shall see how big and handsome I shall be by summer.’
So the youth did it again, and when he went up on the hill next year to
look after his colt and the mares, each of the mares had her foal
again; but the dappled colt was so big that when the lad wanted to feel
its neck to see how fat it was, he could not reach up to it, it was so
high, and it was so bright that the light glanced off its coat.
‘Big and handsome you were last year, my colt, but this year you are
ever so much handsomer,’ said the youth; ‘in all the King’s court no
such horse is to be found. But now you shall come away with me.’
‘No,’ said the dappled Colt once more; ‘here I must stay for another
year. Just kill the twelve little foals again, so that I can suck the
mares this year also, and then come and look at me in the summer.’
So the youth did it—he killed all the little foals, and then went home
again.
But next year, when he returned to look after the dappled colt and the
mares, he was quite appalled. He had never imagined that any horse
could become so big and overgrown, for the dappled horse had to lie
down on all fours before the youth could get on his back, and it was
very hard to do that even when it was lying down, and it was so plump
that its coat shone and glistened just as if it had been a
looking-glass. This time the dappled horse was not unwilling to go away
with the youth, so he mounted it, and when he came riding home to his
brothers they all smote their hands together and crossed themselves,
for never in their lives had they either seen or heard tell of such a
horse as that.
‘If you will procure me the best shoes for my horse, and the most
magnificent saddle and bridle that can be found,’ said the youth, ‘you
may have all my twelve mares just as they are standing out on the hill,
and their twelve foals into the bargain.’ For this year also each mare
had her foal. The brothers were quite willing to do this; so the lad
got such shoes for his horse that the sticks and stones flew high up
into the air as he rode away over the hills, and such a gold saddle and
such a gold bridle that they could be seen glittering and glancing from
afar.
‘And now we will go to the King’s palace,’ said Dapplegrim—that was the
horse’s name, ‘but bear in mind that you must ask the King for a good
stable and excellent fodder for me.’
So the lad promised not to forget to do that. He rode to the palace,
and it will be easily understood that with such a horse as he had he
was not long on the way.
When he arrived there, the King was standing out on the steps, and how
he did stare at the man who came riding up!
‘Nay,’ said he, ‘never in my whole life have I seen such a man and such
a horse.’
And when the youth inquired if he could have a place in the King’s
palace, the King was so delighted that he could have danced on the
steps where he was standing, and there and then the lad was told that
he should have a place.
‘Yes; but I must have a good stable and most excellent fodder for my
horse,’ said he.
So they told him that he should have sweet hay and oats, and as much of
them as the dappled horse chose to have, and all the other riders had
to take their horses out of the stable that Dapplegrim might stand
alone and really have plenty of room.
But this did not last long, for the other people in the King’s Court
became envious of the lad, and there was no bad thing that they would
not have done to him if they had but dared. At last they bethought
themselves of telling the King that the youth had said that, if he
chose, he was quite able to rescue the Princess who had been carried
off into the mountain a long time ago by the Troll.
The King immediately summoned the lad into his presence, and said that
he had been informed that he had said that it was in his power to
rescue the Princess, so he was now to do it. If he succeeded in this,
he no doubt knew that the King had promised his daughter and half the
kingdom to anyone who set her free, which promise should be faithfully
and honourably kept, but if he failed he should be put to death. The
youth denied that he had said this, but all to no purpose, for the King
was deaf to all his words; so there was nothing to be done but say that
he would make the attempt.
He went down into the stable, and very sad and full of care he was.
Then Dapplegrim inquired why he was so troubled, and the youth told
him, and said that he did not know what to do, ‘for as to setting the
Princess free, that was downright impossible.’
‘Oh, but it might be done,’ said Dapplegrim. ‘I will help you; but you
must first have me well shod. You must ask for ten pounds of iron and
twelve pounds of steel for the shoeing, and one smith to hammer and one
to hold.’
