The Bird of Truth

by Unknown · from Tales of Wonder Every Child Should Know

fairy tale transformation hopeful Ages 8-14 4055 words 18 min read

Adapted Version

CEFR A1 Age 5 756 words 4 min Canon 100/100

A kind fisher lived by a big river. The river flowed fast. It was his home. He fished every day. He loved the river. One day, he saw a shiny thing. It moved in the water. He looked closer. It was a clear box. The box floated near. He moved his boat near. He reached out his hand. He pulled the box in. Two small babies were inside. They were very tiny. A boy and girl lay there. They slept in the box. The fisher felt sad for them. He felt love for them. He took them to his wife. He walked to his small home.

"What is that?" she asked. She looked at the box. She saw the babies. "We have many kids now!" she said. She felt worried. The fisher spoke to her. "Heaven sent these two. We will care for them." His wife saw babies. She looked at their small faces. She held a tiny hand. She loved them at once. Her heart felt soft. She smiled at the babies. So, the babies stayed there. They had a new home. They had new parents.

The Boy and the Girl grew. They were kind and good. They learned bird talk. They knew what birds said. The other kids were not always kind. They teased the twins. "You are not our kin!" they said. "You came from the river!" The twins felt sad. They felt they did not belong. They wanted to find their real folks. They decided to go on a quest. They would find where they came from.

They walked far. They found an empty house. They rested there. Swallows flew inside. The birds chirped. They spoke of a sad tale. A queen had twin babies. Tricky people took them. They put the queen to sleep. She was in a secret room. The babies went into the river. The twins heard the birds. They knew the story was theirs. "We are the queen's kids!" the Boy said. "We must help her!" The Girl nodded. "We must find the Bird of Truth." This bird would tell all. They would save their mom.

The Boy went alone. He kept his sister safe. He met a grumpy witch. She lived in a tall tower. "Bring me Water of Many Colours!" she said. "It is from a tricky castle." The Boy was brave. He would find it.

A friendly dog showed the way. It led the Boy to a dark castle. Inside, a wise owl spoke. "Listen close, little one," the owl said. "Many birds here are bright. They say they are the Bird of Truth. But the real one is small. It is a white bird. It hides from the others. Take that bird. Do not take the witch's water. Take clear, pure water instead." The Boy listened well.

The Boy found the small white bird. He took it gently. He filled his jar with clear water. He left the tricky castle. He went back to the witch. She waited for her water. She grabbed the jar. She threw the water. It splashed on her. It splashed on little bugs. The bugs turned into people! They were happy. They were free.

The people thanked the Boy. They were so glad. They walked with him. They went back to his sister. She waited safely.

News of the Bird of Truth spread. Everyone heard it. The tricky people were scared. The King heard the news. He was very curious. "Bring this bird to me!" he said.

The Boy and the Girl went. They took the white bird. They went to the big palace. The Bird of Truth flew in. It flew right to the King. It spoke to him. "The Boy is here," it said. "He has a story for you."

The King let the children in. The Bird of Truth told all. It told how the queen was hidden. It told how her babies were taken. The King listened with wide eyes.

The King was so happy! He hugged the Boy. He hugged the Girl. He opened the secret room. The queen was inside. She looked pale. She saw her children. Her face became bright. She was beautiful again.

The royal folks were together. The kind fisher got a gift. The tricky people had to leave. They could not cause trouble. Everyone was happy. The King, Queen, Boy, and Girl lived happily ever after, always together. The kind fisher was happy too. And the Bird of Truth always watched over them, making sure everyone knew the truth.

Original Story 4055 words · 18 min read

The Bird of Truth

nce upon a time there was a very poor fisherman, who lived in a little hut on the banks of a river. This river, although deep, was calm and clear, and, gliding from the sun and noise, would hide itself among the trees, reeds, and brambles, in order to listen to the birds who delighted it with their songs.

One day when the fisherman went out in his boat to cast his nets, he saw a casket of crystal slowly drifting along with the stream. He rowed toward it, but what was his horror at seeing two little babies, apparently twins, lying in it upon a bundle of cotton! The poor fisherman pitied them, took them out, and carried them home to his wife.

"What have you got there?" she exclaimed, as he presented them to her. "We have eight children already, and as if that were not enough, you must bring me some more!"

