THE DRAGON'S TAIL
by Margaret Arndt · from Fairy Tales from the German Forests
Adapted Version
Do you want to hear a story? This is a story about a boy named Helmut. Helmut is brave. He lives near a big, old castle. And near the castle, there is a forest.
Helmut loves to play. He plays brave games every day. He dreams of big, green dragons. He lives near a big, old castle. A green forest is nearby. Helmut has two good friends. Wolf and Werner play with him. They want to find a dragon. A big, green dragon. Helmut says, "Let's find a dragon today!" Wolf says, "Yes, a big dragon!" Werner says, "Fun, fun, fun! A dragon!" Helmut feels very brave. He is ready for a big adventure. He wants to meet a dragon. He wants to see its long tail. He wants to see its big eyes.
Mama sees Helmut. She sees his brave, happy face. She says, "Be careful, Helmut, my boy." She gives him a big hug. Helmut says, "I am brave, Mama! I am very brave!" He smiles a big, wide smile. Mama smiles too. She says, 'Have fun, my brave boy! Be back for dinner!'
Helmut, Wolf, and Werner walk, walk, walk. They walk to the big forest. They walk to the rocky place. Big rocks stand tall. Green moss grows on the rocks. Drip, drip, drip. Water drips down. Helmut has a toy sword. Wolf has a toy sword. Werner has a toy sword. They are ready for adventure.
Wolf stops. 'Is that a dragon?' he asks. Werner looks. 'I don't know!' he says. Helmut is brave. 'Let's go look!' he says. They walk, walk, walk. They see something green. It is long. It is scaly. What is that? What IS that? It is a tail! A big, green tail!
They follow the tail. They see a dragon! A big, green dragon! It is very, very big. But it looks sad. It looks sleepy. The dragon goes, 'Hoo-choo!' A little puff of smoke comes out. Poof! Helmut says, 'Hello, Dragon!' Wolf says, 'Hello!' Werner says, 'Hello!' The dragon is shy. It hiccups. More smoke! Poof! Poof!
Helmut is not scared. 'Do you want to play?' he asks. The dragon looks at them. It wiggles its tail. Wag, wag, wag. The dragon lies down. It makes a soft sound. 'Mmm-hmm,' it rumbles. Helmut climbs on its back. Wolf climbs on. Werner climbs on. The dragon stands up. It walks! Clip-clop, clip-clop. It walks through the rocks. Whoosh! The dragon goes fast! The boys laugh. Ha, ha, ha! This is fun! A dragon ride! Wheee!
The dragon stops. It sits down. It looks sad again. Its big eyes are wet. 'Why are you sad, Dragon?' Helmut asks. The dragon sighs. 'I have no friends,' it rumbles. 'Nobody wants to play with me. I am all alone.'
Helmut thinks. He reaches into his pocket. He pulls out a banana. 'Here, Dragon,' he says. 'A banana for you!' The dragon looks at the banana. Its eyes get big. It takes the banana. Chomp, chomp, chomp! The dragon eats the banana. It smiles! A big, happy dragon smile! 'Thank you!' the dragon rumbles. 'You are my friend!'
Suddenly, they hear a voice. 'Helmut! Helmut!' It is Mama! Mama is calling. 'Helmut! Time to come home!' Mama is near.
The dragon hears Mama. It looks shy again. It wiggles its tail. 'Bye-bye, friends!' it rumbles softly. Poof! A cloud of sparkly smoke! The dragon is gone. Helmut, Wolf, and Werner jump down. They run, run, run to Mama. Mama sees Helmut. She gives him a big hug. Squeeze! 'Oh, Helmut!' Mama laughs. 'You are so dirty! But I am so happy to see you!'
Helmut hugs Mama back. 'Mama, Mama!' he says. 'We saw a dragon! A big, green dragon! It was nice! It gave us a ride! And I gave it a banana!' Mama smiles. She kisses Helmut's head. 'You were very brave, my boy,' she says. Later, Helmut is in his bed. He thinks about the dragon. 'Good night, Dragon,' he whispers. He closes his eyes. Maybe the dragon whispers back. 'Good night, friend.' The end.
Original Story
THE DRAGON'S TAIL
I wonder if the girls and boys who read these stories, have heard of the charming and romantic town of Eisenach? I suppose not, for it is a curious fact that few English people visit the place, though very many Americans go there. Americans are well known to have a special interest in old places with historical associations, because they have nothing of the sort in America; moreover many of them are Germans by birth, and have heard stories of the Wartburg, that beautiful old castle, which from the summit of a hill, surrounded by woods, overlooks the town of Eisenach.
