Folklore of the Santal Parganas eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 578 pages of information about Folklore of the Santal Parganas.

Folklore of the Santal Parganas eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 578 pages of information about Folklore of the Santal Parganas.

A month afterwards the other brothers came home and asked if all had gone well in their absence.  Their wives said that all was well except that the youngest brother had unfortunately disappeared without leaving any trace.  While they were talking the dog came up and fawned on the brothers, so they asked where it had come from and the women said that it had followed them home on the day that they were looking for the missing boy:  and they had kept it ever since.  So matters rested:  the brothers searched high and low but could not find the missing boy and so gave up the quest.

Now the Raja of that country had three daughters whom he had tried in vain to get married:  whenever a bridegroom was proposed to them they declared that he was not to their liking and they would have nothing to do with him.  At last their father said that as they would not let him choose husbands for them, they must make the choice themselves:  he proposed to assemble all the men in his kingdom on a certain day and there and then they must take to themselves husbands.

So proclamation was made that all the men were to assemble outside the palace and that three of them would receive the Raja’s daughters in marriage without having to pay any brideprice.  On the fixed day a great crowd collected and among others went the six brothers:  and the dog followed them.  Then the three princesses were brought out and three flies were caught:  round one fly was tied a piece of white thread for the eldest princess and round the second fly a red thread for the second princess:  and round the last fly a blue thread for the youngest princess.  Then the three princesses solemnly promised that each would marry the man on whom the fly marked with her colour settled, and the flies were let loose.  The red fly and the blue fly soon settled on two of the men sitting in the crowd but the white fly flew high in the air and circled round and at last settled on the dog which was sitting beside the six brothers.

At this the crowd laughed and jeered but the eldest princess said that she must accept what fate had decreed and that she would marry the dog.  So the betrothal ceremony of the three princesses took place at once, soon followed by their weddings.  The husbands of the two youngest princesses took their brides home, but the eldest princess stayed in her father’s house with her dog.

One day after its dinner the dog was lying on its side asleep and the princess chanced to see the heads of the iron nails in its feet:  “Ah,” thought she, “that is why the poor dog limps.”  So she ran and fetched a pair of pincers and pulled out the nails:  no sooner had she done so than the dog was restored to its human shape and the princess was delighted to find that not only was he a man but also very handsome:  and they settled down to live happily together.

Some months later the six brothers resolved to go and visit the Raja, so that the princess might not feel that the dog she had married had no friends in the world.  Off they set and when they reached the Raja’s palace they were amazed to find their younger brother and still more so when they heard the story of all that had happened to him.

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Project Gutenberg
Folklore of the Santal Parganas from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.