ELEVENTH GOBLIN
by Unknown · from Twenty-Two Goblins. Translated from the Sanskrit
Adapted Version
Once, there was a young king. His name was King Leo. He loved to play all day. He did not like king's work. He ran in the garden. He played with his dogs. He sang loud songs. King's work was not fun.
Farsight was his wise friend. Farsight did all the king's work. He helped the people. He made the rules. People talked about Farsight much. They said Farsight was like a king. Farsight felt very sad. He wanted King Leo to learn.
Farsight told his wife, Prudence. Prudence was very smart. She gave Farsight a good idea. "Go on a long trip," she said. "King Leo will learn to work. He will see it is hard." Farsight liked this. He told King Leo. King Leo did not want him to go. But Farsight left the next day.
Farsight went on a big ship. He sailed on the blue sea. The wind blew his hair. The waves were very big. One day, he saw a magic tree. It grew from the water. A pretty girl sat on it. She was Princess Luna. She sang a sweet song. Farsight watched her. He was very shocked. Then the tree was gone. The girl was gone too.
Farsight came back home. He told King Leo his story. He talked about Princess Luna. He told of her sweet song. He told of the magic tree. King Leo heard about the pretty girl. He thought about her much. King Leo wanted to find her. He wanted to marry her. He loved Princess Luna now. He must go find her.
King Leo left his palace. He went on a long trip. He looked for Princess Luna. He walked for many days. He walked for many nights. He asked people about her. "Do you know Princess Luna?" No one knew her. He kept going. He wanted to find the magic tree. He wanted the singing girl. King Leo was very brave. He would not stop.
King Leo found a quiet city. It was under the sea. The city was very old. The streets were made of shells. Princess Luna lived there. He asked her to marry him. She said yes! But she had a secret. She must go away some days. King Leo said yes to this. They got married. They were very happy.
One day, Princess Luna left. She went away at night. King Leo followed her. He wanted to know her secret. He saw a very big Giant. The Giant was scary. The Giant was very loud. The Giant took Princess Luna away! King Leo was very angry. He loved his wife much. He must help her now. He was not scared.
King Leo had a big sword. He ran at the Giant. He fought the Giant hard. He hit him again and again. He made the Giant go away. Princess Luna was safe. She came out. She had her magic back. She was a fairy again. She could fly! King Leo was very happy. He hugged his wife. They were side by side again.
Princess Luna told King Leo. She wanted to see her father. He was the fairy king. She wanted to go home. King Leo felt sad. He asked her to stay. "Stay a few days," he said. "Let us be happy." Princess Luna agreed. They stayed in the garden. They played in the sun. They ate good food.
King Leo had a plan. He took Princess Luna to a pool. This pool was magic. He hugged her tight. He jumped into the water. Princess Luna was with him. They were in his palace garden! The magic pool brought them home. King Leo was glad.
Princess Luna tried to fly. She could not fly now. Her magic was gone. She felt very sad. She sat and cried. King Leo held her hand. His love kept her here. She was a human princess now. She stayed with King Leo. She loved him too. She wiped her tears.
King Leo was very happy. He had his wife at last. He made a big party. Farsight saw King Leo. He saw King Leo still played. Farsight felt very, very sad. He thought about the king's work. Who would help the people? He left the palace. He went to his bed. He could not smile.
King Leo and Princess Luna lived with joy. King Leo learned to be good. He did his king's work now. He still missed Farsight. Farsight was a wise friend. King Leo thought of him always. He was a good king for his land. And he never forgot Farsight.
Original Story
ELEVENTH GOBLIN
The King who won a Fairy as his Wife. Why did his counsellor's heart break?
Then the king went as before to the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his shoulder, and started back. And the goblin said once more: "O King, I like you wonderfully well because you are not discouraged. So I will tell you a delightful little story to relieve your weariness. Listen."
In the Anga country was a young king named Glory-banner, so beautiful that he seemed an incarnation of the god of love. He had conquered all his enemies by his strength of arm, and he had a counsellor named Farsight.
At last the king, proud of his youth and beauty, entrusted all the power in his quiet kingdom to his counsellor, and gradually devoted himself entirely to pleasure. He spent all his time with the ladies of the court, and listened more attentively to their love-songs than to the advice of statesmen. He took greater pleasure in peeping into their windows than into the holes in his administration. But Farsight bore the whole burden of public business, and never wearied day or night.