The Wartburg is quaintly built with dear little turrets and gables, and high towers, a long curving wall with dark beams like the peasant cottages, and windows looking out into the forest. It belongs at present to the Grand duke of Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach.
Every stone and corner of the Wartburg is connected with some old story or legend.
For instance there is the hall with the raised dais at one end and beautiful pillars supporting the roof where minnesingers of old times used to hold their great "musical festivals" as we should say nowadays. There was keen competition for the prizes that were offered in reward for the best music and songs.
In the castle are also the rooms of St Elizabeth, that sweet saint who was so good to the poor, and who suffered so terribly herself in parting from her husband and children.
Then there is the lion on the roof who could tell a fine tale if he chose; the great banqueting hall and the little chapel.
On the top of the tower is a beautiful cross that is lit up at night by electric light and can be seen from a great distance in the country round. This is of course a modern addition.
But the most interesting room in the castle is that where Dr Martin Luther spent his time translating the Bible. A reward had been offered to anyone who should kill this arch-heretic; so his friends brought him disguised as a knight to the Wartburg, and very few people knew of his whereabouts.
As you look through the latticed windows of that little room, the exquisite blue and purple hills of the Thüringen-Wald stretch away in the distance, and no human habitation is to be seen. There too you may see the famous spot on the wall where Luther threw the inkpot at the devil. To be correct you can see the hole where the ink-stain used to be; for visitors have cut away every trace of the ink, and even portions of the old wooden bedstead. There is the writing-desk with the translation of the Bible, and the remarkable footstool that consisted of the bone of a mammoth.
Those were the days in which a man risked his life for his faith; but they were the days also, we must remember, of witchcraft and magic.
One other story of the Wartburg I must narrate in order to give you some idea of the interest that still surrounds the place, and influences the children who grow up there. It was in the days of the old Emperor Barbarossa (Redbeard).
The sister of the Emperor whose name was Jutta, was married to the Landgraf Ludwig of Thüringen, and they lived at the Wartburg.
One day when Barbarossa came to visit them, he observed that the castle had no outer walls round it, as was usual in those days.
"What a pity," he said, "that such a fine castle should be unprotected by walls and ramparts, it ought to be more strongly fortified."
"Oh," said Landgraf Ludwig, "if that is all the castle needs, it can soon have them."
"How soon?" said the Emperor, mockingly.
"In the space of three days," answered his brother-in-law.
"That could only be possible with the aid of the devil," said Barbarossa, "otherwise it could not be done."
"Wait and see for yourself," said the Landgraf.
On the third day of his visit, Ludwig said to the Emperor: "Would you care to see the walls? They are finished now."
Barbarossa crossed himself several times, and prepared for some fearful manifestation of black magic; but what was his surprise to see a living wall round the castle of stout peasants and burghers, ready armed, with weapons in their hands; the banners of well-known knights and lords waved their pennants in the wind where battlements should have been.
The Emperor was much astonished, and called out: "Many thanks, brother-in-law, for your lesson; stronger walls I have never seen, nor better fitted together."
"Rough stones they may some of them be," said the Landgraf, "yet I can rely on them, as you see."
Now as you may imagine, the children who grow up in this town, must have their heads full of these tales, and many poets and artists have been inspired by the beauties of Eisenach. The natural surroundings of the town are so wonderful, that they also provide rich material for the imagination.
Helmut was a boy who lived in Eisenach. He was eight years old, and went to a day school. He lived outside the town, not far from the entrance to the forest. He was a pale, fair-haired little boy, and did not look the tremendous hero he fancied himself in his dreams; not even when he buckled on helmet, breast-plate and sword, and marched out into the street to take his part in the warfare that went on constantly there, between the boys of this neighbourhood, and the boys who belonged to another part of the town.
Now the Dragon's Gorge is a most marvellous place; it is surrounded on all sides by thick forests, and you come on it suddenly when walking in the woods. It is a group of huge green rocks like cliffs that stand picturesquely piled close together, towering up to the sky. There is only a very narrow pathway between them.