"Wife," replied the poor fisherman, "what could I do? I found these dear little creatures floating on the river below, and they would have died of hunger, or have been drowned, if I had not rescued them. Heaven, which has sent us these two more children, will assist us to provide for them."

And so it proved; and the little ones, a boy and a girl, grew up healthy and robust, together with the eight other children. They were both so good, so docile, and so peaceable, that the fisherman and his wife loved them exceedingly, and always held them up as examples to the other children; but they, envious and enraged, did them a thousand injustices and injuries. To escape from these cruelties, the twins would take refuge together among the thickets and on the river's banks; there they would divert themselves with the birds, and carry crumbs of bread to them; and the birds, grateful to them for their kindness, would fly to meet them, and teach them the bird-language. The children learned to converse with the birds very quickly, and thus they could amuse themselves with their feathered friends, who also taught them many other very good and useful things, one of them being how to get up early in the morning, and another, how to sing. One day when the fisherman's children were more annoying than they had ever been before, they said to the twins:

"We are the true-born children of Christians, but you, with all your neatness and superiority, are but castaways, without any other father or mother than the river, and belong to the toads and frogs!"

Upon receiving this insult the poor brother and sister were so filled with shame and distress that they determined to go right away from home and travel in search of their real parents At the early dawn next day they got up and went forth without any one knowing it, and began their journey, travelling they knew not whither.

Half the day passed by, and they had not perceived as yet any abode, nor seen a single living being. They were hungry, thirsty, and tired, when on turning round a hillside, they discovered a little house and, on reaching it, they found it empty and its inhabitants absent.

Thoroughly disheartened, they seated themselves on a bench in the doorway to rest. After a little while they noticed a number of swallows collected together under the eaves of the roof, and as these birds are such chatter-boxes, they began to prattle with one another. Having learned the language of birds, the children knew what the swallows said.

"Holloa! my lady friend," said one of the birds, who had a somewhat rustic air about it, to another that was of a very elegant and distinguished mien, "my eyes are glad to see you once more! I thought you had forgotten your country friends. How do you live in the palace?"

"I possess the nest of my ancestors," replied the other, "and as yet they have not disinherited me, although, like yours, it is a century old. But tell me before all," continued she with admirable finesse, "how you and all your family are."

"Well, thank heaven, for although I have had my little Mariguita laid up with an inflammation of the eyes that was within an ace of leaving her blind, when I obtained our old remedy, the pito-real, it cured her as if by magic."

"But what news have you to relate to me, friend Beatrice? Does the nightingale still sing well? Does the lark soar as high as of yore? Does the linnet still prune itself?"

"Sister," responded the swallow, "I have nothing but downright scandals to tell you of. Our flock, which formerly was so innocent and temperate, is utterly lost, and has quite taken to the manners of mankind. It is heartbreaking!"

"What! Simple customs and innocence not to be found in the country, nor among birds? My dear friend, what do you tell me?"

"The pure truth and nothing more. Just figure to yourself that on our arrival here, whom should we meet but those chattering linnets, who went off in search of cold and storm when the spring came with long days and bright flowers! We tried to dissuade the crazy creatures, but they answered us with the utmost insolence."

"What did they say?"

"They said to us—

'Whither do we go?

Whence come you, gossips,

Who travel so little

And talk so much?'

This was their reply to us, and on hearing it, we made them march to double-quick time."

"What do I hear!" exclaimed the interlocutor. "That any one has dared to accuse us, the most truthful and discreet of birds, of being gossips?"

"Then what will you think when I tell you," said the first speaker, "that the lark, who was so timid and ladylike, has become an insolent pilferer, and that—

The lady lark upon her flight

Pilfers pulse and pilfers maize

Before the very sower's sight,

And at his anger pertly says,

'Sower, sower, more seed sow,

As that sown can never grow'?"

"I am astounded!"

"That is only half my story. When we arrived here, and I wished to enter my nest, I found a shameless sparrow making himself quite at home in it. 'This nest is mine,' I said to him. 'Yours?' he answered rudely, and began to laugh. 'Mine and mine only.' 'Property is robbery,' piped he quite coolly. 'Sir, are you crazy?' I said to him. 'My ancestors built this nest, my parents educated me in it, and in it I mean to bring up my children.' Then at seeing me fainting, all my companions began to weep. By the time I recovered my consciousness; our husbands had put an end to the thieving rascal. But you, sister, never see such scandals in the palace."

