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The Golden Horse
by Silvia Hartmann 
  Once upon a time, when the land was a little brighter and softer than it is  today, there was a beautiful wild horse and it was golden and free.    Fast like a summer breeze, it would race across the soft green hills sloping  gently to sunsparkly lakes and to the blue hills in the distance, and in the  sweet summer nights, it would sleep beneath the silver moon in a sky of darkest  blue whilst the stars were smiling from above.  But there were people, and amongst them one, a dark man of grim countenance, who  envied the horse its golden beauty and its riches, and his heart grew ever  darker even as the children would point and laugh in delight and run and skip  like horses do, their long curls and straight locks bouncing like the horse?s  tail in the wind.    So the dark man drew a dark plan, and one night, he set a devious trap for the  golden horse made of flowers and the sweetest grass, and when the golden horse  went to the offering he had prepared in the clearing by the fairy?s brook, he  entrapped it and ensnared it with ropes and with chains.  Oh, how the golden horse shrieked and fought! Oh, how the golden horse struggled  against the chains and the ropes that were cutting deep into its silken flanks,  and how it reared and kicked but all the time, the dark man just laughed for he  had tied his end of the ropes and chains to a tree which grew straight into the  earth and was stronger than the golden horse could ever be.    All through the night, the golden horse fought for its freedom.     All through the night, the stars watched with sadness and deepening compassion  from high above as the golden horse grew weaker, and weaker still, yet it would  keep fighting and struggling and would not lay down. Neither could the golden  horse rest not even for a moment, for if it tried to stand and catch a breath,  the dark man would whip the horse with a coarse and knotted whip, drawing bloody  lines across its face and body, and forcing the golden horse to rear again and  spend ever more of its precious power.    All through the day which dawned so sad and grey, and where the sun never showed  her face behind the clouds, the golden horse fought and reared and struggled  against the chain and whip and rope, and the children from the village came and  saw, drawn by its cries they came and they cried too and begged the dark man to  stop, but he just laughed and hit the horse the harder still and so the children  fell silent and watched their hearts tearing with pain and there was nothing  they could do and so they silently stole home and prayed so that they may be  able to forget what they had seen and what they heard and what they had felt.    As the grey and weary day drew to a bloody dusk, the horse could no longer  stand, and as the grey shadows merged into the mist of night, it sank to its  knees and touched the beautiful golden face to the ground, and the dark man  laughed and laughed and he rained blows upon it such as the world had never  seen, but the horse neither cried nor moved nor struggled any more.    The dark man then went in the last of that terrible days light and knelt before  the horses face. Its eyes were closed yet it well knew him there, but it neither  cried nor moved nor struggled any more as the dark man?s hand fell heavily on  its face and his voice fell heavily on its heart ? ?Now you are mine, to do with  as I please. And don?t forget, that I will be your master hereon in, and you  will do my bidding in all ways.?    The dark man rose and tied the horses legs with stout rope, and into the horses  gentle mouth he placed a horror of rusted steel and tied it tight, and then he  laughed again and walked off into the night with not a backward glance.    The horse lay by the fairies brook amidst the cold damp mist of the heartless  night and neither cried nor moved nor struggled. In its heart and in its mind  there was a pressure and a pain that was so great that all the hurts and cuts  and bruises of its weary body were nothing, and the pressure and the pain was so  great that the horse's heart would explode if it beat just one more time.    And at that moment, from the horse there rose a ghostly form, a white form of  pure light, of pure radiant light and beauty, and it was a unicorn being born  and released and rising fully from the fallen horse, it straightened and  stretched, so pure and white if you but could have seen it, a mane of flowing  silver and a flowing silver tail, shimmering in the darkness.    The unicorn rose and moved away from the dark shape of the beaten horse, unsure  and wondering, pure in its new birth and not understanding, and then it raised  its beautiful head towards where the moon was hiding still behind the darkest  nightly clouds and leapt and like a flash, was gone.    The beaten horse remained alone in darkness and though the pain was great, it  slept and never dreamed, not even once.    --------    In the morning, the dark man came with other men and other horses and they  pushed and pulled and whipped until the golden horse would stand, then stumble  on the road. And the golden horse which was no longer golden and not beautiful,  all covered in mud and dirt and blood, was put into a grim stable where the  stones were grey and lichen grew in the cracks and the hard ground was barely  covered with mouldy straw and dreary dead things that once were grass was all  there was to eat, and stale cold water hard and barely living was all there was  to drink, and nothing to be seen of silken hills or sky or of the blue mountains  or the stars.    In time, the wounds on the skin of the once golden horse healed, and in time,  there were just scars on its legs and flank, and in time, the once golden horse  no longer sighed when walking because its feet were so heavy with the iron they  had nailed to them.    In time, the golden horse would drag its heavy loads to market, or the weary  iron plough, or whatever the dark man decided, and in time, no-one seemed to  remember what had been lost, and it was only the children in the village who  would avert their eyes and never look at the horse that was just brown not  golden, that was just plain not beautiful, and as time went by even they started  to forget that they had ever known a different time at all.    There was one, though, who remembered. It gave the dark man never ending  pleasure to see what once had been the golden horse in front of heavy ploughs  and carts and weights too much for its slim feet and slender neck, and he would  often order the stable master to use what once had been the golden horse for  tasks much better suited to another of the tired horses, and the stable master  although old and not a one to give a thought or care, began to wonder why it was  that the dark man rejoiced so in that horses sufferings.    Twenty years or more went by ? who is to say? In all that time, the horse that  once had been the golden horse never sighed anymore, never wept and when it  slept, it never dreamed, not even once.    --------    Far, far away from the village, in another space and time altogether, there  lived a being of magic. This being was neither a man nor a woman, but something  altogether different. It was neither child nor old, for it lived by a time which  is altogether not like the one we know. It was neither dark nor light, but  altogether of the colours that we only know when we are fast asleep and  dreaming.    This being of magic lived in ways we cannot understand, and one day it was in  it?s garden, thinking thoughts the like we have never known, and doing things  the like of which we wouldn?t understand, when it noticed a unicorn grazing  amongst the flowers that grew there (flowers the likes of which you never saw  nor even could imagine).    ?Who are you?? asked the being, for it had been many a starfall and starbirth  since a visitor had found their way to this place.    The unicorn looked up, surprised yet unafraid, for it sensed that the being of  magic was an understanding one, and so it thought to find an expression that  would serve to answer in a polite way, thus addressed.    ?I do not know,? the unicorn said at length.    ?Why are you here?? asked the being.    ?I do not know," the unicorn replied and shook its head so that silver bright  mane flew like banners.    ?What is your purpose?? asked the being of magic.    ?I can?t remember?, said the unicorn, and sighed and then it started to cry  softly, for a sadness had befallen it yet what it was it did not know or  understand.    The being of magic understood that this unicorn was a lost soul, a one that  wanders amidst the planes, never at home, never at rest, blowing like a leaf on  the breeze.    The being of magic understood that this unicorn was very sad, and it wove  compassion in the way that only beings of magic can, a rainbow curtain of blue  and green, like a soft and silken blanket it would lay across the unicorn, and  the unicorn stood and let the blue and green soothe its sadness and its  lonliness and it didn?t feel quite so lost and sad deep down below.    The being of magic understood that the unicorn would need to find its purpose to  truly heal the sadness within, and it called forth resolution as only a being of  magic can, a whirlpool of whispering sounds that spun around and around and  swept up the unicorn and took it to ...      ------------ 
    It was a bright summers day, and a young boy and a young girl were sitting by  the fairy brook. They were very sad because their mother and father had died,  leaving them alone in the world and at the mercy of an old aunt, who neither  cared to feed them nor to listen to their voices.  They were much alike, for they were twins and in spite of their sadness, they  were glad of each other?s comfort and company, and being here by the fairy brook  where all was quite and peaceful together soothed their hearts, so they came  here often and they would talk about their mother and their father and their  loss.    This day, they had come and they had done their talking, and their holding of  hands, and just sat and listened to the sounds of the brook, and the rustling of  the wind in the trees beyond, and the buzzing of the small flying things, and  the warmth of the sun on their heads and shoulders, and the cool wet of the  grass beneath, and letting their thoughts drift with the fluffy white clouds  above, when they heard a whirlpool of whispering, a strange sound like they had  never heard before.    