Then the people began to murmur: "The counsellor Farsight has seduced the king, and now he alone has all the kingly glory." And the counsellor said to his wife, whose name was Prudence: "My dear, the king is devoted to his pleasures, and great infamy is heaped upon me by the people. They say I have devoured the kingdom, though in fact I support the burden of it. Now popular gossip damages the greatest man. Was not Rama forced to abandon his good wife by popular clamour? So what shall I do now?"
Then his clever wife Prudence showed that she deserved her name. She said: "My dear, leave the king and go on a pilgrimage. Tell him that you are an old man now, and should be permitted to travel in foreign countries for a time. Then the gossip will cease, when they see that you are unselfish. And when you are gone, the king will bear his own burdens. And thus his levity will gradually disappear. And when you come back, you can assume your office without reproach."
To this advice the counsellor assented, and said to the king in the course of conversation: "Your Majesty, permit me to go on a pilgrimage for a few days. Virtue seems of supreme importance to me."
But the king said: "No, no, counsellor. Is there no other kind of virtue except in pilgrimages? How about generosity and that kind of thing? Isn't it possible to prepare for heaven in your own house?"
Then the counsellor said: "Your Majesty, one gets worldly prosperity from generosity and that kind of thing. But a pilgrimage gives eternal life. A prudent man should attend to it while he has strength. The chance may be lost, for no one can be sure of his health."
But the king was still arguing against it when the door-keeper came in and said: "Your Majesty, the glorious sun is diving beneath the pool of heaven. Arise. The hour for your bath is slipping away." And the king went immediately to bathe.
The counsellor went home, still determined on his pilgrimage. He would not let his wife go with him, but started secretly. Not even his servants knew.
He wandered alone through many countries to many holy places, and finally came to the Odra country. There he saw a city near the ocean, where he entered a temple to Shiva and sat down in the court. There he sat, hot and dusty from long travel, when he was seen by a merchant named Treasure who had come to worship the god. The merchant gathered from his dress and appearance that he was a high-born Brahman, and invited him home, and entertained him with food, bathing, and the like.
When the counsellor was rested, the merchant asked him: "Who are you? Whence do you come? And where are you going?" And the other replied: "I am a Brahman named Farsight. I came here on a pilgrimage from the Anga country."
Then the merchant Treasure said to him: "I am preparing for a trading voyage to Golden Island. Do you stay in my house. And when I come back, and you are wearied from your pilgrimage, rest here for a time before going home." But Farsight said: "I do not want to stay here. I would rather go with you." And the good merchant agreed. And the counsellor slept in the first bed he had lain in for many nights.
The next day he went to the seashore with the merchant, and entered the ship loaded with the merchant's goods. He sailed along, admiring the wonders and terrors of the sea, till at last he reached Golden Island. There he stayed for a time until the merchant had finished his buying and selling. Now on the way back, he saw a magic tree suddenly rising from the ocean. It had beautiful branches, boughs of gold, fruits of jewels, and splendid blossoms. And sitting on a jewelled couch in the branches was a lovely maiden of heavenly beauty. And while the counsellor wondered what it all meant, the maiden took her lute in her hand, and began to sing:
Whatever seed of fate is sown,
The fruit appears—'tis strange!
Whatever deed a man has done,
Not God himself can change.
And when she had made her meaning clear, the heavenly maiden straightway sank with the magic tree and the couch. And Farsight thought: "What a wonderful thing I have seen to-day! What a strange place the ocean is for the appearance of a tree with a fairy in it! And if this is a usual occurrence at sea, why do not other goddesses arise?"
The pilot and other sailors saw that he was astonished, and they said: "Sir, this wonderful maiden appears here regularly, and sinks a moment after, but the sight is new to you." Then the counsellor, filled with amazement, came to the shore with Treasure, and disembarked. And when the merchant had unloaded his goods and caused his servants to rejoice, the counsellor went home with him and spent many happy days there.
At last he said to Treasure: "Merchant, I have rested happily for a long time in your house. Now I wish to go to my own country. Peace be with you!" And in spite of urging from the merchant, Farsight took his leave, and started with no companion except his own courage. He went through many countries and at last reached the Anga country. And scouts who had been sent by King Glory-banner saw him before he reached the city. When the king learned of it, he went himself out of the city to meet him, for he had been terribly grieved by the separation. He drew near, embraced and greeted the counsellor and took him, all worn and dusty with the weary journey, into an inner room.