"Don't we! Ah, if you only knew!"

"Do tell us! do tell us!" exclaimed all the swallows with one voice. When silence had been re-established, thanks to a loud and prolonged hus-s-s-sh, uttered by an elder, the court dame began her story in these terms.

"You must know that the king fell in love with the youngest daughter of a tailor who lived near the palace, and married her; the girl deserved his love, for she was as good as she was beautiful, and as modest as she was discreet. It so happened that the king had to go to the wars and leave his poor wife in the saddest and most perplexed position, for his ministers and courtiers who were very indignant at having a tailor's daughter for their queen, conspired to ruin her. And they availed themselves of the first opportunity. During the king's absence beautiful twins were born, a boy and a girl; but the wicked conspirators sent to tell him that the queen had for children a cat and a serpent.

"When the king received this intelligence, he was furious and sent off a royal mandate that the queen should be entombed alive, and the children cast into the river. This was done: the beautiful queen was shut up in a stone vault, and her little darling twins were placed in a crystal coffer, and left to the mercy of the stream."

When they heard the fate of the poor queen and her innocent babes, the swallows, who are very kind and affectionate, began to lament most heartily, whilst the twins looked at each other in amazement, suspecting it to be very probable that they themselves were the castaway children.

The city swallow continued her narrative:

"But now hear how God frustrated the plots of these traitors. The queen was entombed; but her attendant, who was very devoted to her, contrived to make a hole in the wall, and supplied her with food through it, as we do to our little ones through our nests, and thus the lady lives, although a life of misery. Her children were rescued by a good fisherman, who has brought them up, so a friend of mine, Martin Fisher, who lives on the banks of the river, has informed me."

The twins, who had heard the whole story, were delighted that they had learned the language of birds; which indeed, is a proof that we should never neglect any opportunity of learning for, when least we think it, what we have learned may prove of great utility to us.

"So then," said the swallows joyfully, "when these children are older, they will be able to regain their place at their father's side, and liberate their mother."

"That is not so easy," said the narrator, "because they will not be able to prove their identity, nor prove their mother's innocence, nor the malice of the Ministry. There is only one method by which they would be able to undeceive the king."

"And what is that? What is that?" cried all the swallows together. "And how do you know it?"

"I know it," responded the narrator, "because one day when I was passing by the palace garden, I met and had a chat with a cuckoo, who, as you know, is a conjuror, and can foretell what will happen. As we were discoursing with each other on the affairs of the palace, he said to me—"

The children and the swallows were listening now with redoubled attention, and even the young swallows were thrusting their little bald heads so far out of their nests, that they were in great peril of falling.

"'The only one who is able to persuade the king,' said the cuckoo to me, 'is the Bird of Truth, who speaks the language of men, although they for the most part do not know truth, and do not wish to understand it.' 'And this bird, where is it?' I asked the cuckoo. 'This bird,' he answered, 'is in the castle of Go and Return Not; the castle is guarded by a ferocious giant who only sleeps one quarter of an hour in the day. If when he wakes up any one should be within reach of his tremendous arm, he seizes and swallows him as we should a mosquito.'"

"And where is this castle?" inquired the inquisitive Beatrice.

"That is what I do not know," responded her friend; "all that I know about it is, that not far from it is a tower in which dwells a wicked witch, who knows the way and will point it out to any one who will bring her from the fountain that flows there, the Water of Many Colours, which water she makes use of in her enchantments. But I should also tell you that she would like to destroy the Bird of Truth, though as no one is able to kill this bird, what she and her friend, the giant, do is to keep it a prisoner guarded by the Birds of Falsehood who will not let it speak a single word."

"Then will nobody be able to inform the poor queen's son where they have hidden the Bird of Truth?" inquired the country swallows.

"Nobody," replied the city bird, "but a pious red owl, who lives as a hermit in the desert, but who knows no more of the language of men then the word 'Cross,' which he learned when, at Calvary, he beheld the Crucifixion of the Redeemer, and which he has never ceased from sorrowfully repeating. And thus he will not be able to understand the prince, even supposing the impossible event should ever happen of the boy finding him out. But, my dear friends, I must say good-bye, for I have spent the whole afternoon in this pleasant chat. The sun is seeking his nest in the depths of the sea, and I am going to seek mine, where my little ones will be wondering what has happened to me. Good-bye, friend Beatrice."