So the youth did this, and no one said him nay. He got both the iron
and the steel, and the smiths, and thus was Dapplegrim shod strongly
and well, and when the youth went out of the King’s palace a cloud of
dust rose up behind him. But when he came to the mountain into which
the Princess had been carried, the difficulty was to ascend the
precipitous wall of rock by which he was to get on to the mountain
beyond, for the rock stood right up on end, as steep as a house side
and as smooth as a sheet of glass. The first time the youth rode at it
he got a little way up the precipice, but then both Dapplegrim’s fore
legs slipped, and down came horse and rider with a sound like thunder
among the mountains. The next time that he rode at it he got a little
farther up, but then one of Dapplegrim’s fore legs slipped, and down
they went with the sound of a landslip. But the third time Dapplegrim
said: ‘Now we must show what we can do,’ and went at it once more till
the stones sprang up sky high, and thus they got up. Then the lad rode
into the mountain cleft at full gallop and caught up the Princess on
his saddle-bow, and then out again before the Troll even had time to
stand up, and thus the Princess was set free.
When the youth returned to the palace the King was both happy and
delighted to get his daughter back again, as may easily be believed,
but somehow or other the people about the Court had so worked on him
that he was angry with the lad too. ‘ shalt have my thanks for
setting my Princess free,’ he said, when the youth came into the palace
with her, and was then about to go away.
She ought to be just as much my Princess as she is yours now, for you
are a man of your word,’ said the youth.
‘Yes, yes,’ said the King. ‘Have her thou shalt, as I have said it; but
first of all thou must make the sun shine into my palace here.’
For there was a large and high hill outside the windows which
overshadowed the palace so much that the sun could not shine in.
‘That was no part of our bargain,’ answered the youth. ‘But as nothing
that I can say will move you, I suppose I shall have to try to do my
best, for the Princess I will have.’
So he went down to Dapplegrim again and told him what the King desired,
and Dapplegrim thought that it might easily be done; but first of all
he must have new shoes, and ten pounds of iron and twelve pounds of
steel must go to the making of them, and two smiths were also
necessary, one to hammer and one to hold, and then it would be very
easy to make the sun shine into the King’s palace.
The lad asked for these things and obtained them instantly, for the
King thought that for very shame he could not refuse to give them, and
so Dapplegrim got new shoes, and they were good ones. The youth seated
himself on him, and once more they went their way, and for each hop
that Dapplegrim made, down went the hill fifteen ells into the earth,
and so they went on until there was no hill left for the King to see.
When the youth came down again to the King’s palace he asked the King
if the Princess should not at last be his, for now no one could say
that the sun was not shining into the palace. But the other people in
the palace had again stirred up the King, and he answered that the
youth should have her, and that he had never intended that he should
not; but first of all he must get her quite as good a horse to ride to
the wedding on as that which he had himself. The youth said that the
King had never told him he was to do that, and it seemed to him that he
had now really earned the Princess; but the King stuck to what he had
said, and if the youth were unable to do it he was to lose his life,
the King said. The youth went down to the stable again, and very sad
and sorrowful he was, as anyone may well imagine. Then he told
Dapplegrim that the King had now required that he should get the
Princess as good a bridal horse as that which the bridegroom had, or he
should lose his life. ‘But that will be no easy thing to do,’ said he,
‘for your equal is not to be found in all the world.’
‘Oh yes, there is one to match me,’ said Dapplegrim. ‘But it will not
be easy to get him, for he is underground. However, we will try. Now
you must go up to the King and ask for new shoes for me, and for them
we must again have ten pounds of iron, twelve pounds of steel, and two
smiths, one to hammer and one to hold, but be very particular to see
that the hooks are very sharp. And you must also ask for twelve barrels
of rye, and twelve slaughtered oxen must we have with us, and all the
twelve ox-hides with twelve hundred spikes set in each of them; all
these things must we have, likewise a barrel of tar with twelve tons of
tar in it. The youth went to the King and asked for all the things that
Dapplegrim had named, and once more, as the King thought that it would
be disgraceful to refuse them to him, he obtained them all.
So he mounted Dapplegrim and rode away from the Court, and when he had
ridden for a long, long time over hills and moors, Dapplegrim asked:
‘Do you hear anything?’
‘Yes; there is such a dreadful whistling up above in the air that I
think I am growing alarmed,’ said the youth.