When he saw that she was saved, the king cried "Come, come to me!"
And as soon as the counsellor was refreshed, the king said: "Counsellor, why did you leave us? How could you bring yourself to do so harsh and loveless a thing? But after all, who can understand the strange workings of stern necessity? To think that you should decide all at once to wander off on a pilgrimage! Well, tell me what countries you visited, and what new things you saw."
Then the counsellor told him the whole story truthfully and in order, the journey to Golden Island and the fairy who rose singing from the sea, her wonderful beauty and the magic tree.
But the king immediately fell in love so hopelessly that his kingdom and his life seemed worthless to him without her. He took the counsellor aside and said: "Counsellor, I simply must see her. Remember that I shall die if I do not. I bow to my fate. I will take the journey which you took. You must not refuse me nor accompany me. I shall go alone and in disguise. You must rule the kingdom, and not dispute my words. Swear to do it on your life."
So he spoke, and would not listen to advice, but dismissed the counsellor. Then Farsight was unhappy though a great festival was made for him. How can a good counsellor be happy when his master devotes himself to a vice?
The next night King Glory-banner threw the burden of government on that excellent counsellor, assumed the dress of a hermit, and left his city. And as he travelled, he saw a monk named Grass, who said when the king bowed before him as a holy man: "My son, if you sail with a merchant named Fortune, you will obtain the maiden you desire. Go on fearlessly."
So the king bowed again and went on rejoicing. After crossing rivers and mountains he came to the ocean. And on the shore he met at once the merchant Fortune whom the monk had mentioned, bound for Golden Island. And when the merchant saw the king's appearance and his signet ring, he bowed low, took him on the ship, and set sail.
When the ship reached the middle of the sea, the maiden suddenly arose, sitting in the branches of the magic tree. And as the king gazed eagerly at her, she sang as before to her lute:
Whatever seed of fate is sown,
The fruit appears—'tis strange!
Whatever deed a man has done,
Not God himself can change.
Whatever, how, for whom, and where
'Tis fated so to be,
That thing, just so, for him, and there
Must happen fatally.
This song she sang, hinting at what was to happen. And the king gazed at her smitten by love, and could not move. Then he cried: "O Sea, in hiding her, you deceive those who think they have your treasures. Honour and glory to you! I seek your protection. Grant me my desire!" And as the king prayed, the maiden sank with the tree. Then the king jumped after her into the sea.
The good merchant Fortune thought he was lost and was ready to die of grief. But he was comforted by a voice from heaven which said: "Do nothing rash. There is no danger when he sinks in the sea. For he is the king Glory-banner, disguised as a hermit. He came here for the sake of the maiden; she was his wife in a former life. And he will win her and return to his kingdom in the Anga country." So the merchant sailed on to complete his business.
But King Glory-banner sank in the sea, and all at once he saw a heavenly city. He looked in amazement at the balconies with their splendid jewelled pillars, their walls bright with gold, and the network of pearls in their windows. And he saw gardens with pools that had stairways of various gems, and magic trees that yielded all desires. But rich as it was, the city was deserted.
He entered house after house, but did not find the maiden anywhere. Then he climbed a high balcony built of gems, opened a door, and entered. And there he saw her all alone, lying on a jewelled couch, and clad in splendid garments. He eagerly raised her face to see if it was really she, and saw that it was indeed the maiden he sought. At the sight of her he had the strange feeling of the traveller in a desert in summer at the sight of a river.
And she opened her eyes, saw that he was handsome and loveable, and left her couch in confusion. But she welcomed him and with downcast eyes that seemed like full-blown lotuses she did honour to his feet. Then she slowly spoke: "Who are you, sir? How did you come to this inaccessible under-world? And what is this hermit garb? For I see that you are a king. Oh, sir, if you would do me a kindness, tell me this."
And the king answered her: "Beautiful maiden, I am King Glory-banner of the Anga country, and I heard from a reliable person that you were to be seen on the sea. To see you I assumed this garb, left my kingdom, and followed you hither. Oh, tell me who you are."
Then she said to him with bashful love: "Sir, there is a king of the fairies named Moonshine. I am his daughter, and my name is Moonlight. Now my father has left me alone in this city. I do not know where he went with the rest of the people, or why. Therefore, as my home is lonely, I rise through the ocean, sit on a magic tree, and sing about fate."