So saying, the swallow took to flight, and the children in their joy, feeling neither hunger nor fatigue, got up and pursued their way in the same direction that the bird had flown.

At the hour of evening service the children arrived at a city which they imagined must be that in which the king, their father, dwelt. They begged a good woman to give them shelter for the night, and this, seeing they were so well-spoken and well-mannered, she kindly granted.

The following morning had scarcely dawned when the girl arose and tidied the house, and the boy drew the water and watered the garden, so that when the good woman got up she found all the housework done. She was so pleased with this that she proposed to the children that they should remain and live with her. The boy said that his sister might, but that it was necessary for him to arrange some business matters, for which he had come to the city. So he departed, and followed a chance road, praying to heaven to guide his steps and bring his enterprise to a successful ending.

For three days he followed various byways, but without seeing any vestige of the tower; on the fourth, sad and weary he seated himself under the shadow of a tree. After a short time he saw a little turtle-dove arrive and rest among the branches of the tree; so he said to it in its own language:

"Little turtle-dove, I wish you could tell me where the castle of Go and Return Not is?"

"Poor boy," responded the turtle-dove, "who bore you such ill-will as to send you there?"

"It is my good or my evil fortune," replied the boy.

"Then if you wish to know it," said the bird, "follow the Wind, which to-day blows toward it!"

Then the boy thanked the turtle-dove and recommenced his journey, following the course of the wind as it changed and chopped about to different points of the compass. The country gradually grew sadder and more arid; and, as night approached, the path led between bare and sombre rocks, a vast black mass among them being the tower wherein dwelt the witch whom the boy was in search of. The sight of the hideous place terrified him at first; but as he was brave—like every one whose aim is the furtherance of a good work—he advanced boldly. When he reached the tower, he picked up a big stone and struck the gate with it three times; the hollows of the rocks reverberated with the sounds, as if sighs were uttered from their very entrails.

Then the door opened, and there appeared in the doorway an old woman carrying a candle that lit up her face, which was so wrinkled and so frightful that the poor boy recoiled in horror. Quite an army of beetles, lizards, salamanders, spiders and other vermin surrounded the witch.

"How dare you disturb me, impudent beggar," she exclaimed, "by coming to knock at my door? What do you want? Speak quickly!"

"Madam," said the boy, "knowing that you alone know the way which leads to the castle of Go and Return Not, I come to ask you, if you please, to point it out to me."

The old woman made a grimace, intended for a mocking smile, and answered:

"Very well; but now it is too late. You shall go to-morrow. Come in, and you shall sleep with these little insects."

"I am not able to stay," replied the boy. "It is necessary that I should go at once, as I have to return by daybreak to the place whence I came."

"May dogs worry you, and cats tear you, you stubborn boy," growled the old witch angrily. "If I tell you the way," she added, "it will only be upon condition that you bring me this jar full of the Water of Many Colours, which flows from the fountain in the courtyard of the castle; and if you do not bring it to me, I will change you into a lizard for all eternity."

"Agreed!" cried the boy in return.

Then the old woman called a poor dog, which looked very thin and wretched, and said to it:

"Up! conduct this good-for-naught to the castle of Go and Return Not, and be careful that you inform my friend of his arrival."

The dog snarled, shook himself savagely, and set forth. At the end of about two hours they arrived in front of a very black, enormous, and gloomy castle, whose portals stood wide open, though neither light nor sound gave any indication that it was inhabited; even the rays of the moon, as they were reflected upon the sombre and lifeless mass, seemed to make it still more horrible.

As he went forward the dog began to howl; but the boy, who knew not whether this was the giant's hour for sleep, stopped and rested himself timorously against the trunk of a withered and leafless wild olive, which was the only tree to be found in that parched and naked district.

"Heaven help me!" exclaimed the boy.

"Cross! cross!" responded a sad voice among the branches of the olive. Joyfully the boy recognized the hermit owl which the swallow had mentioned, and said to it in the language of birds:

"Poor little owl, I beg you will help and guide me. I am come in search of the Bird of Truth, and I have to carry the Water of Many Colours to the witch of the tower."

