Adventures of a Boy
Adventures of a Boy is the title of an Azeri folktale first collected in Russian language in the early 20th century.
It is related, in the international Aarne-Thompson-Uther Index, to tale type ATU 314, "Goldener", in that a boy and his friend horse escape from an attempt on their lives by the boy's parents, either on the boy or on the animal, and later he takes up a job as a king's gardener.
Summary
First version
In an Azeri tale titled "Приключения мальчика", first collected in Nukha and published in 1904, a woman has a son and a foal who are very close friends. However, their close proximity drives the boy apart from his studies and even work. Intent on ending their friendship, the woman calls for a doctor and confides in him that she will pretend to be ill, and the doctor must prescribe as a cure foal meat.It happens thus: the woman's husband is told by the doctor that only the foal's meat can cure her, and goes to talk to their son about killing his pet horse. The boy goes to talk to the foal and explain it the situation. The foal then begins to talk and advises the boy to go to his lesson, then come back home and ask his father for a last ride; the boy then must hold tight to the horse's body and whip it hard.
The boy follows the horse's plan, and both ride away from his parents' house and into the forest. He hears a loud roar: it is a tiger who has devoured a deer, but its antlers were stuck in the tiger jaw. The boy cuts off the deer's antlers to help the tiger, and the feline, in gratitude, lets him have one of its cubs. The same thing happens to a lion further ahead: the boy cuts off the deer's antlers from the lion's maw and, in gratitude, the lion gives him one of its cubs.
Later, the boy and the feline cubs arrive at a city. The cubs tell the boy to let the horse with them for safekeeping, while he goes to the city to finds a job, and, should he need the cubs' help, he has but to clap his hands. The boy follows their advice and finds a job as the local king's gardener. One day, he summons the cubs, who bring with them the foal, and instructs them to dig out the garden for him, while he rides his horse for a while. These events are witnessed by the king's youngest daughter, who falls in love with the gardener.
Some time later, the princesses send three melons of different states of ripeness to their father, as analogy for their marriageability. His viziers correctly interpret the princesses' intention, and the king orders for all youth in the city to assemble in a crowd, for the princesses will throw apples to their suitors of choice. During the occasion, the elder princess throws hers to the son of the head vizier, the middle one to a nobleman's son, while the youngest withhold hers. The king then asks if there is any person who is not present at the gathering, and is told of the lowly gardener boy. The gardener is brought forth, and the youngest princess throws him her apple, to the king's consternation. The monarch insists his daughter repeats the action: she avoids any other suitor, save for the gardener, to whom she throws her apple.
The king celebrates his elder daughters' marriages, while the gardener takes the princess to a shack near the garden. Later, the king falls ill, and the royal doctors say that only deer meat may cure him. His two sons-in-law go on the hunt, and the gardener asks his wife if her father can get him a horse. The princess goes to talk to her father, but he, still furious at her choice of husband, rebuff her. Despite the setback, the gardener summons his cubs and his horse friend, and they ride away to hunt.
The boy orders the cubs to drive all the animals to a single spot in a gorge for a better hunt. Suddenly, he sights his brothers-in-law coming. The men ask for some carcasses, and boy agrees to give them some. as he slaughters them the deer, he declares that the taste should go to the head and legs of the animal. The brothers-in-law bring back the deer meat and their wives prepare a meal for their ailing father. The king eats their dishes, which are tasteless, and does not get better. The youngest princess, however, brings him a meal made of the deer's head and legs, and the king's health improves.
Some time later, the king gets word that a neighbouring king is poised to attack his city, and marches with his army to defend his kingdom. However, the enemy army overpowers his, until a mysterious knight appears in the battlefield accompanied by two animals, a tiger and a lion. The knight destroys the enemy army. The king goes to meet his strange saviour and notices a wound on his arm, so he takes off a handkerchief and bandages his hand, then returns to the city.
The next day, the king summons the people for a celebratory feast, and hopes he can see the mysterious knight who saved him. Among the guests, however, he cannot see anyone with a hand injury, and asks if everyone is at the feast. The guards inform that the gardener is missing, so he is also brought to the celebration. When the people wash their hands before eating their meal, the king notices the handkerchief and the wound on the gardener's hand, realizing he was the warrior at the battlefield. The monarch then gives his approval to his youngest daughter and appoints him as his heir.