Then the king remembered the words of the monk, and urged her with such gentle, tender words that she confessed her love and agreed to marry him. But she made a condition: "My dear, on four set days in each month you must let me go somewhere unhindered and unseen. There is a reason." And the king agreed, married her, and lived in heavenly happiness with her.
While he was living in heavenly bliss, Moonlight said to him one day: "My dear, you must wait here. I am going somewhere on an errand. For this is one of the set days. While you stay here, sweetheart, you must not go into that crystal room, nor plunge into this pool. If you do, you will find yourself at that very moment in the world again." So she said good-bye and left the city.
But the king took his sword and followed, to learn her secret. And he saw a giant approaching with a great black cave of a mouth that yawned like the pit. The giant fell down and howled horribly, then took Moonlight into his mouth and swallowed her.
And the king's anger blazed forth. He took his great sword, black as a snake that has sloughed its skin, ran up wrathfully, and cut off the giant's head. He was blinded by his madness, he did not know what to do, he was afflicted by the loss of his darling. But Moonlight split open the stomach of the giant, and came out alive and unhurt, like the brilliant, spotless moon coming out from a black cloud.
When he saw that she was saved, the king cried: "Come, come to me!" and ran forward and embraced her. And he asked her: "What does it mean, dearest? Is this a dream, or an illusion?" And the fairy answered: "My dear, listen to me. It is not a dream, not an illusion. My father, the king of the fairies, laid this curse upon me. My father had many sons, but he loved me so that he could not eat without me. And I used to come to this deserted spot twice a month to worship Shiva.
"One day I came here and it happened that I spent the whole day in worship. That day my father waited for me and would not eat or drink anything, though he was hungry and angry with me. At night I stood before him with downcast eyes, for I had done wrong. And he forgot his love and cursed me—so strong is fate. 'Because you have despised me and left me hungry a whole day, a giant named Terror-of-Fate will swallow you four times a month when you leave the city. And each time you will split him open and come out. And you shall not remember the curse afterwards, nor the pain of being swallowed alive. And you must live here alone.'
"But when I begged him, he thought awhile and softened the curse. 'When Glory-banner, King of the Angas, shall become your husband, and shall see you swallowed by the giant, and shall kill the giant, then the curse shall end, and you shall remember all your magic arts.' Then he left me here, and went with his people to the Nishadha mountain. But I stayed here because of the curse. And now the curse is ended, and I remember everything. So now I shall go to the Nishadha mountain to see my father. Of course now I remember how to fly. And you are at liberty to stay here, or to go back to your own kingdom."
Then the king was sad, and he begged her thus: "My beautiful wife, do not go for seven days. Be as kind as you are beautiful. Let me be happy with you in the garden, and forget my longings. Then you may go to your father, and I will go home." So he persuaded her, and was happy with her for six days in the garden. And the lilies in the ponds looked like longing eyes, and the ripples like hands raised to detain them, and the cries of swans and cranes seemed to say: "Do not leave us and go away."
On the seventh day the king cleverly led his wife to the pool from which one could get back to the world. There he threw his arms about her and plunged into the pool, and came up with her in the pool in the garden of his own palace.
The gardeners saw that the king had come back with a wife, and they joyfully ran and told the counsellor Farsight. He came and fell at the king's feet, and then led the king and the fairy into the palace. And the counsellor and the people thought: "Wonderful! The king has won the fairy whom others could see only for a moment like the lightning in the sky. Whatever is written in one's fate, that comes true, however impossible it may be."
But when Moonlight saw that the king was in his own country, and the seven days were over, she thought she would fly away like other fairies. But she could not remember how. Then she became very sad, like a woman who has been robbed.
And the king said: "Why are you so sad, my dear? Tell me." And the fairy said: "The curse is over. Yet because I have been bound so long in the fetters of your love, I have lost my magic arts. I cannot fly." Then the king thought: "The fairy is really mine," and he was happy and made a great feast.
When the counsellor Farsight saw this, he went home, and lay down on his bed, and his heart broke, and he died. Then the king governed the kingdom himself, and lived for a long time in heavenly happiness with Moonlight.
When he had told this story, the goblin said: "O King, when the king was so happy, why should the counsellor's heart break? Was it from grief because he did not win the fairy himself? Or from sorrow because the king came back, and he could no longer act as king? If you know and will not tell me, then you will lose your virtue, and your head will go flying into a hundred pieces."