"Do not do that," responded the owl; "but when you have filled the jar with the clear, pure water that flows from a spring at the foot of the fountain of Water of Many Colours, go in quickly to the aviary, which you will find in front of the doorway; do not take any notice of the various coloured birds that will come to meet you and deafen you by all shouting out together that they are the Bird of Truth; then seize a little white bird which the others thrust on one side and persecute ceaselessly, but cannot kill, because it cannot die. But go quickly, for at this moment the giant is just going to sleep, and his sleep only lasts for a quarter of an hour!"

The boy began to run; he entered into the courtyard, where he found that the fountain had many spouts whence poured waters of different colours, but he did not look at them; he filled his jar at the spring of pure, clear water which flowed from the spring at the foot of the fountain, and then made his way to the aviary. Scarcely had he entered it, when he was surrounded by a troop of birds, some plovers, some black ravens, and others gorgeous peacocks, each one declaring itself to be the Bird of Truth. The boy did not linger with them, but went right forward, and finding the white bird he was in search of huddled in the corner, he took it, placed it in his bosom, and went forth, not however, without distributing a few good blows among the enemies of the Bird of Truth.

The boy did not cease running until he reached the witch's tower. When he arrived, the old wretch seized the jar and flung all the contents at him, thinking that it was the water of many colours, and that he would be changed by it into a parrot; but as it was pure and clear water, the boy only became handsomer than he was before.

At the same time she had drenched all the insects, who were really people that had arrived there with the same intention as the little prince, and who were immediately changed back into their original forms—the beetles into knights errant, the lizards into princesses, grasshoppers into dancers, crickets into musicians, flies into journalists, spiders into young ladies, curianas (black flies) into students, the weevils into boys, and so forth. When the old witch saw this, she seized a broom and flew away. Then the disenchanted people, the ladies, gentlemen, girls and boys thanked their liberator and accompanied him on his way back to the city.

You may imagine how delighted his sister was when she saw the young prince return with the Bird of Truth. But a very great difficulty still remained, and that was, how the bird could be got into the presence of the king without the knowledge of the courtiers, who were interested in preventing him from discovering the crime which they had committed. And what was more, the Court having learned that the Bird of Truth had been found, the news inspired such dread that few were able to sleep tranquilly in their beds. All kinds of weapons were prepared against it; some sharpened, others envenomed; hawks were trained to pursue it; cages were prepared in which to imprison it, if it were found impossible to kill it; they slandered it, saying that its whiteness was an artificial paint, with which it coated its black plumage; they satirized and ridiculed it in every possible manner. At last so much was said about the Bird of Truth, that it reached the king's ears, who wished to see it; and the more that the courtiers intrigued to prevent it, the more he desired to view the bird. Finally, his Majesty issued a proclamation, that whoever had the Bird of Truth in his possession, was to present himself without delay to the king.

This was the very thing that the boy had wished for. So he hastened to the palace, carrying the Bird of Truth in his bosom; but, as you can imagine, the courtiers would not allow him to enter. Then the bird, taking flight, entered into the royal household by a window, and presenting itself before the king, said:

"Sir, I am the Bird of Truth; the boy who brought me here in his bosom has not been allowed by the courtiers to enter."

The king commanded that the boy should be brought in at once, and he entered with his sister, who had accompanied him to the palace. When they came into the royal presence the king inquired who they were.

"That the Bird of Truth can tell your Majesty," said the boy.

And, questioned by the king, the bird answered that the children were his Majesty's own, and informed him of all that had happened. As soon as the king heard the story of the treason, with tears of joy he clasped the children in his arms, and ordered masons to open the vault in which the good queen had been so many years entombed. When the poor lady came forth she was so white that she looked like a statue of marble; but as soon as she beheld her children, the blood rushed from her heart to her cheeks, and she became again as beautiful as she had ever been before. The king embraced her, and seated her on the throne with her children by her side. Then he ordered the good fisherman to be fetched, and created him chief of the Ministry of Fishing; and the queen's faithful attendant, who had saved her mistress's life, he pensioned off, and created a duchess, and he distributed many other gifts and benefits to celebrate the most joyful occasion of his life.