‘That is all the wild birds in the forest flying about; they are sent
to stop us,’ said Dapplegrim. ‘But just cut a hole in the corn sacks,
and then they will be so busy with the corn that they will forget us.’
The youth did it. He cut holes in the corn sacks so that barley and rye
ran out on every side, and all the wild birds that were in the forest
came in such numbers that they darkened the sun. But when they caught
sight of the corn they could not refrain from it, but flew down and
began to scratch and pick at the corn and rye, and at last they began
to fight among themselves, and forgot all about the youth and
Dapplegrim, and did them no harm.
And now the youth rode onwards for a long, long time, over hill and
dale, over rocky places and morasses, and then Dapplegrim began to
listen again, and asked the youth if he heard anything now.
‘Yes; now I hear such a dreadful crackling and crashing in the forest
on every side that I think I shall be really afraid,’ said the youth.
‘That is all the wild beasts in the forest,’ said Dapplegrim; ‘they are
sent out to stop us. But just throw out the twelve carcasses of the
oxen, and they will be so much occupied with them that they will quite
forget us.’ So the youth threw out the carcasses of the oxen, and then
all the wild beasts in the forest, both bears and wolves, and lions,
and grim beasts of all kinds, came. But when they caught sight of the
carcasses of the oxen they began to fight for them till the blood
flowed, and they entirely forgot Dapplegrim and the youth.
So the youth rode onwards again, and many and many were the new scenes
they saw, for travelling on Dapplegrim’s back was not travelling
slowly, as may be imagined, and then Dapplegrim neighed.
‘Do you hear anything?’ he said.
‘Yes; I heard something like a foal neighing quite plainly a long, long
way off,’ answered the youth.
‘That’s a full-grown colt,’ said Dapplegrim, ‘if you hear it so plainly
when it is so far away from us.’
So they travelled onwards a long time, and saw one new scene after
another once more. Then Dapplegrim neighed again.
‘Do you hear anything now?’ said he.
‘Yes; now I heard it quite distinctly, and it neighed like a full-grown
horse,’ answered the youth.
‘Yes, and you will hear it again very soon,’ said Dapplegrim; ‘and then
you will hear what a voice it has.’ So they travelled on through many
more different kinds of country, and then Dapplegrim neighed for the
third time; but before he could ask the youth if he heard anything,
there was such a neighing on the other side of the heath that the youth
thought that hills and rocks would be rent in pieces.
‘Now he is here!’ said Dapplegrim. ‘Be quick, and fling over me the
ox-hides that have the spikes in them, throw the twelve tons of tar
over the field, and climb up into that great spruce fir tree. When he
comes, fire will spurt out of both his nostrils, and then the tar will
catch fire. Now mark what I say—if the flame ascends I conquer, and if
it sinks I fail; but if you see that I am winning, fling the bridle,
which you must take off me, over his head, and then he will become
quite gentle.’
Just as the youth had flung all the hides with the spikes over
Dapplegrim, and the tar over the field, and had got safely up into the
spruce fir, a horse came with flame spouting from his nostrils, and the
tar caught fire in a moment; and Dapplegrim and the horse began to
fight until the stones leapt up to the sky. They bit, and they fought
with their fore legs and their hind legs, and sometimes the youth
looked at them. And sometimes he looked at the tar, but at last the
flames began to rise, for wheresoever the strange horse bit or
wheresoever he kicked he hit upon the spikes in the hides, and at
length he had to yield. When the youth saw that, he was not long in
getting down from the tree and flinging the bridle over the horse’s
head, and then he became so tame that he might have been led by a thin
string.
This horse was dappled too, and so like Dapplegrim that no one could
distinguish the one from the other. The youth seated himself on the
dappled horse which he had captured, and rode home again to the King’s
palace, and Dapplegrim ran loose by his side. When he got there, the
King was standing outside in the courtyard.
‘Can you tell me which is the horse I have caught, and which is the one
I had before?’ said the youth. ‘If you can’t, I think your daughter is
mine.’
The King went and looked at both the dappled horses; he looked high and
he looked low, he looked before and he looked behind, but there was not
a hair’s difference between the two.
