Section 1
The Dragon and his Grandmother explained simply
The Dragon and his Grandmother by Andrew Lang
Original excerpt
Excerpt preview
There was once a great war, and the King had a great many soldiers, but he gave them so little pay that they could not live upon it. Then three of them took counsel together and determined to desert.
Read full original text in reading mode
Public-domain original
There was once a great war, and the King had a great many soldiers, but
he gave them so little pay that they could not live upon it. Then three
of them took counsel together and determined to desert.
One of them said to the others, ’If we are caught, we shall be hanged
on the gallows; how shall we set about it?’ The other said, ’Do you see
that large cornfield there? If we were to hide ourselves in that, no
one could find us. The army cannot come into it, and to-morrow it is to
march on.’
They crept into the corn, but the army did not march on, but remained
encamped close around them. They sat for two days and two nights in
the corn, and grew so hungry that they nearly died; but if they were to
venture out, it was certain death.
They said at last, ’What use was it our deserting? We must perish here
miserably.’
Whilst they were speaking a fiery dragon came flying through the air. It
hovered near them, and asked why they were hidden there.
They answered, ’We are three soldiers, and have deserted because our pay
was so small. Now if we remain here we shall die of hunger, and if we
move out we shall be strung up on the gallows.’
’If you will serve me for seven years,’ said the dragon, I will lead you
through the midst of the army so that no one shall catch you.’ ’We have
no choice, and must take your offer,’ said they. Then the dragon seized
them in his claws, took them through the air over the army, and set them
down on the earth a long way from it.
He gave them a little whip, saying, ’Whip and slash with this, and as
much money as you want will jump up before you. You can then live as
great lords, keep horses, and drive about in carriages. But after seven
years you are mine.’ Then he put a book before them, which he made all
three of them sign. ’I will then give you a riddle,’ he said; ’if you
guess it, you shall be free and out of my power.’ The dragon then flew
away, and they journeyed on with their little whip. They had as much
money as they wanted, wore grand clothes, and made their way into the
world. Wherever they went they lived in merrymaking and splendour, drove
about with horses and carriages, ate and drank, but did nothing wrong.
The time passed quickly away, and when the seven years were nearly ended
two of them grew terribly anxious and frightened, but the third
made light of it, saying, ’Don’t be afraid, brothers, I wasn’t born
yesterday; I will guess the riddle.’
They went into a field, sat down, and the two pulled long faces. An old
woman passed by, and asked them why they were so sad. ’Alas! what have
you to do with it? You cannot help us.’ ’Who knows?’ she answered. ’Only
confide your trouble in me.’
Then they told her that they had become the servants of the Dragon for
seven long years, and how he had given them money as plentifully as
blackberries; but as they had signed their names they were his, unless
when the seven years had passed they could guess a riddle. The old woman
said, ’If you would help yourselves, one of you must go into the wood,
and there he will come upon a tumble-down building of rocks which looks
like a little house. He must go in, and there he will find help.’
The two melancholy ones thought, ’That won’t save us!’ and they remained
where they were. But the third and merry one jumped up and went into the
wood till he found the rock hut. In the hut sat a very old woman, who
was the Dragon’s grandmother. She asked him how he came, and what was
his business there. He told her all that happened, and because she was
pleased with him she took compassion on him, and said she would help
him.
She lifted up a large stone which lay over the cellar, saying, ’Hide
yourself there; you can hear all that is spoken in this room. Only sit
still and don’t stir. When the Dragon comes, I will ask him what the
riddle is, for he tells me everything; then listen carefully what he
answers.’
At midnight the Dragon flew in, and asked for his supper. His
grandmother laid the table, and brought out food and drink till he was
satisfied, and they ate and drank together. Then in the course of the
conversation she asked him what he had done in the day, and how many
souls he had conquered.
’I haven’t had much luck to-day,’ he said, ’but I have a tight hold on
three soldiers.’
’Indeed! three soldiers!’ said she. ’Who cannot escape you?’
’They are mine,’ answered the Dragon scornfully, ’for I shall only give
them one riddle which they will never be able to guess.’
’What sort of a riddle is it?’ she asked.
’I will tell you this. In the North Sea lies a dead sea-cat—that shall
be their roast meat; and the rib of a whale—that shall be their
silver spoon; and the hollow foot of a dead horse—that shall be their
wineglass.’
When the Dragon had gone to bed, his old grandmother pulled up the stone
and let out the soldier.
’Did you pay attention to everything?’
’Yes,’ he replied, ’I know enough, and can help myself splendidly.’
Then he went by another way through the window secretly, and in all
haste back to his comrades. He told them how the Dragon had been
outwitted by his grandmother, and how he had heard from his own lips the
answer to the riddle.
Then they were all delighted and in high spirits, took out their whip,
and cracked so much money that it came jumping up from the ground.
When the seven years had quite gone, the Fiend came with his book, and,
pointing at the signatures, said, ’I will take you underground with me;
you shall have a meal there. If you can tell me what you will get for
your roast meat, you shall be free, and shall also keep the whip.’
Then said the first soldier, ’In the North Sea lies a dead sea-cat; that
shall be the roast meat.’
The Dragon was much annoyed, and hummed and hawed a good deal, and asked
the second, ’But what shall be your spoon?’
’The rib of a whale shall be our silver spoon.’
The Dragon-made a face, and growled again three times, ’Hum, hum, hum,’
and said to the third, ’Do you know what your wineglass shall be?’
’An old horse’s hoof shall be our wineglass.’
Then the Dragon flew away with a loud shriek, and had no more power over
them. But the three soldiers took the little whip, whipped as much money
as they wanted, and lived happily to their lives end.
Public-domain original text shown for study context.
What happens here
The Dragon and his Grandmother tells a compact fairy-tale episode about magic, promises, cleverness, danger, courage, and wonder. The story builds around a problem, a test, and a turn that makes the lesson memorable.
Why this scene matters
This tale matters because it preserves a public-domain folk-story pattern in a short readable form. The simple version helps readers follow the action before returning to the original wording.
Characters in this scene
- Hero or central figure: The character whose choice or problem drives The Dragon and his Grandmother.
- Helper or opponent: A person, creature, or force that tests, guides, tricks, or blocks the central figure.
- Story world: The magical or social setting that makes the lesson easier to see.