And the king said to the goblin: "O magic creature, neither of these reasons would be possible for a high-minded counsellor. But he thought: 'The king used to neglect his duties for the sake of ordinary women. What will happen now, when he loves a fairy? In spite of all my efforts, a terrible misfortune has happened.' I think that was why his heart broke."
Then the magic goblin went back to his tree in a moment. And the king was still determined to catch him, and went once more to the sissoo tree.
Story DNA
Moral
True wisdom lies in understanding the long-term consequences of actions and prioritizing duty over fleeting desires, even when personal happiness is at stake.
Plot Summary
King Glory-banner neglects his kingdom, relying on his wise counsellor Farsight. Farsight embarks on a pilgrimage, where he witnesses a beautiful fairy, Moonlight, rising from the sea. Upon his return, the king falls madly in love with the fairy and abandons his throne to find her. He succeeds, marries her, and breaks a curse that binds her, but then tricks her into returning to his world, causing her to lose her magical abilities. While the king and fairy live happily, Farsight, heartbroken by the king's continued irresponsibility, dies, leaving the king to rule alone.
Themes
Emotional Arc
suffering to triumph
Writing Style
Narrative Elements
Cultural Context
This story is part of the Vetala Panchavimshati (Twenty-five Tales of the Vetala), a collection of ancient Indian Sanskrit legends and fairy tales, often embedded within a frame story of a king and a 'vetala' (goblin/vampire).
Plot Beats (15)
- A frame story begins with a king carrying a goblin, who promises a story to relieve weariness.
- King Glory-banner of Anga neglects his duties, leaving governance to his counsellor Farsight, who faces public criticism.
- Farsight, on his wife's advice, undertakes a pilgrimage to restore his reputation and encourage the king's maturity.
- During his sea voyage, Farsight witnesses a beautiful fairy, Moonlight, rising from the ocean on a magic tree, singing about fate.
- Farsight returns, and the king, upon hearing the story, falls deeply in love with the fairy and vows to find her.
- The king, disguised as a hermit, embarks on a quest, receiving a prophecy from a monk about his destined union with the fairy.
- The king finds Moonlight in a deserted underwater city, proposes, and marries her under the condition that she be allowed to leave unhindered on four specific days each month.
- The king secretly follows Moonlight on one of her designated days and witnesses her being swallowed by a giant.
- The king slays the giant, freeing Moonlight and breaking her father's curse, which restores her memory of her fairy powers.
- Moonlight explains her curse and her intention to return to her father, but the king persuades her to stay for seven days.
- On the seventh day, the king tricks Moonlight into plunging into a pool that transports them back to his palace garden.
- Moonlight discovers she has lost her magic arts and cannot fly, realizing she is bound to the human world by the king's love.
- The king rejoices and celebrates, but Farsight, witnessing the king's continued devotion to pleasure over duty, dies of a broken heart.
- The king and Moonlight live happily ever after, with the king governing his kingdom.
- The goblin asks the frame story king why Farsight's heart broke, and the king correctly deduces it was from despair over the king's continued irresponsibility.
Characters
Glory-banner
Of such striking beauty that he seemed an incarnation of the god of love. He possesses strong arms, indicative of his prowess in conquering enemies.
Attire: Initially, he would wear luxurious, finely woven silk dhotis and angarkhas, possibly embroidered with gold thread, befitting a young Indian king who has entrusted his kingdom to a counsellor and is devoted to pleasure. Later, as he becomes more active, his attire would still be royal but perhaps more practical for travel and combat, though still opulent. He would wear gold jewelry, such as armlets and necklaces.
Wants: Initially, to indulge in pleasure and enjoy his youth. Later, to win and keep Moonlight, and to live in happiness with her.
Flaw: His initial neglect of kingly duties for pleasure, and his tendency to be swayed by personal desires over state affairs.
Transforms from a pleasure-seeking, neglectful ruler into a determined, courageous, and loving husband who actively seeks out and wins his fairy wife, eventually taking full responsibility for his kingdom.
Pleasure-seeking, initially neglectful of duties, courageous, determined, tender, loving, clever.
Farsight
A high-born Brahman, suggesting a lean build and dignified appearance. His dress and demeanor indicate his status and wisdom. He is described as an 'old man' when he proposes his pilgrimage, implying a mature age.
