|
'It is dangerous to
comb your hair by the spring. Be careful,
because if a hair falls and ruffles the surface
of the water, the spirit of the spring will
bewitch you.'
'Old wives tales,' cried
the girl, 'there are no spirit in the fountain.'
But the girl was very wrong. In the pool lived a
very powerful spirit, one of those nymphs of the
streams and mountains which abound in the
Asturian mythology. The spirit watched angrily
as the girl spent the whole day combing her hair,
never helping to spin the wool or knead the
dough. She had not been able to do a thing about
it, as the girl did not ruffle the water of the
pool, but patiently the nymph waited for her
chance.
Then one day, one of the girl's golden hairs
fell into the water and the nymph, dressed in a
cloak of green water, rose angrily out of the
pool.
'Didn't your mother warn you not to ruffle the
water?' she asked, in a very quiet voice.
'A hair as beautiful as this does not ruffle the
water', replied the proud maiden.
'I am going to bewitch you to punish you for
your pride', the spirit said icily. Barefoot,
her long golden hair adorned with pearls and a
crown made from the reflection of the moon, she
alighted on the grass next to the pool. Frowning,
she declared:'I am turning you into a cuelebre.
You will only turn back into a maiden if you
meet a knight who is so brave that he is not
afraid of you and has a heart so pure that he
finds you beautiful.
At once the girl's body grew to an enormous size
and became covered with coloured scales. her
golden hair turned into crests and two wings
sprouted from her shoulders. With a howl of
despair, the cuelebre slunk off weeping, and hid
in a cave by the sea.
As all the youths who set eyes on the cuelebre
are afraid, the proud girl who was bewitched by
the spirit still lives in her little cave on the
sea shore, waiting for the knight who will find
her beautiful, so that she can become a maiden
once more.
|

|