And on the other side of the brook, as the sounds began to fade away, a  ghostlike shape appeared, and it looked like something their mother had shown  them in the old leather bound book she had kept high up on the kitchen shelf and  as one, they remembered and they said its designation, ?Unicorn? in hushed tones  as not to frighten the creature that had appeared before them.    The unicorn looked directly at them, and saw them, and it spoke, with a voice  like gentle bells, ?You can see me.?    And the children nodded carefully, as not to frighten it away and the little  girl said, ?You are a unicorn?.    The unicorn lowered its beautiful head with a shell shiny horn that shone like  newest silver in the sun.    ?I am lost,? said the unicorn. ?I need to find my way home but I cannot. Will  you help me??    The boy and the girl looked at each other, and the boy said, ?We are lost also,  and we have no home also. How can such as us be of help to one like you??    The unicorn sighed deeply and made as if to turn and walk away, and the little  girl sprang to her feet. ?Please don?t go!? she cried, and the unicorn stopped  and turned its head towards her questioningly.    ?It is true we are lost and have no home, but perhaps together we can find a  way? Perhaps we can do something if we just think, and talk, and share amongs  us? For me and my brother, we have talked long and often, and there?s nothing  new in what we say, yet here you are, a real life unicorn, you must be magic,  sent to help us too!?    The boy and the unicorn both nodded for the speech was fair and it made sense.  And so they talked and it was decided that for now, the unicorn should come with  them and live in the empty stable at the bottom of the field behind the aunt?s  house, and that they would find a way to make things right for everyone.    The sun was low now, and the children knew it was time to return for fear of  spending a night not being able to go to sleep for hunger rumbling in their  bellies, and so the boy and the girl and the unicorn set off behind the  hedgerows to the aunt?s house in the village.    But they did not need to fear, for when a labourer came amongst them by  incident, he never saw the unicorn; and when another child crossed their path,  hurried and as anxious to be home for supper as they were, the child never saw  the unicorn either and they took to the road, and no-one but they could see the  unicorn.    And so it was that as the last rays of the dying sun cast long black shadows  across a road flooded with orange a cart came towards them, and the cart was  drawn by a horse so feeble and so tired that it dragged its feet and would  stumble every other step.    And the cart was loaded high, and even higher with heavy barrels and with heavy  loads, and a tired workman cursed and flicked his switch without much anger  every time the horse faltered and stumbled on its weary way.    And the children stood to one side, and the unicorn stood still in the middle of  the road, but the coachman did not see it there, and neither did the tired horse  who had been a golden horse a long time ago and now was close to dying of the  hard treatment and the work which was far too much and far too hard.    The children gripped each others hands and held their breath as the horse and  cart touched the unicorn, then went clear through it, clattering and rumbling  dusty on its way into the twilight, fading sound and sight as the unicorn stood,  shaken and trembling, in the middle of the road and could not move for terror in  its heart.    For, you see, the unicorn had remembered something, had recognised something,  but it was too dire and too strange and unicorns don?t understand the ways of  heartache and of pain, of cruely and of neglect.    The children went to the unicorn and stood at either side, gently reaching out  and touching its neck which was cold with fear and trembling hard.    The little girl asked with much concern, ?What is it, dear unicorn? What has  frightened you so? We have passed a number of people and a number of carts on  our journey so far but here you are, quite trembling all over??    And the unicorn dropped its pretty silver head and the children could see a tear  so shining and beautiful from its great dark eyes, and try as it might, the  unicorn could not remain and had to turn and follow the cart that was already a  way down the road, and it began to walk slowly and hesitantly at first, then  faster into a trot and faster still into a gallop, and then faster still so it  was flying across the darkening road and the children ran behind.    The cart had drawn into a lane and up the lane to the ill kept yard of an ill  kept house that sat in the shadows of foreboding. The unicorn streaked up the  lane, a silver spark in the gloom and the children hesitated at the sharpened  fence that bordered what was the dark man?s house.    For a moment, they exchanged a glance, but either had to know and find out and  be there and neither wanted to lose sight of the unicorn, the first wondrous  thing that had appeared to them for all the asking and the praying they had ever  done.    