Helmut had often been there with his father and mother or with other boys. After heavy rain or thawing snow it became impassable; at the best of times it was advisable for a lady not to put on her Sunday hat, especially if it were large and had feathers; for the rocks are constantly dripping with water. The great boulders are covered with green moss or tiny ferns; and in the spring time, wood sorrel grows on them in great patches, the under side of the leaves tinged an exquisite violet or pink colour. The entrance to the Dragon's Gorge is through these rocks; they narrow and almost meet overhead, obscuring the sky, till it seems as if one were walking under the sea. Two persons cannot walk side by side here. In some parts, indeed, one can only just squeeze through; the way winds in and out in the most curious manner; there are little side passages too, that you could hardly get into at all.
In some places you can hear the water roaring under your feet; then the rocks end abruptly and you come out into the forest again, and hear the birds singing and see the little brook dancing along by the side of the way. Altogether it is the most fascinating, wet and delightful walk that you could imagine.
Helmut had long been planning an expedition to these rocks in company with other boy friends, in order to slay the dragon. He dreamt of it day and night, until he brought home a bad mark for "attention" in his school report. He told his mother about it; she laughed and said he might leave the poor old fellow alone; there were plenty of dragons to slay at home, self-will, disobedience, inattention, and so on! She made a momentary impression on the little boy, who always wanted to be good but found it difficult at times, curious to say, to carry out his intention.
He looked thoughtful and answered: "Of course, mother, I know; but this time I want to slay a 'really and truly' dragon, may I? Will you let me go with the other boys, it would be such fun?"
The Dragon's Gorge was not far off, and mother did not think that Helmut could do himself any harm, except by getting wet and dirty, and that he might do as well in the garden at home.
"If you put on your old suit and your thick boots, I think you may go. Keep with the other boys and promise me not to get lost!"
"Oh, I say, won't it be fine fun! I'll run off and tell the other fellows. Hurrah!" and Helmut ran off into the street. Soon four heads were to be seen close together making plans for the next day.
"We'll start quite early at six o'clock," they said, "and take our second breakfast with us." (In Germany eleven o'clock lunch is called second breakfast.) However it was seven o'clock a.m. before the boys had had their first breakfast, and met outside the house.
How mother and father laughed to see the little fellows, all dressed in the most warlike costumes like miniature soldiers, armed with guns and swords.
Mother was a little anxious and hoped they would come to no harm; but she liked her boy to be independent, and knew how happy children are if left to play their pretence games alone. She watched the four set off at a swinging march down the street. Soon they had recruits, for it was a holiday, and there were plenty of boys about.
Helmut was commanding officer; the boys shouldered their guns, or presented arms as he directed. They passed the pond and followed the stream through the woods, until they came to the Dragon's Gorge, where the rocks rise up suddenly high and imposing looking. Here they could only proceed in single file. Helmut headed the band feeling as courageous as in his dreams; his head swam with elation. Huge walls towered above them; the rocks dropped water on their heads. As yet they had seen or heard nothing of the dragon. Yet as they held their breath to listen, they could hear something roaring under their feet.
"Don't you tell me that that is only water," said Helmut, "A little brook can't make such a row as that—that's the dragon."
The other boys laughed, they were sceptical as to the dragon, and were only pretending, whereas Helmut was in earnest.
"I'm hungry," said one boy, "supposing we find a dry place and have our lunch!"
They came to where the path wound out again into the open air, and sat down on some stones, which could hardly be described as dry. Here they ate bread and sausage, oranges and bananas.
"Give me the orange peel, you fellows. Mother hates us to throw it about; it makes the place so untidy." So saying Helmut pushed his orange peel right into a crevice of the rock and covered it with old leaves. But the other boys laughed at him, and chucked theirs into the little stream, which made Helmut very angry.
"I won't be your officer any more, if you do not do as I say," he said, and they began to quarrel.
"We're not going to fight your old dragon, we're going home again to play football, that will be far better fun," said the boys who had joined as recruits, and they went off home, till only Helmut's chums were left. They were glad enough to get rid of the other boys.
"We have more chance of seeing the dragon without those stupid fellows," they said.
They finished their lunch, shouldered their guns again, and entered the second gorge, which is even more picturesque and narrow than the first.
Suddenly Helmut espied something round, and slimy, and long lying on the path before him like a blind worm, but much thicker than blind worms generally are. He became fearfully excited, "Come along you fellows, hurry up," he said, "I do believe it is the dragon's tail!"
They came up close behind him and looked over his shoulders; the gorge was so narrow here that they could not pass one another.
"Good gracious!" they said, "whatever shall we do now?"
They all felt frightened at the idea of a real dragon, but they stood to their guns like men, all but the youngest, Adolf, who wanted to run away home; but the others would not let him.
"Helmut catch hold of it, quick now," whispered Werner and Wolf, the other two boys.
