Black Bull of Norroway

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The Black Bull of Norroway is a fairy tale collected by Joseph Jacobs in More English Fairy Tales.[1]

The language, including references to bannocks, would indicate a Scottish teller.

It is Aarne-Thompson type 425A, the search for the lost husband. Others of this type include The King of Love, The Brown Bear of Norway, The Daughter of the Skies, East of the Sun and West of the Moon, The Enchanted Pig, The Tale of the Hoodie, Master Semolina, The Sprig of Rosemary, The Enchanted Snake, and White-Bear-King-Valemon.[2]

It was included by Andrew Lang in The Blue Fairy Book,[3] by Ruth Manning-Sanders in Scottish Folk Tales, and J. R. R. Tolkien cited it in his essay "On Fairy-Stories" as the example of a "eucatastrophe."

[edit] Synopsis

A woman's three daughters in succession ask her to cook them some food so they can go off to seek their fortune and go to a witch woman to discover how they may find it. The woman advises them to look out her back door. The first one, on the third day, saw a coach-and-six come for her; the second one, a coach-and-four; and the third, a black bull.

The daughter is terrified but goes off with the bull. When she grows hungry, he tells her to eat out of his right ear, and drink out of his left. The first night, they arrive at a castle of his old brother, where she is welcomed and given a beautiful apple and told to never break it until she came to the most terrible straits that a mortal could be in, and then it would help her. The second night, at the second brother's, she receives a beautiful pear; the third night, at the youngest brother's, a beautiful plum; and then the black bull takes her to a dark glen.

The black bull leaves her there because he must go to fight the devil. If everything about her turns blue, he has won, but if everything turns red, the devil has won. She must sit perfectly still until he returns, or he will not be able to find her again.

When everything about her turns blue, she moves because she is so happy, and the bull does not return. She sets out and, searching, finds a glass mountain. A blacksmith tells her that if she serves him for seven years, he will make her iron shoes to climb the mountain. She serves him for seven years, he makes her iron shoes, and then she climbs the mountain.

At the top, an old washerwoman tells her that whoever washed certain bloody shirts would marry the gallant young knight whose shirts they were. The washerwoman had tried, and her daughter had tried, and the shirts remained bloody. They have the stranger woman try, and the shirts became clean, but the washerwoman convinces the knight that it was her daughter.

The woman breaks the apple and finds it full of gold and jewelry. She offers it to the daughter if she will put off the wedding a day and let the woman into his room at night. The daughter agrees but gives the knight a sleeping-drink, and the woman can not wake him, though she sobs and sings:

"Seven long years I served for thee,
The glassy hill I clamb for thee,
Thy bloody clothes I wrang for thee;
And wilt thou not waken and turn to me?"

She tries the pear, and finds even richer jewelry, but it goes as before.

The next day, someone at the castle asks the knight about the noise in his room at night. He has not heard it, but he does not drink the sleeping potion and so, on the third try, when she buys her way in with the plum's jewelry, is awake to hear her.

He has the washerwoman and her daughter burnt and marries the woman.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Joseph Jacobs, More English Fairy Tales, "Black Bull of Norroway"
  2. ^ Heidi Anne Heiner, "Tales Similar to East of the Sun & West of the Moon"
  3. ^ Andrew Lang, The Blue Fairy Book, "The Black Bull of Norroway"