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Title | Notes |
---|---|
Book Author | Dean S. Fansler |
Chapter Nr. | t18n |
Language code | eng |
A Tagalog variant of this story, entitled “Pedro and the Giants,” and narrated by José Hilario from Batangas, runs thus in abstract:—
Two orphan sisters living with their brother Pedro are stolen by two powerful giants. Pedro goes in search of his sisters,
and finds them. Contrary to the expectations of all, the two grim brothers-in-law welcome Pedro, and offer to serve him. Pedro
later wishes to marry a princess, and the giants demand her of the king her father. He refuses to give her up, although she
falls in love with Pedro. To punish his daughter, the king exposes her to the hot sun: but one of the giants shades her with
his eagle-like wings. Then the other giant threatens the king; but the monarch says he is safe, for his life is contained
in two eggs in an iron box guarded
This analogue of our story is not very close in details, yet there are enough general resemblances between the two to make it pretty certain that they are distantly related.
Our story of “Juan and his Adventures” belongs to the “Animal Brothers-in-Law” cycle, a formula for which Von Hahn (1 : 53) enumerates the following incidents:—
- A Three princes who have been transformed into animals marry the sisters of the hero.
- B The hero visits his three brothers-in-law.
- C They help him perform tasks.
- D They are disenchanted by him.
As Crane says (p. 60), this formula varies, of course. Sometimes there are but two sisters (cf. our variant), and the brothers-in-law are freed from their enchantment in some other way than by the hero. For a bibliography of this group, see Crane, 342–343, note 23, to No. 13.
Perhaps the best version of this story is that found in Basile, 4 : 3, the argument of which, as given in Burton’s translation (2 : 372), runs thus:—
Ciancola, son of the King of Verde-colle, fareth to seek his three sisters, married one with a falcon, another with a stag, and the other with a dolphin; after long journeying he findeth them, and on his return homewards he cometh upon the daughter of a king, who is held prisoner by a dragon within a tower, and calling by signs which had been given him by the falcon, stag, and dolphin, all three came before him ready to help him, and with their aid he slayeth the dragon, and setteth free the princess, whom he weddeth, and together they return to his realm.
This argument does not quite do justice to the similarities between Basile’s story and ours. For instance, in the Italian story, when the daughters leave, they give their mother three identical rings as tokens. Then a son is born to the queen. When he is fifteen years old, he sets out to look for his sisters, taking the rings with him. Nor, again, does this argument mention the fact that in the end the animal brothers-in-law are transformed into men,—a feature which is found in Basile, but not in our story. In the main, however, it will be seen that the two are very close. In Von Hahn, No. 25, the brothers-in-law are a lion, a tiger, and an eagle.
The opening of our story, so far as I know, is not found in any of the other members of this cycle. Usually the sisters are
married to the animals in consequence of a king’s decision to give his daughters to the
The obtaining of magic articles by a trick of the hero is found in many folk-tales. In Grimm, No. 197, which is distantly
related to our story, the hero cheats two giants out of a wishing-cap over which they are quarrelling. In Grimm, No. 92, where
we find the same situation, the magic articles are three,—a sword which will make heads fly off, a cloak of invisibility,
a pair of transportation-boots (see Bolte-Polívka, 2 : 320 f., especially 331–335). In Grimm, No. 193, a flying saddle is
similarly obtained. In Crane, No. XXXVI (p. 136 f.), Lionbruno acquires a pair of transportation-boots, an inexhaustible purse,
and a cloak of invisibility. This incident is also found in Somadeva (Tawney, 1 : 14), where the articles are a pair of flying-shoes,
a magic staff which writes what is going to happen, and a vessel which can supply any food the owner asks for. In another
Oriental collection (Sagas from the Far East, pp. 23–24), the prince and his follower secure a cap of invisibility from a
band of quarrelling boys, and a pair of transportation-boots from some disputing demons. Compare Tawney’s note for other instances.
This incident is also found in an Indian story by Stokes, No. XXII, “How the Raja’s Son won the Princess Labam.” In this the
hero meets four fakirs, whose teacher (and master) has died, and has left four things,—“a bed which carried whosoever sat
on it whithersoever he wished to go; a
For the “Fee-fi-fo-fum” formula hinted at in our story, see Bolte-Polívka, 1 : 289–292.
In many of the members of this cycle, when the hero takes his leave of his brothers-in-law, he is given feathers, hair, scales, etc., with which he can summon them in time of need. In our story, however, Juan has no such labor-saving device: he has to visit his brothers a second time when he desires aid against the giant.
The last part of our story turns on the idea of the “separable soul or strength” of the dragon, snake, demon, giant, or other monster. This idea has been fully discussed by Macculloch (chapter V). As this conception is widespread in the Orient and is found in Malayan literature (e.g., in “Bidasari”), there is no need of tracing its occurrence in the Philippines to Europe. In the norm of this cycle, the animal brothers-in-law help the hero perform tasks which the king requires all suitors for his daughter’s hand to perform. Here the beasts help the hero secure the life and strength of the giant who is holding the princess captive.
Taken as a whole, our story seems to have been imported into the Philippines from the Occident, for the reason that no Oriental analogues of it appear to exist, while not a few are known from southern Europe. Our two variants are from the Tagalog province of Batangas, and, so far as I know, the story is not found elsewhere in the Islands. As suggested above, however, the introduction is probably native, or at least very old, and the conclusion has been modified by the influence of another cycle well known in the Orient.
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