Once there was a farmer with two sons. One morning he
said to them, “Boys, you’re old enough now to marry. But in our family,
we have our own way to choose a bride.”
The younger son listened respectfully, but the older
one said, “You’ve told us, Father. We must each cut down a tree and see
where it points.”
“That’s right,” said the farmer. “Then walk that way
till you find a sweetheart. That’s how we’ve done it, and that’s how we
always will.”
Now, the older son already knew who he wanted to
marry. He also knew how to cut a tree so it fell how he wanted. So, his
tree fell and pointed to the farm where his sweetheart lived.
The younger son, whose name was Mikko, didn’t have a
sweetheart, but he thought he’d try his luck in the town. Well, maybe
he cut the tree wrong, or maybe it had thoughts of its own, but it fell
pointing to the forest.
“Good job, Mikko!” his brother mocked. “What
sweetheart will you find there? A wolf or a fox?”
“Never mind,” said Mikko. “I’ll find who I find.”
The two young men went their ways. Mikko walked
through the forest for hours without seeing a soul. But at last he came
to a cottage deep in the woods.
“I knew I’d find a sweetheart!” said Mikko. But when
he went inside, he saw no one.
“All this way for nothing,” he said sadly.
“Maybe not!” came a tiny voice.
Mikko looked around, but the only living thing in
sight was a little mouse on a table. Standing on its hind legs, it gazed
at him with large, bright eyes.
“Did you say something?” he asked it.
“Of course I did! Now, why don’t you tell me your
name and what you came for?”
Mikko had never talked with a mouse, but he felt it
only polite to reply. “My name is Mikko, and I’ve come looking for a
sweetheart.”
The mouse squealed in delight. “Why, Mikko, I’ll
gladly be your sweetheart!”
“But you’re only a mouse,” said Mikko.
“That may be true,” she said, “but I can still love
you faithfully. Besides, even a mouse can be special! Come feel my fur.”
With one finger, Mikko stroked the mouse’s back.
“Why, it feels like velvet! Just like the gown of a princess!”
“That’s right, Mikko.” And as he petted her, she
sang to him prettily.
“Mikko’s sweetheart will I be.
What a fine young man is he!
Gown of velvet I do wear,
Like a princess fine and rare.”
Mikko looked into those large, bright eyes and
thought she really was quite nice, for a mouse. And since he’d found no
one else anyway, he said, “All right, little mouse, you can be my
sweetheart.”
“Oh, Mikko!” she said happily. “I promise you won’t
be sorry.”
Mikko wasn’t so sure, but he just stroked her fur
and smiled.
When Mikko got home, his brother was already there
boasting to their father. “My sweetheart has rosy red cheeks and long
golden hair.”
“Sounds very nice,” said the farmer. “And what about
yours, Mikko?”
“Yes, Mikko,” said his brother, laughing. “Did you
find a sweetheart with a nice fur coat?”
Now, Mikko didn’t want to admit his sweetheart was a
mouse. So he said, “Mine wears a velvet gown, like a princess!”
His brother stopped laughing.
“Well!” said the farmer. “It sounds like Mikko’s
tree pointed a good way too! But now I must test both your sweethearts.
Tomorrow you’ll ask them to weave you some cloth, then you’ll bring it
home to me. That’s how we’ve done it, and that’s how we always will.”
They started out early next morning. When Mikko
reached the cottage in the woods, there was the little mouse on the
table. She jumped up and down and clapped her tiny paws.
“Oh, Mikko, I’m so glad you’re here! Is this the day
of our wedding?”
Mikko gently stroked her fur. “Not yet, little
mouse,” he said glumly.
“Why, Mikko, you look so sad! What’s wrong?”
“My father wants you to weave some cloth. But how
can you do that? You’re only a mouse!”
“That may be true,” she said, “but I’m also your
sweetheart, and surely Mikko’s sweetheart can weave! But you must be
tired from your walk. Why don’t you rest while I work?”
“All right,” said Mikko, yawning. He lay down on a
bed in the corner, and the little mouse sang him a pretty lullaby.
“Mikko’s sweetheart will I be.
What a fine young man is he!
Cloth of linen I will weave.
I’ll be done when he must leave.”
When the little mouse was sure that Mikko was
asleep, she picked up a sleigh bell on a cord and rang it. Out of
mouseholes all around the room poured hundreds of mice. They all stood
before the table, gazing up at her.
“Hurry!” she said. “Each of you, fetch a strand of
the finest flax.”
The mice rushed from the cottage—then one, two,
three, and back they were, each with a strand of flax.
First they spun it into yarn on the spinning wheel. Whirr.
Whirr. Whirr. Some worked the pedal, some fed the flax, some rode
around with the wheel.
Then they strung the yarn on the loom and wove it
into cloth. Swish. Thunk. Swish. Thunk. Swish. Thunk. Some worked
the pedals, some rocked the beater, some sailed the shuttle back and
forth.
At last they cut the cloth from the loom and tucked
it in a nutshell.