So keeping close together and their shoulders drawn in tight, the two children  scuttled up the lane like little mice, listening all ears and fearful eyes and  pounding hearts for the sounds they might hear and the sights they might see.    The yard was lit by a single tired lantern of yellow light hung from a crooked  post. The sound of drinking and men laughing came from the servants quarter, and  all alone amidst the cobblestones and the weeds that sprang between them stood  the cart, and chained to it still, the worn out horse, its head so low, its back  bent deep and no-one there to bring it food or water or release it from its  harness.    Beside it danced the unicorn light on nervous feet, big eyes of black ringed  white with fear, drawn to what had once had been the golden horse yet not  knowing why.    The children crept closer by the stable walls and looked nervously towards the  servant quarters, but there was laughing from within and singing too and the  door was firmly shut for now.  The children looked at the the unicorn and the broken horse and there was  something familiar about them both although one was white and light as light  would be, and one was merging with the shadows and heavy as heavy could be, yet  there was something there that caught the children?s eyes and their minds and  hearts as well.    It was then that the dark man sitting in his dark rooms felt something that he  had not felt in years, and disturbed, he got up and went to the window and  looked into the yard below.  And it was then, that the dark man felt a fear he had not felt in years, and he  swiftly took his knotted whip and ran down the stairs and out into the yard.    The unicorn and the children startled much at his approach and backed away from  him into a corner, backed away from his flashing whip and crunching steps and  hoarse voice that filled them with dread as he shouted and threatened them.    ?Now I have got you where I want you!? the dark man snarled and laughed as well  as he encroached further and further still on the two children and the unicorn  all huddled together in a corner and he raised his whip high and with one voice,  they called for help to everyone and anyone but there was no-one there to hear  them and respond ? but was there?    The broken horse had raised its weary head and watched and listened and it saw,  and as it saw, deep deep within itself it found an ember of a long forgotten  memory of suffering, and with that long forgotten memory another ember, burning  more brightly, of a time before when there was silken grass and wind and  glorious racing in the freedom of the hills so blue and green.    And deep within, the ember flared and flared and finally caught fire, caught to  life and the horse reared mightily within it?s harness and with flaying hooves,  it struck the dark man from behind who never thought to give the horse another  glance so sure was he that there was nothing left within to fight.    Its heavy iron shod feet struck the dark man from behind and he fell senseless  to the cobblestones, and as he did, the horse reared up again and screamed such  screams as you have never heard, and as it screamed its screams turned into song  and this was a song that would fell fortresses and raze the mountains to the  ground, and as it sang, the bindings fell from its mouth and shoulders, and as  it reared and danced, the iron shoes fell from its feet and sparked lightning  against the stony walls, and as it reared and sang and danced, the unicorn leapt  forward and it joined the dance and it too began to sing and as it did, their  voices blended into one of beauty and of wisdom, and as they danced together,  faster and faster still, their forms began to blend and meld and then there was  just one horse, golden and beautiful, so much more than either had been, dancing  in the yard.    The children stood in awe and looked upon the great golden horse and when the  dance was done and all fell silent once again, they ventured forth and both  reached out a hand of friendship, and its great eyes, shining with wisdom and  understanding and a light they never knew before fell on them with love and true  compassion and they knew that it was grateful to them, and that they had been  designed to come and start the magic that would set it free from the dark man?s  spell.    And that was that.     What of the dark man, you might ask? He was broken, vanquished and a shadow of  his former self, and when the sun rose high and clear the morning after that, he  just dissolved like shadows do, leaving never a trace or a sign he had ever  breathed at all.    And what of the horse, and of the children?    They went away together and they lived in the blue mountains, far away.     In time, they would have founded a great city, where you would see statues  celebrating the little boy, and the little girl, and the golden horse; and the  great city would be known across the land for a place where you would go to stay  if you would need to be reminded that there is more to life than toil, and if  you look to find your magic. 
  
  
 
  
  
  
The Golden Horse: An original fairy tale from: 
A Wonderful Book of Fairy Tales: The Golden Horse & Other Stories by Silvia Hartmann. 
A gift for the magical child within 
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