Helmut stretched out his hand courageously; perhaps it was only a huge, blind worm after all; but as he tried to catch it, the thing slipped swiftly away. They all followed it, running as fast as they could through the narrow gorge, bumping themselves against the walls, scratching themselves and tearing their clothes, but all the time Helmut never let that tail (if it was a tail) out of his sight.
"If we had some salt to put on it," said he, "we might catch it like a dicky bird."
"It would be a fine thing to present to a museum," said Wolf.
Well, that thing led them a fine dance. It would stop short, and then when they thought they had got it, it started off again, until they were all puffing and blowing.
"We've got to catch it somehow," said Helmut, who thought the chase fine sport. At that moment the gorge opened out again into the woods, and the tail gave them the slip; for it disappeared in a crevice of the rock where there was no room for a boy to follow it.
"It was a blind worm you see," said Werner.
Presently, however, they heard a noise as of thunder, and looking down the path they saw a head glaring at them out of the rocks, undeniably a dragon's head, with a huge jaw, red tongue, and rows of jagged teeth.
The boys stared aghast: they were in for an adventure this time, and no mistake. Slowly the dragon raised himself out of the rocks, so that they saw his whole scaly length, like a huge crocodile. Then he began to move along the path away from them. He moved quite slowly now, so there was no difficulty in keeping up with him; but his tail was so slimy and slippery that they could not keep hold of it; moreover it wriggled dreadfully whenever they tried to seize it. But Helmut had inherited the cool courage of the Wartburg knights, and he was not going to be overcome by difficulties.
With a wild Indian whoop he sprang on the dragon's back, and all the other boys followed his example, except little Adolf who was timid and began to set up a howl for his mother, I'm sorry to say. No sooner were the boys on his back than the dragon set off at a fine trot up and down the Dragon's Gorge, they had to hold on tight and to duck whenever the rock projected overhead, or when they went sharply round a corner.
"Hurrah," cried Helmut waving a flag, "this is better than a motor ride. Isn't he a jolly old fellow?"
At this remark the jolly old fellow stopped dead and began to snort out fire and smoke, that made the boys cough and choke.
"Now stop that, will you!" said Helmut imperatively, "or we shall have to slay you after all, that's what we came out for you know." He pointed his gun at the head of the dragon as he spoke like a real hero.
The dragon began to tremble, and though they could only see his profile, they thought he turned pale.
"Where's that other little boy?" he asked in a hollow voice. "If you will give him to me for my dinner, I will spare you all."
Helmut laughed scornfully, "Thanks, old fellow," he said—"you're very kind, I'm sure Adolf would be much obliged to you. I expect he's run home to his mother long ago; he's a bit of a funk, we shan't take him with us another time."
"He looked so sweet and juicy and tender," said the dragon sighing, "I never get a child for dinner nowadays! Woe is me," he sniffed.
"You are an old cannibal," said the boys horrified, and mistaking the meaning of the word cannibal. "Hurry up now and give us another ride, it's first-rate fun this!"
The dragon groaned and seemed disinclined to stir, but the boys kicked him with their heels, and there was nothing for it but to gee-up.
After he had been up and down several times, and the boys' clothes were nearly torn to pieces, he suddenly turned into a great crevice in the rocks that led down into a dark passage, and the boys felt really frightened for the first time. Daylight has a wonderfully bracing effect on the nerves.
In a moment, however, a few rays of sunshine penetrated the black darkness, and they saw that they were in a small cave. The next thing they experienced was that the dragon shook himself violently, and the small boys fell off his back like apples from a tree on to the wet and sloppy floor. They picked themselves up again in a second, and there they saw the dragon before them, panting after his exertions and filling the cavern with a poisonous-smelling smoke. Helmut and Wolf and Werner stood near the cracks which did the duty of windows, and held their pistols pointed at him. Luckily he was too stupid to know that they were only toy guns, and when they fired them off crack-crack, they soon discovered that he was in a terrible fright.
"What have I done to you, young sirs?" he gasped out. "What have I done to you, that you should want to shoot me? Yet shoot me! yes, destroy me if you will and end my miserable existence!" He began to groan until the cavern reverberated with his cries.
"What's the matter now, old chappie?" said Helmut, who, observing the weakness of the enemy, had regained his courage.