Second version
In an Azeri tale published by Azeri folklorist with the title "Похождения мальчика", first collected in 1930, from a source in Nakhkray, a boy is very devoted to his friend, the horse, much to his mother's chagrin. She decides to apart the boy from the horse once and for all, by feigning illness and asking for horse meat as cure. The boy confides in the horse, which talks in a human voice that his father will sacrifice it, and hatches a plan with the boy: the boy is to come home from school, when he will hear the horse neighing for him; the boy is to ask for a ride, and, by whipping it, they will run off to any other place. It happens so: the boy and the horse ride away to another kingdom. On his journey, the boy saves a tiger and a lion from choking on their food, and in return they give the boy one of their cubs as companions. The retinue goes along the road; the cubs agree to look after the boy's horse while the human goes to look for a job in the city. The boy hires himself as apprentice to the royal gardener. One day, he summons his animal friends by clapping and rides around the garden - a scene that is seen by the king's youngest princess. The next day, the princesses deliver some melons to their father as a metaphor for their marriageability, and a suitor selection test is prepared for them: the princesses are to throw apples at their intended suitors. The elder throws her to the vizier's son, the middle one to the vekil's son, and the youngest to the gardener's apprentice. The youngest princess repeats the action and confirms her choice, to the king's disgust, who banishes her from the palace. Some time later, the king falls ill, and only deer meat can cure him. The three sons-in-law ride off to find deer meat, and the boy, with the aid of his animal companions, catches the best meat to give to the king. Lastly, war erupts, and the king rides to battle. When his army is surrounded, the boy appears with the tiger and the lion and defeats the enemy army. He is injured in the left hand, and the king bandages him. At the end of the tale, the king prepares a grand celebratory feast and invites every person, and those that do not come are to be taken to the feast. The gardener's apprentice is taken to the banquet and, when he washes his hands, the king realizes he was the warrior at the battlefield. The compiler classified the tale as types 554 and 314, and listed it as a variant of the first version.Analysis
Tale type
In a review of Zeynalli's publication, Russian scholar, who developed the first East Slavic Folktale Classification in 1929, classified the tale as type 532, "Neznaika".Azerbaijani scholarship classifies the tale in the Azerbaijani Folktale Index as Azerbaijani type 532, "Ağ atlı oğlan". In the Azerbaijani type, the hero's stepmother feigns illness and wants to kill the horse; the hero asks for a last ride on the horse and both escape to another kingdom; on the road, the hero helps some animals and gains their help; in the distant kingdom, the hero defeats an entire army and is recognized by his dressed wound. However, in the international Aarne-Thompson-Uther Index, the tale is classified as type ATU 314, "Goldener": a youth with golden hair works as the king's gardener. The type may also open with the prince for some reason being the servant of an evil being, where he gains the same gifts, and the tale proceeds as in this variant. Furthermore, German folklorist Hans-Jörg Uther, in his 2004 revision of the international tale type index, subsumed type AaTh 532 under a new tale type, ATU 314, "Goldener", due to "its similar structure and content".
Introductory episodes
Scholarship notes three different opening episodes to the tale type: the hero becomes a magician's servant and is forbidden to open a certain door, but he does and dips his hair in a pool of gold; the hero is persecuted by his stepmother, but his loyal horse warns him and later they both flee; the hero is given to the magician as payment for the magician's help with his parents' infertility problem. Folklorist Christine Goldberg, in Enzyklopädie des Märchens, related the second opening to former tale type AaTh 532, "The Helpful Horse ", wherein the hero is persecuted by his stepmother and flees from home with his horse.American folklorist Barre Toelken recognized the spread of the tale type across Northern, Eastern and Southern Europe, but identified three subtypes: one that appears in Europe, wherein the protagonist becomes the servant to a magical person, finds the talking horse and discovers his benefactor's true evil nature, and acquires a golden colour on some part of his body; a second narrative, found in Greece, Turkey, Caucasus, Uzbekistan and Northern India, where the protagonist is born through the use of a magical fruit; and a third one. According to Toelken, this Subtype 2 is "the oldest", being found "in Southern Siberia, Iran, the Arabian countries, Mediterranean, Hungary and Poland". In this subtype, the hero and the foal are born at the same time and become friends, but their lives are at stake when the hero's mother asks for the horse's vital organ, which motivates their flight from their homeland to another kingdom.
Motifs
A motif that appears in tale type 314 is the hero having to find a cure for the ailing king, often the milk of a certain animal. According to scholar Erika Taube, this motif occurs in tales from North Africa to East Asia, even among Persian- and Arabic-speaking peoples.Professor Anna Birgitta Rooth stated that the motif of the stepmother's persecution of the hero appears in tale type 314 in variants from Slavonic, Eastern European and Near Eastern regions. She also connected this motif to part of the Cinderella cycle, in a variation involving a male hero and his cow.