This is the one tale in the present collection in which dazzling beauty is a plot element—but it is the humans who place false value on the illusion of beauty, not Triamor herself. It is clear that Triamor’s dazzling beauty is a supernatural attribute. The ability of fairy folk to create an illusion of glamour was well-known to the Celtic people who told and listened to these tales. Actually Triamor’s strange beauty is a side issue; the mainspring of the story is Triamor’s power to confer fame and wealth. She grants young Lanval his heart’s desire and adds the usual taboo to their pact—in this case, Lanval is forbidden to mention Triamor to humans.
The tale is a little more complex than most folktales using this basic plot. As usual, the human’s impulsive thoughtlessness causes the breakup of the pact and the withdrawal of good fortune. In this tale, Triamor relents at the end and rescues Lanval—if dwelling in the shadowy Other World of fairy folk can be called a rescue. Implicit in the tale is a moral concerning Lanval’s fate. Extravagance and thoughtless speech brought about his first misfortunes. Although Triamor rescued him from that state with her magic bounty, this good fortune was again lost through thoughtless speech—a character flaw that may seem minor to us. Nonetheless, Lanval did achieve his dream of wealth and fame for a time, and his departure for the Other World of fairy folk may not be a sad fate after all.
“Finn Magic” is told from the hero’s point of view. Although there is no doubt that Zilla is a heroine of strength and courage, hers is a much smaller, though crucial, role. However, the theme of ethnic prejudice is unusual. I felt that the story belonged in this collection, despite the fact that Zilla is seen only through Eilert’s eyes. Whatever her role may be in rescuing Eilert from the Draug and Merfolk (the tale is deliberately discreet on this point), it is clear the Nordlanders believed she possessed magic spells or influence over the people beneath the sea. While Eilert may be uncertain about Zilla’s magic, he does recognize her physical courage in saving him.
Although I have taken the greater part of this introduction to speak of the remarkably spirited heroines I have culled from the large body of traditional folktales, I cannot end without a few words about the heroes who appear in some of the tales with them. By and large, they are not the stereotyped heroes of most fairy and folktales. They are not flat cardboard characters, but are individually appealing in their own right. Eilert struggles with family loyalty before breaking through prejudice; brave Alexey redeems his mistake of impulsive curiosity; and Lanval is extravagant and thoughtless.
But enough has been said about the quite special heroines—and heroes—in these tales. The proof is in the reading.
Long ago in southern Africa, demon spirits and monstrous ogres were much more to be feared than the wild animals of the forests. The ogres were both sly and cruel—they could quickly change their shapes, and were said to devour children.
Mulha, like many other children, had heard tales of the ogre Inzimu and his sister, Imbula. However, it was not until she was fourteen and almost fully grown that she came face-to-face with these monsters. This is the way it happened:
One day Mulha’s father was away hunting. Her mother was at work tending the crops in their field, some distance away. Mulha’s task was to stay at the family’s thatched hut and care for her two younger sisters. Unfortunately, Mulha became quite bored watching the children.
Her eyes fell on the large storage pot sitting near the door of the hut. The three children had always been forbidden to open this pot, but this day Mulha decided she was going to peek inside. Perhaps, she thought hungrily, her mother kept honey cakes or special treats there.
So Mulha lifted up the heavy lid. Before she could even see the contents, a small, sharp-fanged animal that had hidden there leaped out and grew at once into a huge ogre. When Mulha saw his long tail, she knew he was the ogre Inzimu.
The three girls ran into the hut, the Inzimu after them.
“I won’t harm you,” said he, making his voice as sweet as honey. “I only want you to cook me some dinner. I’m very hungry.”
He persuaded the two older girls to go out for buckets of water; then, as soon as they left the hut, he popped the youngest girl into a large cooking pot and put on a heavy lid.
While the two girls were filling the buckets, a large honeybee buzzed about their heads. The buzzing became words: “The Inzimu has hidden your little sister in the cooking pot!”
“How can we save her?” cried the younger sister. Mulha thought a few moments. Then she said, “After we return, I will run out of the hut. As soon as the Inzimu chases me, you must rescue our sister. Both of you run into the brush behind the hut and hide.”
The girls returned with the water and stood quietly near the door. Suddenly Mulha called out in a taunting voice, “You will never catch me, Inzimu!” And she ran out of the hut.
In a rage, the Inzimu started after her. But he tripped over the pail of water the younger sister thrust out, and Mulha had a good start. Fleet as a deer, she dodged the bushes and trees until she reached the river. There she plunged in and swam easily to the other side—for she knew the Inzimu was powerless to follow her over water.
The Inzimu returned to find the small hut empty, and after shouting angry threats of revenge, he departed. But the younger sisters did not creep out of their hiding place until they heard their parents’ return.
After Mulha’s parents heard the story of the Inzimu who had hidden in the storage pot, they became very alarmed.
“We must leave this hut,” declared the father. “Our children are not safe here. The Inzimu will surely return another day. We will go down the valley to my brother’s house.”
Quickly the family packed up their possessions and left.
“The Inzimu will try to take revenge on Mulha. It was she who tricked him,” said the mother. “We must send her away.”
To be sure Mulha would be safe, her parents decided to send her to stay with an older married sister living in a distant kraal. Since this was less than a day’s walk, Mulha assured her parents she could follow the track to the kraal alone.
Dressed in her best garment, a gaily striped black cloth knotted about her waist, and wearing her brightest ornaments, Mulha set out with a light step. She promised to be very careful and to remember her mother’s warning to eat nothing along the way.
It was midsummer, however, and the afternoon was hot. Soon Mulha became very thirsty. When she saw a manumbela tree covered with ripe berries, she could not resist them. Hitching up her skirt, she climbed the tree, and she ate the juicy berries.
As soon as she returned to the ground, the tree trunk opened. Out came a huge woman, an Imbula, with an ugly animal snout and a hairy red pelt covering her body.
“You are not safe traveling alone,” said the Imbula, making her voice as sweet as honey. “You will be robbed of all your pretty things. I will go with you to protect you, but first we must exchange clothes so that you will be safe.”
Mulha protested in vain, but the Imbula promised to return everything to Mulha when they approached the kraal. Then she pulled off Mulha’s skirt, and in no time at all, she had forced the exchange of clothing.
To her horror, Mulha found that the red, hairy pelt of the Imbula clung to her tightly, as if it were