"I am an anachronism," said the dragon, "don't you know what that is?—well, I am one born out of my age. I am a survival of anything but the fittest. You are the masters now, you miserable floppy-looking race of mankind. You can shoot me, you can blow me up with dynamite, you can poison me, you can stuff me—Oh, oh—you can put me into a cage in the Zoological Gardens, you have flying dragons in the sky who could drop on me suddenly and crush me. You have the power. We great creatures of bygone ages have only been able to creep into the rocks and caves to hide from your superior cleverness and your wily machinations. We must perish while you go on like the brook for ever." So saying he began to shed great tears, that dropped on the floor splash, splash, like the water from the rocks.
The boys felt embarrassed: this was not their idea of manly conduct, and considerably lowered their opinion of dragons in general.
"Do not betray me, young sirs," went on the dragon in a pathetic and weepy voice, "I have managed so far to lie here concealed though multitudes of people have passed this way and never perceived me."
"I tell you what," said Helmut touched by the dragon's evident terror, "let's make friends with him, boys; he's given us a nice ride for nothing; we will present him with the flag of truce."
Turning to the dragon he said: "Allow us to give you a banana and a roll in token of our friendship and esteem."
"O," said the dragon brightening up, "I like bananas. People often throw the skins away here. I prefer them to orange peel. I live on such things, you must know, the cast-off refuse of humanity," he said, becoming tragic again.
They presented him with the banana, and he ate it skin and all, it seemed to give him an appetite. He appeared to recover his spirits, and the boys thought it would be better to look for the way out. The cavern seemed quite smooth and round, except for the cracks through which the daylight came; they could not discover the passage by which they had entered. The dragon's eyes were beginning to look bloodthirsty; remembrances of his former strength shot across his dulled brains. He could crush and eat these little boys after all and nobody would be the wiser. Little boys tasted nicer than bananas even.
Meanwhile Wolf and Werner had stuck their flags through the holes in the rocks, so that they were visible from the outside.
Now little Adolf had gone straight home, and had told awful tales of the games the others were up to, and he conducted the four mothers to the Dragon's Gorge where they wandered up and down looking for their boys. Adolf observed the flags sticking up on the rocks, and drew attention to them. The Dragon's Gorge resounded with the cries of "Helmut! Wolf! Werner!"
The dragon heard the voices as well; his evil intentions died away; the chronic fear of discovery came upon him again. He grew paler and paler; clouds of smoke came from his nostrils, until he became invisible. At the same moment Helmut groping against the wall that lay in shadow, found the opening of the passage through which they had come. Through this the three boys now crawled, hardly daring to breathe, for fear of exciting the dragon again. Soon a gleam of light at the other end told of their deliverance. Their tender mothers fell on their necks, and scolded them at the same time. Truly, never did boys look dirtier or more disreputable.
"We feel positively ashamed to go home with you," their mothers said to them.
"Well, for once I was jolly glad you did come, mother," said Helmut. "That treacherous old dragon wanted to turn on us after all; he might have devoured us, if you had not turned up in the nick of time. Not that I believe that he really would have done anything of the sort, he was a coward you know, and when we levelled our guns at him he was awfully frightened. Still he might have found out that our guns were not properly loaded, and then it would have been unpleasant."
Mother smiled, she did not seem to take the story quite so seriously as Helmut wished.
"We had a gorgeous ride on his back, mother dear; would you like to see him? You have only to lie down flat and squeeze yourself through that crack in the rocks till you come to his cave."
"No thank you," said mother, "I think I can do without seeing your dragon."
"Oh, we have forgotten our flags!" called out Wolf and Werner, "wait a minute for us," and they climbed up over the rocks and rescued the flags. "He's still in there," they whispered to Helmut in a mysterious whisper.
"Mother," said Helmut that evening when she came to wish him good night, "do you know, if you stand up to a dragon like a man, and are not afraid of him, he is not so difficult to vanquish after all."
"I'm glad you think so," said mother, "'Volo cum Deo'—there is a Latin proverb for you; it means, that with God's help, will-power is the chief thing necessary; this even dragons know. Thus a little boy can conquer even greater dragons than the monsters vast of ages past."
"Hum!" said Helmut musingly, "mother, dear, I was a real hero to-day, I think you would have been proud of me; but I must confess between ourselves, that the old dragon was a bit of a fool!"
Story DNA
Moral
True courage is not the absence of fear, but the will to act despite it, and sometimes, the greatest monsters are merely misunderstood or outdated.