“Now, off with you!” said the little mouse, and they
all scampered back to their mouseholes. Then she called, “Mikko, wake
up! It’s time to go home! And here is something for your father.”
Mikko sleepily took the nutshell. He didn’t know why
his father should want such a thing, but he said, “Thank you, little
mouse.”
When he got home, his brother was proudly presenting
the cloth from his sweetheart. The farmer looked it over and said,
“Strong and fairly even. Good enough for simple folks like us. And where
is yours, Mikko?”
Mikko blushed and handed him the nutshell.
“Look at that!” said his brother. “Mikko asked for
cloth, and his sweetheart gave him a nut!”
But the farmer opened the nutshell and peered
inside. Then he pinched at something and started to pull. Out came
linen, fine beyond belief. It kept coming too, yard after yard after
yard.
Mikko’s brother gaped with open mouth, and Mikko did
too!
“There can be no better weaver than Mikko’s
sweetheart!” declared the farmer. “But both your sweethearts will do
just fine. Tomorrow you’ll bring them home for the wedding. That’s how
we’ve done it, and that’s how we always will.”
When Mikko arrived at the cottage next morning, the
little mouse again jumped up and down. “Oh, Mikko, is this the day of
our wedding?”
“It is, little mouse.” But he sounded more glum than
ever.
“Why, Mikko, what’s wrong?”
“How can I bring home a mouse to marry? My brother
and father and all our friends and neighbors will laugh and think I’m a
fool!”
“They might think so, indeed,” she said
softly. “But, Mikko, what do you think?”
Mikko looked at the little mouse, gazing at him so
seriously with her large, bright eyes. He thought about how she loved
him and cared for him.
“I think you’re as sweet as any sweetheart could be.
So let them laugh and think what they like. Today you’ll be my bride.”
“Oh, Mikko, you’ve made me the happiest mouse in the
world!”
She rang her sleigh bell, and to Mikko’s
astonishment, a little carriage raced into the room. It was made from a
nutshell and pulled by four black rats. A mouse coachman sat in front,
and a mouse footman behind.
“Mikko,” said the little mouse, “aren’t you going to
help me down?”
Mikko lifted her from the table and set her in the
carriage. The rats took off and the carriage sped from the cottage, so
that Mikko had to rush to catch up.
While he hurried along behind her, the little mouse
sang a pretty song.
“Mikko’s sweetheart will I be.
What a fine young man is he!
In a carriage I will ride
When I go to be his bride.”
At last they reached the farm and then the spot for
the wedding, on the bank of a lovely, swift-flowing stream. The guests
were already there enjoying themselves. But as Mikko came up, they all
grew silent and stared at the little carriage.
Mikko’s brother stood with his bride, gaping in
disbelief. Mikko and the little mouse went up to him.
“That’s the stupidest thing I ever saw,” said his
brother, and with one quick kick, sent the carriage, the rats, and the
mice, all into the stream. Before Mikko could do a thing, the current
bore them away.
“What have you done!” cried Mikko. “You’ve killed my
sweetheart!”
“Are you crazy?” said his brother. “That was only a
mouse!”
“She may have been a mouse,” said Mikko tearfully,
“but she was also my sweetheart, and I really did love her!”
He was about to swing at his brother, when his
father called, “Mikko, look!”
All the guests were staring downstream and pointing
and crying out in wonder. Mikko turned and to his amazement saw four
black horses pulling a carriage out of the stream. A coachman sat in
front and a footman behind, and inside was a soaked but lovely princess
in a gown of pearly velvet.
The carriage rode up along the bank and stopped
right before him. “Mikko,” said the princess, “aren’t you going to help
me down?”
Mikko stared blankly a moment, and then his eyes
flew wide. “Are you the little mouse?”
“I surely was,” said the princess, laughing, “but no
longer. A witch enchanted me, and the spell could be broken only by one
brother who wanted to marry me and another who wanted to kill me. But,
sweetheart, I need a change of clothes. I can’t be wet at our wedding!”
And a grand wedding it was, with Mikko’s bride the
wonder of all. The farmer could hardly stop looking at her. Of course,
Mikko’s brother was a bit jealous, but his own bride was really quite
nice, so he couldn’t feel too bad.
The next day, the princess brought Mikko back to her
cottage—but it was a cottage no longer! It was a castle with hundreds
of servants, and there they made their home happily.
And if Mikko and the princess had any sons, you know
just how they chose their brides.
About the Story
My retelling is based mostly on “The Forest Bride,” in Mighty
Mikko: A Book of Finnish Fairy Tales and Folk Tales, by Parker
Fillmore, Harcourt Brace, New York, 1922. Fillmore’s own retellings were
based on folklore collections of Finnish scholar Eero Salmelainen,
unfortunately still not available in English. I also consulted “The
Mouse Bride,” in Tales from a Finnish Tupa, by James Cloyd Bowman
and Margery Bianco, Albert Whitman, Chicago, 1940.
How to Sing the Song
Words and music by Aaron Shepard
Mikko’s sweetheart will I be. What a fine young man is he.
Gown of velvet I do wear, like a princess fine and rare.
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