‘No,’ said the King; ‘that I cannot tell , and as thou hast
procured such a splendid bridal horse for my daughter thou shalt have
her; but first we must have one more trial, just to see if thou art
fated to have her. She shall hide herself twice, and then thou shalt
hide thyself twice. If thou canst find her each time that she hides
herself, and if she cannot find thee in thy hiding-places, then it is
fated, and thou shalt have the Princess.’
‘That, too, was not in our bargain,’ said the youth. ‘But we will make
this trial since it must be so.’
So the King’s daughter was to hide herself first.
Then she changed herself into a duck, and lay swimming in a lake that
was just outside the palace. But the youth went down into the stable
and asked Dapplegrim what she had done with herself.
‘Oh, all that you have to do is to take your gun, and go down to the
water and aim at the duck which is swimming about there, and she will
soon discover herself,’ said Dapplegrim.
The youth snatched up his gun and ran to the lake. ‘I will just have a
shot at that duck,’ said he, and began to aim at it.
‘Oh, no, dear friend, don’t shoot! It is I,’ said the Princess. So he
had found her once.
The second time the Princess changed herself into a loaf, and laid
herself on the table among four other loaves; and she was so like the
other loaves that no one could see any difference between them.
But the youth again went down to the stable to Dapplegrim, and told him
that the Princess had hidden herself again, and that he had not the
least idea what had become of her.
‘Oh, just take a very large bread-knife, sharpen it, and pretend that
you are going to cut straight through the third of the four loaves
which are lying on the kitchen table in the King’s palace—count them
from right to left—and you will soon find her,’ said Dapplegrim.
So the youth went up to the kitchen, and began to sharpen the largest
bread-knife that he could find; then he caught hold of the third loaf
on the left-hand side, and put the knife to it as if he meant to cut it
straight in two. ‘I will have a bit of this bread for myself,’ said he.
‘No, dear friend, don’t cut, it is I!’ said the Princess again; so he
had found her the second time.
And now it was his turn to go and hide himself; but Dapplegrim had
given him such good instructions that it was not easy to find him.
First he turned himself into a horse-fly, and hid himself in
Dapplegrim’s left nostril. The Princess went poking about and searching
everywhere, high and low, and wanted to go into Dapplegrim’s stall too,
but he began to bite and kick about so that she was afraid to go there,
and could not find the youth. ‘Well,’ said she, ‘as I am unable to find
you, you must show yourself; ‘whereupon the youth immediately appeared
standing there on the stable floor.
Dapplegrim told him what he was to do the second time, and he turned
himself into a lump of earth, and stuck himself between the hoof and
the shoe on Dapplegrim’s left fore foot. Once more the King’s daughter
went and sought everywhere, inside and outside, until at last she came
into the stable, and wanted to go into the stall beside Dapplegrim. So
this time he allowed her to go into it, and she peered about high and
low, but she could not look under his hoofs, for he stood much too
firmly on his legs for that, and she could not find the youth.
‘Well, you will just have to show where you are yourself, for I can’t
find you,’ said the Princess, and in an instant the youth was standing
by her side on the floor of the stable.
‘Now you are mine!’ said he to the Princess.
‘Now you can see that it is fated that she should be mine,’ he said to
the King.
‘Yes, fated it is,’ said the King. ‘So what must be, must.’
Then everything was made ready for the wedding with great splendour and
promptitude, and the youth rode to church on Dapplegrim, and the King’s
daughter on the other horse. So everyone must see that they could not
be long on their way thither.
From J. Moe.
Public-domain original text shown for study context. Underlined terms can be tapped for simple reader notes.
What happens here
Dapplegrim follows fairy-tale trials, magic helpers, promises, danger, and earned reward.
Why this scene matters
This story matters because it turns fairy-tale trials, magic helpers, promises, danger, and earned reward into a compact public-domain reading experience that is easier to understand when the plot is explained plainly first.
Characters in this scene
- Main figure: The person, animal, or symbolic figure at the center of the story.
- The problem: The pressure, temptation, danger, or misunderstanding that drives the action.
- The story world: The setting and surrounding characters that make the choice or surprise meaningful.