Plot Summary
Helmut, an imaginative boy from Eisenach, inspired by local legends, sets out with his friends to slay a dragon in the mysterious Dragon's Gorge. They encounter a real but pathetic dragon, who is more afraid of them than they are of it, and who laments its obsolescence. After an initial thrill of riding the dragon, the boys are led into a dark cave where the dragon's bloodthirsty instincts briefly resurface. However, their mothers, alerted by a scared friend, arrive and their shouts frighten the dragon into invisibility, allowing the boys to escape. Helmut reflects on the adventure, realizing that courage and willpower can overcome even fearsome creatures, and that sometimes, monsters are just misunderstood.
Themes
Emotional Arc
innocence to wisdom
Writing Style
Narrative Elements
Cultural Context
The story grounds itself in the real history and legends of Eisenach and the Wartburg Castle, particularly the Reformation and medieval German culture, to create a sense of place and inspire imagination.
Plot Beats (15)
- The narrator introduces Eisenach and the Wartburg castle, detailing its historical and legendary significance, including Martin Luther's room and the story of Emperor Barbarossa's 'living wall'.
- Helmut, an imaginative eight-year-old boy from Eisenach, dreams of heroic deeds and plans an expedition to the Dragon's Gorge with his friends to slay a dragon.
- Helmut's mother playfully dismisses his dragon-slaying ambition, suggesting he conquer self-will and disobedience instead, but eventually allows him to go with his friends.
- Helmut, Wolf, and Werner venture into the unique and challenging Dragon's Gorge, armed with toy weapons, while Adolf, another boy, lags behind.
- Adolf gets scared and runs home, while the other boys continue, finding the dragon's tail and eventually the dragon itself.
- The dragon, initially appearing fierce, is revealed to be old, timid, and easily intimidated by the boys' toy guns and bravado.
- The boys, mistaking the dragon's fear for playfulness, ride on its back through the gorge, enjoying the 'first-rate fun'.
- The dragon leads them into a dark, hidden cave, causing the boys to feel genuine fear for the first time.
- Inside the cave, the dragon reveals its sorrowful existence as an 'anachronism', a creature born out of its age, living on human refuse, and terrified of humanity's power.
- Moved by the dragon's plight, Helmut offers it a banana as a token of friendship.
- The dragon eats the banana but then its eyes grow bloodthirsty, and it considers eating the boys.
- Meanwhile, Adolf has told his mother about the expedition, and the mothers arrive at the gorge, calling out for their children.
- The dragon, hearing the mothers' voices, is overcome by its chronic fear of discovery and vanishes in a cloud of smoke.
- The boys find the hidden exit and escape to their relieved but scolding mothers.
- Helmut recounts the adventure, emphasizing his bravery and the dragon's cowardice, and later reflects on the lesson of willpower and courage with his mother.
Characters
Helmut ★ protagonist
A pale, fair-haired little boy, eight years old, with a slender build. He doesn't appear outwardly heroic despite his vivid imagination.
Attire: Typical early 20th-century German boy's clothing: likely knickerbockers or short trousers, a simple shirt (perhaps linen or cotton), and sturdy shoes. When playing, he might add a toy helmet and breastplate over these clothes.
Wants: To experience adventure, prove his bravery, and live out the heroic tales he hears about the Wartburg.
Flaw: Can be easily frightened when faced with real danger, prone to exaggeration, and sometimes overestimates his own bravery.
Starts as a boy who fancies himself a hero in play, confronts a 'real' (though cowardly) dragon, and learns that true bravery involves facing fear and even showing compassion, rather than just brute force. He also learns that even formidable foes can be 'a bit of a fool'.
Imaginative, brave (especially when playing), a bit boastful, empathetic (towards the dragon), and resourceful.
Image Prompt & Upload
An eight-year-old German boy standing upright, facing forward, full body visible from head to toe. He has a pale complexion, a round face, and fair, light blonde hair cut short. His eyes are blue and round. He wears a simple cream-colored linen shirt, brown knickerbockers, and sturdy brown leather shoes. Over his clothes, he wears a crudely made toy helmet and a toy breastplate, both appearing to be fashioned from tin or painted wood. He holds a small, dark grey toy pistol in his right hand. He has a determined yet slightly apprehensive expression. Plain white background, full body visible head to toe, single figure, no watermark, no text, no signature.
Wolf ◆ supporting
A young boy, likely around Helmut's age, with a typical build for a child of that era and region.
Attire: Typical early 20th-century German boy's clothing, similar to Helmut's: knickerbockers or short trousers, a simple shirt, and sturdy shoes. He also carries a toy pistol.
Wants: To participate in exciting games and adventures with his friends.