Story DNA

Moral

Truth, though often suppressed, will eventually reveal itself and bring justice to the innocent.

Plot Summary

A poor fisherman finds and raises two abandoned royal twins. Mistreated by their adoptive siblings, the twins leave home and, through their ability to speak with birds, learn they are the lost children of a queen unjustly imprisoned by conspirators. The brother embarks on a quest to find the magical Bird of Truth and pure water, overcoming a witch's deception with the help of an owl. He returns with the Bird of Truth, which reveals the entire conspiracy to the king, leading to the queen's release, the family's reunion, and justice for all.

Themes

truth and justiceperseveranceinnocence betrayedkindness rewarded

Emotional Arc

suffering to triumph

Writing Style

Voice: third person omniscient
Pacing: moderate
Descriptive: lush
Techniques: rule of three, personification of nature

Narrative Elements

Conflict: person vs person
Ending: happy
Magic: talking animals (swallows, owl, Bird of Truth), magical transformation (witch turning people into insects, pure water reversing it), enchanted objects (crystal casket), prophetic knowledge (Bird of Truth)
the crystal casket (innocence, fragility, abandonment)the Bird of Truth (justice, revelation, purity)the Water of Many Colours vs. pure water (deception vs. truth)

Cultural Context

Origin: Spanish
Era: timeless fairy tale

The story reflects common European fairy tale tropes of abandoned royal children, wicked stepmothers/courtiers, and magical quests for truth and justice.

Plot Beats (14)

  1. A poor fisherman discovers two infant twins in a crystal casket on a river and brings them home to his wife, who reluctantly agrees to raise them.
  2. The twins, a boy and a girl, grow up kind and docile, learning the language of birds, but are cruelly mistreated by the fisherman's other children.
  3. After being called 'castaways' by their adoptive siblings, the twins leave home to find their true parents.
  4. While resting in an empty house, the twins overhear swallows discussing the tragic tale of a queen whose newborn twins were cast into a river and she was entombed alive due to a court conspiracy.
  5. The twins realize they are likely the royal children and decide to seek the Bird of Truth to uncover the full story and rescue their mother.
  6. The brother sets out alone, leaving his sister behind for safety, and encounters a witch who demands the Water of Many Colours from the 'Castle of Go and Return Not'.
  7. A dog leads the boy to the gloomy castle, where a hermit owl advises him to ignore the colorful birds claiming to be the Bird of Truth and instead take a small, persecuted white bird, and to fill his jar with pure water, not the Water of Many Colours.
  8. The boy follows the owl's advice, retrieves the white Bird of Truth, and fills his jar with pure water, freeing many enchanted people (turned into insects) when the witch throws the water on them.
  9. The disenchanted people thank the boy and accompany him back to his sister.
  10. News of the Bird of Truth spreads, causing fear among the conspirators, but the king, intrigued, demands to see it.
  11. The boy and his sister bring the Bird of Truth to the palace; the bird flies in through a window and speaks directly to the king, revealing the boy's presence.
  12. The king allows the children in, and the Bird of Truth recounts the entire story of the queen's unjust imprisonment and the children's abandonment.
  13. The king, overjoyed, embraces his children and orders the queen's vault to be opened; she emerges, pale but regains her beauty upon seeing her children.
  14. The royal family is reunited, the fisherman is rewarded, the queen's loyal attendant is honored, and the conspirators are punished.

Characters

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The Boy (Prince)

human child male

A healthy and robust child, initially appearing as a peasant boy. He becomes handsomer after being doused with pure water, suggesting a naturally appealing but perhaps unrefined appearance before the transformation.

Attire: Initially, simple, practical peasant clothing, likely made of coarse linen or wool in muted, earthy tones. Later, when entering the palace, he might wear slightly better, but still modest, attire. No specific details are given, so a generic European peasant boy's outfit of the era is appropriate.

Wants: To find his true parents and escape the cruelty of his adoptive siblings. Later, to bring the Bird of Truth to his father, the King, and restore his family.

Flaw: His initial innocence and vulnerability to the insults of his adoptive siblings, leading him to leave home without a clear plan.

Starts as an innocent, persecuted child, leaves home in distress, embarks on a perilous journey, gains wisdom and courage through his interactions with magical creatures, and ultimately restores his family and rightful place as a prince.

