Long ago in the river port city called Novgorod the
Great, there lived a young musician named Sadko.
Every day, a rich merchant or noble would send a
messenger to Sadko’s door, calling him to play at a feast. Sadko would
grab his twelve-string gusli and rush to the banquet hall. There
he would pluck the strings of his instrument till all the guests were
dancing.
“Eat your fill!” the host would tell him later,
pointing him to the table, and passing him a few small coins besides.
And on such as he was given did Sadko live.
Often his friends would ask him, “How can you
survive on so little?”
“It’s not so bad,” Sadko would reply. “And anyway,
how many men can go to a different feast each day, play the music they
love, and watch it set a whole room dancing?”
Sadko was proud of his city, the richest and most
free in all Russia. He would walk through busy Market Square, lined with
merchants in their stalls and teeming with traders from many lands. He
never crossed the square without hearing tongues of far-off places, from
Italy to Norway to Persia.
Down at the piers, he would see the sailing ships
with their cargos of lumber, grain, hides, pottery, spices, and precious
metals. And crossing the Great Bridge over the River Volkhov, Sadko
would catch the glint from the gilded roofs of a dozen white stone
churches.
“Is there another such city as Novgorod in all the
world?” he would say. “Is there any better place to be?”
Yet sometimes Sadko was lonely. The maidens who
danced gaily to his music at the feasts would often smile at him, and
more than one had set his heart on fire. But they were rich and he was
poor, and not one of them would think of being his.
One lonely evening, Sadko walked sadly beyond the
city walls and down along the broad River Volkhov. He came to his
favorite spot on the bank and set his gusli on his lap. Gentle waves
brushed the shore, and moonlight shimmered on the water.
“My lovely River Volkhov,” he said with a sigh.
“Rich man, poor man—it’s all the same to you. If only you were a woman!
I’d marry you and live with you here in the city I love.”
Sadko plucked a sad tune, then a peaceful one, then a
merry one. The tinkling notes of his gusli floated over the Volkhov.
All at once the river grew rough, and strong waves
began to slap the bank. “Heaven help me!” cried Sadko as a large shape
rose from the water. Before him stood a huge man, with a pearl-encrusted
crown atop a flowing mane of seaweed.
“Musician,” said the man, “behold the King of the
Sea. To this river I have come to visit one of my daughters, the
Princess Volkhova. Your sweet music reached us on the river bottom,
where it pleased us greatly.”
“Thank you, Your Majesty,” stammered Sadko.
“Soon I will return to my own palace,” said the
King. “I wish you to play there at a feast.”
“Gladly,” said Sadko. “But where is it? And how do I
get there?”
“Why, under the sea, of course! I’m sure you’ll find
your way. But meanwhile, you need not wait for your reward.”
Something large jumped from the river and flopped at
Sadko’s feet. A fish with golden scales! As Sadko watched in amazement,
it stiffened and turned to solid gold.
“Your Majesty, you are too generous!”
“Say no more about it!” said the King. “Music is
worth far more than gold. If the world were fair, you’d have your fill
of riches!” And with a splash, he sank in the river and was gone.
The next morning, Sadko arrived at the market square
just as the stalls were opening. He quickly sold the golden fish to an
astonished merchant. Then hurrying to the piers, he booked his passage
on a ship leaving Novgorod that very day.
Down the Volkhov the ship sailed, across Lake Ladoga
and the Gulf of Finland, and into the Baltic Sea. As it sped above the
deep water, Sadko peered over the rail.
“In all the wide sea,” he murmured, “how can I ever
find the palace?”
Just then, the ship shuddered to a halt. The wind
filled the sails, yet the ship stood still, as if a giant hand had
grasped it.
Some of the sailors cursed in fear, while others
prayed for their lives. “It must be the King of the Sea!” the captain
cried. “Perhaps he seeks tribute—or someone among us.”
“Do not be troubled,” called Sadko. “I know the one
he seeks.” And clutching his gusli, he climbed the railing.
“Stop him!” shouted the captain.
But before any could lay hold of him, Sadko jumped
from the ship and plunged below the waves.
Down sank Sadko, down all the way to the sea floor.
The red sun shone dimly through the water above, while before him stood a
white stone palace.
Sadko passed through a coral gate. As he reached the
huge palace doors, they swung open to reveal a giant hall. The elegant
room was filled with guests and royal attendants—herring and sprats, cod
and flounder, gobies and sticklebacks, sand eels and sea scorpions,
crabs and lobsters, starfish and squid, sea turtles and giant sturgeon.
Standing among the guests were dozens of
maidens—river nymphs, the Sea King’s daughters. On a shell throne at the
end of the hall sat the Sea King and his Queen.
“You’re just in time!” called the King. “Musician,
come sit by me—and let the dance begin!”
Sadko set his gusli on his lap and plucked a merry
tune. Soon all the fish swam in graceful figures. The seafloor crawlers
cavorted. The river maidens leaped and spun.
“I like that tune!” declared the King. He jumped to
the center of the hall and joined the dance. His arms waved, his robe
swirled, his hair streamed, his feet stamped.
“Faster!” cried the King. “Play faster!”
Sadko played faster and the King’s dance grew
wilder. All the others stopped and watched in awe. Ever more madly did
he move, whirling faster, leaping higher, stamping harder.
The Sea Queen whispered urgently, “Musician, end
your tune! It seems to you the King merely dances in his hall. But above
us, the sea is tossing ships like toys, and giant waves are breaking on
the shore!”
Alarmed, Sadko pulled a string until it snapped.
“Your Majesty, my gusli is broken.”
