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The Horses of Sol and Maane
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THE HORSES OF SOL AND MAANE
[20]
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VERY long time ago there lived in the far North a man
named Mundilfare, who had two children that were famed
all the world over for their beauty and grace. The name
of the boy was Maane, and that of the girl was Sol, and
their father boasted that neither in heaven nor upon
the earth were there any beings so fair to look upon as
they, so bright of face, so firm of step, so noble in
action. Of course his boasting gained for the children
no friends, but rather stirred up envy and hatred; and
the Asa-folk, who were the mightiest people in that
country,—so mighty that they were sometimes called
gods,—planned how to get them out of the world. Had
Mundilfare been wise, he would have praised the
children of the Asa-folk and let people think as they
would about Maane and Sol.
The Asas had two horses, noble steeds as yellow as
gold and swifter than the storm-winds. They also had a
chariot made of hammered gold,
[21] in which they had stored
by a kind of magic all the sparks that flew up out of
the vast fiery region of the South. Once they harnessed
the horses to the chariot and sent them out over the
earth, driverless and without a guide, to carry light
and heat to the nations of men. But the plan was a
failure. The horses, wandering whither they pleased,
did not serve all parts of the world alike. Some lands
were almost burned up with the intense heat that was
given out from the car; others were not visited at all,
and the people who lived there perished in the cold and
the darkness. And so the Asas were upon the point of
giving up the scheme entirely; for, although under
ordinary circumstances, as in the din of battle or in
the roar of the storm, they were the bravest of the
brave, yet none of them dared try to drive the golden
steeds and the burning chariot. Then one of the wisest
among them proposed a plan by which they might kill two
birds with one stone, and at the same time bring great
honor to themselves.
"This fair maiden Sol and her pale-faced brother
Maane," said he, "are, as everybody knows, skilled in
the management of horses. Now, let us put the girl into
the burning chariot,
[22] with the shield Swalin in one
hand, and the long, stout reins in the other, and let
it be her duty to guide the fiery steeds through the
pathway of the skies, favoring all men alike. And let
us do likewise with the boy, giving him charge of the
feebler team and the silvery chariot, which have stood
idle these many years because none of us knew what to
do with them. Thus we shall rid ourselves of the
hateful boastings of this fellow Mundilfare, and shall
confer blessings not a few upon all mankind."
No sooner was this proposition made than all the
Asa-folk gladly agreed to it. They took the two
children from their homes, and imposed upon each the
wearisome task that had been suggested. To Sol they
gave the burning chariot, which was henceforth called
the sun-car, and to Maane they assigned the silvery
car that carried the moon. When fair Sol ascended to
her place and took the long golden reins in her hands,
the fiery steeds, of whom even the bold Asas were
afraid, leaped up into the sky and, under her firm and
gentle guidance, journeyed whithersoever she wished.
And she named them Arvak and Alswin because they were
ever wakeful and as swift as eagles on the wing. But
the sparks which flew from the
fast- [23] turning axle of
the sun-car were exceedingly hot and dazzling, and the
steeds and their fair driver would have been burned up
had not the cool shield Swalin reflected back the heat
and sheltered them from the blinding light; nor,
indeed, would the horses have been safe even then, had
not the Asas hung upon their necks two wind-bags that
blew cooling breezes about them all day long and kept
them ever fresh and vigorous.
Maane's team was a very gentle one, and he had no
trouble in guiding it wherever he wished; and his
chariot gave out no heat, but only a soft, silvery
light which everybody, and especially children, loved
to look upon. Now and then some child who had been very
good, or some silver-headed man or sweet-voiced lady,
would catch a glimpse of Maane's beautiful face; but it
was not often. Once upon a time two children named Juke
and Bil—or, as you have it in English, Jack and Jill—went
up to their father's well to fetch a pail of
water; and the pail was hung from a long pole which
they carried on their shoulders. Looking up at the
round full moon sailing in the sky, they saw the bright
charioteer, and were so charmed by his lovely face that
they forgot
[24] all about their errand and thought only of
the fair vision in the sky above them. And so,
wherever Maane drove his team, there they went also,
careless of their burden and thoughtless of the bumps
and falls which they got in running after the moon.
Maane, who had been watching them all the time, was
touched by their devotion to him, and finally, after
they had wandered very far from home, he drove his team
close down to the earth and lifted them into the car
beside him. And now, any bright night when the moon is
full, you may see Jack and Jill in it, with the pole
lying on their shoulders and the pail of water still
hanging below it; for they never, never tire of
admiring the beauty of their master's face.
The life of Sol and Maane was not an unhappy one, for
they loved the horses which they guided, the one daily,
the other nightly, over the vaulted blue roof of the
sky. There was not much that happened anywhere on the
earth without one or the other of them seeing it. For
when Sol sank to rest in the great sea, or drove her
fiery steeds down behind the western hills, Maane would
start out with his feebler team and drive silently
onward among the clouds and the troops of stars—silently
lest he should waken the sleeping earth.
[25] But his sleek-coated horses were never able to keep
pace with Arvak the ever-wakeful, and Alswin the
eagle-chaser, which drew his sister's car; and so, even
if they started together, he was sure to fall steadily
behind, little by little, every day, until at the end
of four weeks Sol would gain upon him one entire trip.
Then, when she passed him in her swift car, he would
hide his face in his long cloak because of the dazzling
sunlight, and the two would begin the race over again.
But it always ended the same way: Sol would make
twenty-eight trips to Maane's twenty-seven.
But by and by, when the Asas had been almost forgotten,
a wise man came into the world, who spent all his time
in looking at things through a glass, and in writing
long rows of figures in a little book, and in putting
everything at right angles on shelves instead of
letting them lie around loose. He looked at the sun-car
and the moon-car through his glass, and declared that
he saw neither horses nor drivers, nor indeed any
wagons, but only the sun and moon. But there is no
wonder that he did not see them, for his eyes were not
of the right kind, nor his heart either, for that
matter. Then he set out to prove
[26] by figures that the
sun always stands in the same place, and that the moon
is too big to be put into a wagon of any kind; and,
after much talking, he succeeded in making a great many
people think that he knew more about such things than
did the charioteers themselves, or even the Asa-folk,
who had started the whole affair. Of course Sol and
Maane did not care to stay in the business after they
found that the world was losing
faith in them, and so they went into retirement, as
people would say nowadays—that is, they turned their
steeds about and drove their chariots into the safe and
pleasant country of Fairyland, where all such creations
of the fancy find refuge.
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