A young boy with an earnest expression, holding a small, pure white bird close to his chest.

Good, docile, peaceable, kind, determined, courageous, resourceful, innocent.

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The Girl (Princess)

human child female

A healthy and robust child, twin sister to the boy. She is described as good, docile, and peaceable. Her appearance would be similar to her brother's, reflecting their shared peasant upbringing.

Attire: Simple, practical peasant clothing, likely a plain dress or smock made of coarse linen or wool in muted, earthy tones. No specific details are given, so a generic European peasant girl's outfit of the era is appropriate.

Wants: To find her true parents and escape the cruelty of her adoptive siblings. Later, to support her brother in his quest and reunite with their true family.

Flaw: Her initial vulnerability to the insults and cruelty of her adoptive siblings.

Starts as an innocent, persecuted child, leaves home with her brother, and remains a steadfast companion and supporter throughout his journey, ultimately sharing in the restoration of their family.

A young girl with a kind expression, standing protectively beside her twin brother.

Good, docile, peaceable, kind, loyal, supportive.

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The Fisherman

human adult male

A very poor man, likely weathered from a life spent outdoors on the river. His build would be lean and strong from physical labor. His skin would be tanned and perhaps lined from sun exposure.

Attire: Simple, worn, and patched clothing typical of a poor fisherman: a coarse linen or wool tunic, patched trousers, and perhaps a simple cap. Colors would be muted and earthy.

Wants: To provide for his large family and to act with kindness and charity towards those in need.

Flaw: His poverty and large family make it difficult to provide for more children, though he overcomes this with faith.

Remains consistent in his kindness and faith. He is rewarded at the end for his good deeds, becoming the chief of the Ministry of Fishing.

A kind-faced, weathered man in simple, patched clothes, holding a fishing net.

Compassionate, kind, trusting, faithful (believing Heaven will provide), hardworking, humble.

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The Fisherman's Wife

human adult female

A woman likely worn from poverty and raising a large family. Her build would be practical, perhaps sturdy. Her appearance would reflect a life of hard work.

Attire: Simple, practical peasant clothing, likely a coarse linen dress and apron in muted, worn colors. Her clothes would be mended and clean but not new.

Wants: To care for her existing family and manage the household, initially hesitant to take on more children due to their poverty.

Flaw: Her initial reluctance to take in the twins due to the burden of poverty.

Overcomes her initial exasperation and grows to love the adopted twins, treating them as her own.

A hardworking woman with a kind but tired expression, wearing a simple apron.

Initially exasperated, but ultimately kind, accepting, hardworking, and loving towards the adopted children.

✦

The Bird of Truth

magical bird ageless non-human

A small, pure white bird. It is persecuted by other birds but cannot be killed, indicating a delicate yet indestructible nature.

Attire: N/A (feathers)

Wants: To reveal the truth to the King and expose the treachery of the courtiers.

Flaw: Physically small and persecuted by others, requiring the boy's protection.

Remains consistent in its nature as the embodiment of truth. Its role is to reveal information and bring about justice.

A small, pristine white bird with an aura of quiet wisdom.

Truthful, wise, persecuted, resilient, courageous (when revealing the truth).

👤

The King

human adult male

A monarch, likely of a dignified and regal bearing. His appearance would reflect his royal status, possibly showing signs of age and sorrow from the loss of his family.

Attire: Rich, regal attire appropriate for a European monarch, such as a velvet robe, embroidered with gold thread, over fine silk garments. A jeweled crown or circlet would be present, along with a scepter.

Wants: To govern his kingdom justly, to seek the truth about the Bird of Truth, and ultimately, to reunite with his lost family.

Flaw: Initially deceived by his courtiers regarding his wife and children.

Starts as a sorrowful and deceived ruler, but through the intervention of the Bird of Truth and his children, he discovers the truth, restores his family, and dispenses justice, becoming a joyful and complete monarch.

A regal king, seated on a throne, with a look of profound joy and relief.

Just, sorrowful (due to his loss), curious (about the Bird of Truth), loving (towards his family), decisive (in seeking truth and dispensing justice).

👤

The Queen

human adult female

Initially described as beautiful. After years entombed, she appears 'white as a statue of marble,' but regains her beauty and color upon seeing her children, suggesting a delicate and graceful physique.