“A shame,” said the Sea King, winding to a stop. “I
could have danced for days. But a fine fellow you are, Sadko. I think
I’ll marry you to one of my daughters and keep you here forever.”
“Your Majesty,” said Sadko carefully, “beneath the
sea, your word is law. But this is not my home. I love my city of
Novgorod.”
“Say no more about it!” roared the King. “Prepare to
choose your bride. Daughters, come forth!”
The river maidens passed in parade before Sadko.
Each was more lovely than the one before. But Sadko’s heart was heavy,
and he barely looked at them.
“What’s wrong, musician?” the King said merrily.
“Too hard to choose? Then I’ll wed you to the one who fancies you.
Behold the Princess Volkhova!”
The princess stepped forward. Her green eyes were
sparkling, and a soft smile graced her lips. “Dearest Sadko, at last we
can be together. For years I have thrilled to the music you’ve played on
the shore.”
“Volkhova!” said Sadko in wonder. “You’re as lovely
as your river!”
But the Sea Queen leaned over and said softly, “You
are a good man, Sadko, so I will tell you the truth. If you but once
kiss or embrace her, you can never return to your city again.”
That night, Sadko lay beside his bride on a bed of
seaweed. She’s so lovely, thought Sadko, so charming—all I
ever hoped for. How can I not hold her?
But time after time, the Queen’s words came back to
him—never return to your city again— and his arms lay frozen at
his sides.
“Dearest,” said the princess, “why do you not
embrace me?”
“It is the custom of my city,” Sadko stammered. “We
never kiss or embrace on the first night.”
“Then I fear you never will,” she said sadly, and
turned away.
When Sadko awoke the next morning, he felt sunlight
on his face. He opened his eyes and saw beside him not the Princess
Volkhova but the River Volkhov. And behind him rose the walls of
Novgorod!
“My home,” said Sadko, and he wept—perhaps for joy
at his return, perhaps for sadness at his loss, perhaps for both.
* * *
The years were good to Sadko. With the money that
remained to him, he bought a ship and goods enough to fill it. And so
Sadko became a merchant, and in time, the richest man in Novgorod.
What’s more, he married a fine young woman and raised a family. Many a
feast he would hold so he could play his gusli and watch his children
dance.
Yet sometimes still on a quiet evening he would walk
out of the city alone, sit on the bank, and send his tinkling music
over the water. And sometimes too a lovely head would rise from the
river to listen—or perhaps it was only moonlight on the Volkhov.
About the Story
In Russia, stories of ancient legendary heroes like the
merchant-musician Sadko are preserved in epic ballads known as byliny
(pronounced “BIL-lin-ee”), a term meaning “what has been.” Originally
composed by minstrels between the 10th and 16th centuries, they are
recited today by talented peasant “narrators,” mostly in the remote
Russian northwest. Reciting is often accompanied by the gusli, a
psaltery of twelve or more strings.
Though byliny singing is a dying art, stories drawn
from the ballads are known to every Russian schoolchild and form an
important part of Russia’s national heritage. Most popular of all is the
Sadko legend, made known internationally as well by Rimsky-Korsakov’s
opera Sadko.
Sadko’s story is set in Novgorod, the greatest
commercial center of medieval Russia. Novgorod was built on both banks
of the River Volkhov, a major trade route bringing ships and merchants
from Scandinavia, Germany, Greece, Italy, Turkey, Arabia, and Persia.
Sadko himself is probably based on the merchant Sotko Sytinich, who in
1167 erected the city’s largest church, according to official
chronicles.
Novgorod occupies an important place in Russian
political history as well. In 862 it was conquered and made the capital
of the Viking prince Rurik, whose heirs founded the Kievan dynasty and
ruled most of European Russia until 1598. More importantly, Novgorod
became the only medieval Russian city to win independence from princely
rule. From 1136 until its conquest by Moscow in 1478, Novgorod was a
republic—the closest to a true democracy that any of Russia was to come
until the late twentieth century. For Russian visionaries in the
centuries between, it became a symbol of liberty.
Russian legend says that every river has its nymph—a
female nature spirit in human form who lives in the river and is part
of it. And all river nymphs are daughters of the Sea King, into whose
waters their rivers flow.
Texts consulted for my retelling include “Folk Tales
of Russia,” translated by Kate Blakey, in The Slavonic Review
(later The Slavonic and East European Review), Vol. 3; Russian
Heroic Poetry, by N. Kershaw Chadwick, Cambridge University Press,
Cambridge, 1932; The Heroic Ballads of Russia, by L. A. Magnus,
Dutton, New York, 1921; The Epic Songs of Russia, by Isabel
Florence Hapgood, Scribners, New York, 1886; Byliny: Heroic Tales of
Old Russia, by Alexander Pronin, Possev, Frankfurt, 1971; La
Russie Épique, by Alfred Rambaud, Maisonneuve, Paris, 1876; and Sadko:
A Lyric Legend (opera libretto), by A. Rimsky-Korsakov, translated
by Kathleen de Jaffa, Rullman, New York, 1930.
Additional information on byliny is found in Russian
Folklore, by Y. M. Sokolov (sometimes cataloged as I. M. Sokolov),
translated by Catherine Ruth Smith, Macmillan, New York, 1950. Historic
Novgorod is treated in numerous tourist guides and other references.
How to Say the Names
gusli ~ GOOSS-leeLadoga ~ LAH-do-gah
Novgorod ~ NOV-go-rod
Sadko ~ SOD-ko
Volkhov ~ VOLE-kove
Volkhova ~ VOLE-ko-vah
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