Fantasies are a part of every culture. They go by different names, including folklore and fairy tales, and the manner in which they are told are reflective of the daily lives and mythologies of the societies from which these stories come. This one is a relatively modern Greek fairy tale and deals in the pleasures and treasures of the times in which it was first told.
Fantasies are a part of every culture. They go by different names, including folklore and fairy tales, and the manner in which they are told are reflective of the daily lives and mythologies of the societies from which these stories come. This one is a relatively modern Greek fairy tale and deals in the pleasures and treasures of the times in which it was first told.
THE FAIRY GARDENS
UNCLE KOSTAS, as everyone called him, had once been a prisoner of the fairies. He would sit stiffly down upon a stone and lean upon the tall, shepherd's staff which he always carried, to recount his story.
"Look," he would begin. "Do you see those hills yonder? They are the Hills of the Dragons...”
Many, many years ago Kostas was resting at noon beside a spring under the shadow of a pine in one of the Dragonorahes, Dragon Hills, after eating his bread and cheese. He closed his eyes for a little while and when he opened them, there were fairies dancing all around him in the air. He knew that he was handsome, handsome enough to tempt them to carry him away, but since he had his gun with him he thought himself safe.
Some of the fairies were singing, others were playing their flutes, and all would pause now and then to ask Kostas to play his flute and dance with them. Pointing to his gun, he shook his head and even though they were angry they dared not harm him. Suddenly the music and the dancing ceased. The fairies whispered together a moment and then disappeared like a cobweb that is brushed away.
Kostas was about to go back to his sheep, grazing lower down on the hillside, but he was unable to move, even to stretch out his hand. Then the fairies were back again and this time their queen was with them, riding on a great white horse. Around her were a thousand fairies on white horses and others kept coming and coming until the Dragonorahe was covered with them.
"Does he please you?" one asked the queen.
"Will you have him?" asked another.
"He is powerless now," said a third. "Shall we take him?"
The queen looked down at him thoughtfully for a long time. Then she smiled, lifted her wand and cried, "I shall have him! He is beautiful! Let us bring him with us!"
Servant fairies caught up Kostas and darted away with him as fast as an eagle flies. The queen with the thousand fairies on horseback followed and after them came the thousands and thousands of others, all in white, all dancing around and around as they swept forward.
"Here you must stay
For a year and a day,
And never, oh never,
Will you wish to go away."
sang the queen to her new prisoner and all the fairies echoed softly,
"And never, oh never,
Will you wish to go away."
Looking about him, Kostas saw that he was in a paradise! There were gardens everywhere, each with flowers of a different color. One garden was white, one yellow, one purple, then green, rose and blue, with many shades of each, so that they all blended together like the bars of a magnificent rainbow. In the center was a lake, mirror-like, upon which an island appeared to float. So clear was the water that one could see to the bottom which was studded with emeralds. Upon the surface, like great bubbles, diamonds, rubies and sapphires moved with the slow current.
There were as many kinds of fruit trees on the island as there were flower gardens around the lake. Figs, pears and olives, peaches and plums, as well as grapes heavy upon their vines, hung in tempting profusion. The fruit would fall to the ground when it was ripe and if no one ate it, it would harden into a jewel of the shape and color of the fruit.
But Kostas, alone of all those thousands, was not happy. He enjoyed living in that paradise, but he could never forget his home and his sweetheart Christena, and he longed to go back. Then he would think of the queen. He thought she cared a great deal for him, more, perhaps, than for any of the other youths. He remembered her song:
For a year and a day,
And never, oh never,
Will you wish to go away."
Click to enlarge
In the lake one saw mermaids with fairy faces.
"I must wait," he told himself again and again. "I must wait for a year and a day."
Finally the time passed. Kostas went to the queen, bowed very humbly and said:
"Here did I stay
For a year and a day,
But always and always
I've wished to go away."
Then he told her how, even though she was so beautiful and everything was so lovely, he desired above all to go home to his sweetheart Christena. The queen did not answer immediately, and he waited in anguish on his knees with his head bowed to the ground.
"Kostas," she said at last, "will you do anything I ask you?"
"Anything!" he cried, starting up eagerly.
Hopefully, Kostas began his search in the gardens, but though he looked carefully among all the vari-colored flower beds, he found nothing. Going to the island, he searched anxiously beneath all the fruit trees and even scanned their branches, but the vase was not there. It was now almost noon.
He walked to the shore and stood looking hopelessly into the water, thinking how far he was from his desire. A strange fish, all gold and blue, appeared swimming toward him. But no, it was not a fish. It was a vase, gold set with turquoise!
Kostas seized it and held it up joyfully. The lining! He was almost afraid to look. There it was, the fine gold hair, and there was something else, more precious to him than hair or jewels or gold. It was the shepherd's clothes that he had worn when the fairies carried him away. He knew then that the queen meant to let him go. Quickly exchanging the fairy garments for the old loose cloak and short, full skirt of the shepherd, he returned to the queen and laid the vase before her, just as the sun reached the meridian.
"You may go back to your home and your sweetheart," she said, "and you may take with you a strand of the hair lining the vase. It is my hair, and if you should ever wish to return to the fairy gardens, you have only to show it to the fairies and they will bring you back."
Kostas thanked her many times and arose. There was a beautiful white horse with a golden tail and mane and a human face, to carry him, and three fairy princesses with red caps, to show him the way.
Through the golden gate, through the long, dark passage, through the snow-fringed opening in the mountain and over the hills they flew until they reached the spring on the Dragonorahe. There the fairies left him, just where he had been a year and a day before.
Muchas gracias, many thanks for visiting and making this blog possible. Have a wonderful day. I hope you all enjoy my new post on the Fairy Gardens. It has been on of my favorite and thought I would share a different version. With love to you all from me, The Fairy Lady
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