Flaw: Can be easily scared, and relies on Helmut for leadership in frightening situations.
Remains a loyal friend and participant in the adventure, experiencing fear and relief alongside Helmut.
Adventurous, loyal to his friends, playful, and easily influenced by Helmut's leadership.
Image Prompt & Upload
An eight-year-old German boy standing upright, facing forward, full body visible from head to toe. He has a healthy complexion, a round face, and short, light brown hair. His eyes are brown. He wears a simple blue linen shirt, grey knickerbockers, and sturdy brown leather shoes. He holds a small, dark grey toy pistol in his right hand and a small, red fabric flag on a thin wooden stick in his left. He has an excited and slightly mischievous expression. Plain white background, full body visible head to toe, single figure, no watermark, no text, no signature.
Werner ◆ supporting
A young boy, likely around Helmut's age, with a typical build for a child of that era and region.
Attire: Typical early 20th-century German boy's clothing, similar to Helmut's: knickerbockers or short trousers, a simple shirt, and sturdy shoes. He also carries a toy pistol.
Wants: To participate in exciting games and adventures with his friends.
Flaw: Can be easily scared, and relies on Helmut for leadership in frightening situations.
Remains a loyal friend and participant in the adventure, experiencing fear and relief alongside Helmut.
Adventurous, loyal to his friends, playful, and easily influenced by Helmut's leadership.
Image Prompt & Upload
An eight-year-old German boy standing upright, facing forward, full body visible from head to toe. He has a healthy complexion, a round face, and short, dark brown hair. His eyes are hazel. He wears a simple green linen shirt, dark grey knickerbockers, and sturdy brown leather shoes. He holds a small, dark grey toy pistol in his right hand and a small, yellow fabric flag on a thin wooden stick in his left. He has an excited and slightly mischievous expression. Plain white background, full body visible head to toe, single figure, no watermark, no text, no signature.
The Dragon ⚔ antagonist
A large, ancient dragon, described as a 'great creature of bygone ages'. It is capable of filling a cavern with poisonous-smelling smoke and shedding large tears. Its eyes can appear bloodthirsty.
Attire: None, as it is a dragon.
Wants: To survive in a world that has surpassed him, to remain hidden, and to find sustenance (even if it's refuse or, briefly, small boys).
Flaw: Extreme cowardice, fear of discovery, and a lack of understanding of modern human 'weapons' (toy pistols).
Initially a terrifying figure, he is quickly revealed to be a pathetic coward. He briefly gains the boys' empathy and accepts their 'friendship', but his inherent predatory nature resurfaces. He ultimately retreats into invisibility when faced with the threat of discovery by the mothers, remaining a hidden, fearful creature.
Cowardly, pathetic, self-pitying, prone to exaggeration, initially fearful, but with underlying treacherous and bloodthirsty instincts. He is also surprisingly articulate and philosophical about his anachronistic existence.
Image Prompt & Upload
A very large, ancient, green-scaled dragon, sitting hunched and looking dejected, facing forward, full body visible from head to toe. Its scales are mossy green and rough, with a leathery underbelly. Its head is reptilian with large, sad, yellow eyes and smoke faintly curling from its nostrils. Large, clear tears are rolling down its snout and splashing onto the cavern floor. Its posture is one of deep self-pity and fear. Plain white background, full body visible head to toe, single figure, no watermark, no text, no signature.
Helmut's Mother ◆ supporting
A typical German mother of the early 20th century. No specific details are given, so assume a practical, caring appearance.
Attire: Practical, modest early 20th-century German attire, likely a long skirt, blouse, and apron, suitable for a homemaker. Not overly ornate.
Wants: To ensure her son's safety and well-being, and to guide him morally.
Flaw: Her skepticism sometimes prevents her from fully appreciating the depth of her son's experiences.
Serves as a grounding force for Helmut, bringing him back to reality after his adventure and offering a moral interpretation of his experience.
Caring, concerned, practical, a bit skeptical of her son's wild tales, but also wise and capable of imparting moral lessons.
Image Prompt & Upload
A middle-aged German woman standing upright, facing forward, full body visible from head to toe. She has a kind, round face with a gentle expression, and her light brown hair is neatly pulled back into a bun. Her skin is fair with a few faint lines around her eyes. She wears a long, dark blue linen skirt, a cream-colored blouse with a high collar, and a simple white apron tied at her waist. Her hands are clasped gently in front of her. Plain white background, full body visible head to toe, single figure, no watermark, no text, no signature.