Attire: Initially, royal attire. After being entombed, she would likely be in simple, perhaps tattered, white garments. Upon her restoration, she would be dressed in magnificent royal gowns, perhaps of silk and brocade, in rich colors.

Wants: To be reunited with her children and husband, and to be freed from her unjust imprisonment.

Flaw: Vulnerable to the treachery of the courtiers, leading to her unjust entombment.

Starts as an unjustly imprisoned and suffering queen, but is miraculously restored to her former beauty and reunited with her family, regaining her rightful place on the throne.

A beautiful queen, initially pale as marble, but with a sudden flush of color returning to her cheeks as she embraces her children.

Patient (enduring entombment), loving (towards her children), resilient, forgiving (implied by her immediate joy).

✦

The Witch of the Tower

human (magical) elderly female

An old wretch, implying a haggard and possibly grotesque appearance. Her body would be bent or frail, but with an underlying malevolence.

Attire: Dark, tattered, and simple clothing, perhaps a coarse, dark cloak or dress, suggesting a life of isolation and dark magic. No specific details are given, so a generic European witch's attire is appropriate.

Wants: To trap and transform visitors into insects, presumably for her own amusement or power.

Flaw: Her magic is reversed by pure water, and she is easily defeated when her deception is revealed.

Remains consistent in her villainy. She is defeated and flees when her magic is inadvertently reversed by the boy.

An old, cackling woman, broom in hand, flying away in a rage.

Malicious, deceptive, cruel, easily enraged, powerful (magically).

✦

The Hermit Owl

animal (magical) ageless non-human

A sad-voiced owl, residing in a withered, leafless wild olive tree. Its appearance would be wise and perhaps slightly mournful, with large, observant eyes.

Attire: N/A (feathers)

Wants: To guide and assist those seeking the Bird of Truth, providing crucial information.

Flaw: None apparent, acts as a pure guide.

Remains consistent as a wise guide, providing critical information to the boy.

A wise owl with large, sad eyes, perched on a gnarled, leafless branch.

Wise, helpful, knowledgeable, somewhat melancholic ('sad voice').

Locations

Fisherman's Riverside Hut

transitional Implied temperate climate, likely pleasant for river activities.

A small, humble hut situated directly on the banks of a deep, calm, and clear river. The river itself is partially hidden by trees, reeds, and brambles, creating a secluded and natural environment.

Mood: Initially humble and peaceful, later becoming tense due to sibling rivalry, then sad as the twins depart.

The twins are discovered in a crystal casket, raised by the fisherman, and later decide to leave due to mistreatment.

small hut river boat fishing nets trees reeds brambles

Deserted Hillside House

indoor afternoon Implied warm, dry conditions suitable for swallows.

A small, empty house discovered after the twins travel for half a day, located on a hillside. Swallows nest under its eaves.

Mood: Initially disheartening and lonely, then becomes a place of revelation and hope as the children understand the swallows' conversation.

The twins rest here and overhear the swallows discussing the Bird of Truth and the Water of Many Colours, gaining crucial information for their quest.

small house doorway bench eaves of the roof swallows

Giant's Courtyard and Aviary

outdoor night Dry, desolate, implied hot climate.

A parched and naked district leading to a courtyard with a unique fountain and an aviary. The fountain has multiple spouts pouring different colored waters, but at its base, a spring of pure, clear water flows. The aviary is filled with various birds, including a persecuted white bird.

Mood: Tense, dangerous, and magical, with a sense of urgency.

The boy retrieves the pure water and the Bird of Truth, overcoming the deceptive birds and the giant's impending awakening.

withered wild olive tree parched district courtyard fountain with multi-colored spouts spring of pure water aviary plovers, ravens, peacocks small white bird

Royal Palace

indoor day Implied stable, regal environment.

A grand royal residence with windows large enough for a bird to fly through, and a throne room where the king holds court. It contains a hidden vault where the queen was entombed.

Mood: Initially tense and suspicious due to the courtiers' machinations, transforming into joyous and celebratory.

The Bird of Truth reveals the true parentage of the children and the queen's unjust imprisonment, leading to a joyous reunion and restoration of justice.

palace windows throne room king's throne courtiers hidden vault marble statue-like queen