Adolf ○ minor
A young boy, likely around Helmut's age, with a typical build for a child of that era and region.
Attire: Typical early 20th-century German boy's clothing, similar to the other boys: knickerbockers or short trousers, a simple shirt, and sturdy shoes.
Wants: To report on the 'awful tales' of the other boys, possibly out of jealousy or a desire for attention.
Flaw: His tendency to tattle on others.
Plays a crucial role in the boys' rescue by leading the mothers to the Dragon's Gorge.
Tattletale, observant, and a bit of a rival to Helmut and his friends.
Image Prompt & Upload
An eight-year-old German boy standing upright, facing forward, full body visible from head to toe. He has a slightly mischievous expression, with a round face and short, dark blonde hair. His eyes are bright blue and wide. He wears a simple brown linen shirt, green knickerbockers, and sturdy brown leather shoes. His right arm is raised, and his index finger is pointing off to the side, indicating something with a look of triumph. Plain white background, full body visible head to toe, single figure, no watermark, no text, no signature.
Locations
Wartburg Castle
A beautiful old castle overlooking Eisenach from a wooded hill, quaintly built with dear little turrets, gables, and high towers. It features a long curving wall with dark beams reminiscent of peasant cottages, and windows looking out into the forest. Inside, there's a hall with a raised dais and beautiful pillars, rooms of St. Elizabeth, a great banqueting hall, a small chapel, and a specific room where Martin Luther translated the Bible. This room has latticed windows, a writing-desk, and a footstool made from a mammoth bone, with a famous ink-stain hole on the wall.
Mood: Historical, grand, ancient, scholarly, slightly eerie due to old legends and Luther's encounter with the devil.
Emperor Barbarossa visits and challenges Landgraf Ludwig to build walls; Luther translates the Bible and throws an inkpot at the devil; the castle serves as a backdrop for local legends and inspires children.
Image Prompt & Upload
A view into a medieval German castle study room, specifically Martin Luther's room in the Wartburg. Sunlight streams through small, leaded latticed windows, illuminating dust motes in the air and casting patterns on the rough-hewn timber floorboards. A heavy, dark wooden writing desk is positioned near the window, covered with parchment scrolls and a quill. A unique, large footstool made from a mammoth bone rests beneath the desk. The stone walls are aged, with a distinct, faded ink stain on one section. no border, no frame, no watermark, no text, no signature, edge-to-edge illustration.
Dragon's Gorge (Drachenschlucht)
A most marvelous place, surrounded on all sides by thick forests. It consists of a group of huge, green, cliff-like rocks picturesquely piled close together, towering up to the sky. There is only a very narrow, constantly dripping pathway between them, making it impassable after heavy rain or thawing snow. The great boulders are covered with green moss and tiny ferns, and in springtime, wood sorrel grows there.
Mood: Mysterious, damp, adventurous, slightly foreboding, natural wonder.
Helmut and his friends explore the gorge, leading them to the dragon's cave.
Image Prompt & Upload
A very narrow, winding pathway through a deep, moss-covered rock gorge in the Thuringian Forest. Towering, dark green, wet rock faces rise dramatically on both sides, almost touching overhead, creating a claustrophobic yet awe-inspiring passage. Water constantly drips from the slick, dark stone, nourishing vibrant green moss and small ferns that cling to every surface. The ground is a mix of damp earth and small, smooth stones. A sliver of diffused daylight filters down from the distant opening above. no border, no frame, no watermark, no text, no signature, edge-to-edge illustration.
Dragon's Cavern
A hidden cave within the Dragon's Gorge, described as quite smooth and round, except for cracks that serve as windows, allowing daylight to filter in. It is filled with a poisonous-smelling smoke when the dragon is present. The entrance passage is initially hard to find but is a narrow opening in the shadowed wall.
Mood: Eerie, smoky, confined, initially terrifying, then pathetic and slightly absurd due to the dragon's demeanor.
Helmut and his friends encounter the dragon, make friends with it, and are eventually rescued by their mothers.
Image Prompt & Upload
An interior view of a large, naturally formed cave with smooth, damp, dark grey rock walls. High up, narrow, irregular cracks in the rock allow shafts of pale, diffused daylight to penetrate, illuminating swirling wisps of a faint, acrid-smelling smoke. The cavern floor is uneven, composed of damp earth and scattered small stones. The overall impression is one of ancient, hidden confinement. no border, no frame, no watermark, no text, no signature, edge-to-edge illustration.