Attire: Initially, the formal attire of a royal counsellor in ancient India: a white or cream dhoti, a simple but well-made angarkha, possibly a shawl or uttariya draped over his shoulders, indicating his scholarly and administrative role. During his pilgrimage, his attire would be simpler, perhaps a plain white dhoti and an unstitched cloth (uttariya) for modesty and ease of travel, indicating a renunciant's path. Later, back in the palace, he would revert to his counsellor's attire.
Wants: To protect the king's reputation and the kingdom's stability, to maintain his own integrity, and to prepare for eternal life through pilgrimage.
Flaw: His deep sense of responsibility and foresight ultimately lead to his despair and death when he perceives the king's actions as a threat to the kingdom's future.
He attempts to guide the king and protect the kingdom, goes on a pilgrimage to diffuse public gossip, and returns to find the king happily married. His arc ends tragically with his death from a broken heart, unable to reconcile the king's personal happiness with his perceived neglect of duty.
Diligent, loyal, wise, selfless, burdened, principled, astute.
Prudence
Not explicitly described, but as the wife of a high-born Brahman counsellor, she would likely be graceful and modest in appearance, reflecting her cleverness and wisdom.
Attire: A traditional Indian sari or salwar kameez made of fine cotton or silk in muted, respectable colors, befitting the wife of a high-ranking counsellor. She would wear minimal, elegant jewelry.
Wants: To protect her husband's reputation and well-being, and indirectly, the stability of the kingdom.
Flaw: Not explicitly shown, but her reliance on her husband's actions for her own peace of mind could be a vulnerability.
Appears briefly to offer crucial advice that sets the main plot in motion, then recedes from the narrative.
Clever, wise, practical, supportive, perceptive.
Moonlight
A lovely maiden of heavenly beauty, with a brilliant, spotless appearance like the moon. She is capable of splitting open a giant's stomach from the inside, suggesting a hidden strength despite her delicate appearance.
Attire: Initially, when seen on the magic tree, she would wear flowing, ethereal garments, perhaps made of shimmering silk or gossamer fabric in light, celestial colors like silver, white, or pale blue, adorned with subtle jewels. As the king's wife, her attire would still be beautiful and regal, but perhaps more earthly, though still retaining an otherworldly elegance, such as a richly embroidered silk lehenga or sari.
Wants: To fulfill the conditions of her curse, to find love and happiness, and eventually to return to her father's kingdom.
Flaw: Bound by a curse, and later, by her love for the king, which causes her to lose her magic arts.
Begins as a cursed fairy, bound to a cycle of suffering and forgetting. She finds love with Glory-banner, is freed from her curse, and initially regains her magic. However, her love for the king and his cleverness cause her to lose her magic arts, transforming her into a human queen, bound to the earthly realm by love.
Mysterious, beautiful, loving, resilient, initially bound by a curse, later sad and vulnerable.
Treasure
A merchant, likely well-fed and prosperous, indicating his success in trade. His appearance would be clean and respectable.
Attire: Practical but good quality clothing for a merchant, such as a fine cotton or silk kurta and dhoti, possibly with a waistcoat or angarkha, in rich but not overly ostentatious colors. He would wear some gold jewelry, indicative of his wealth.
Wants: To conduct his trading voyages, and to offer hospitality to those in need.
Flaw: None explicitly shown.
Provides Farsight with hospitality and passage, serving as a catalyst for Farsight's encounter with Moonlight.
Generous, hospitable, kind, shrewd (in business).
Terror-of-Fate
A giant with a great black cave of a mouth that yawns like the pit. He is large enough to swallow a human whole.
Attire: None, or minimal, perhaps a rough loincloth, emphasizing his primal, monstrous nature.
Wants: To fulfill the curse laid upon Moonlight.
Flaw: Vulnerable to a sword strike, specifically to the head.
Appears as a recurring threat to Moonlight, only to be slain by King Glory-banner, thus ending the curse.
Brutal, monstrous, a force of fate.
The Goblin
A magic creature, implied to be a Vetala (a vampire-like being that inhabits corpses in Hindu mythology). It is carried on the king's shoulder, suggesting a size that can be easily transported but is still substantial enough to be a burden. Its appearance is likely grotesque or unsettling.
Attire: None, or tattered rags, consistent with a corpse-dwelling entity.
Wants: To test the king's wisdom and determination, and to tell stories.
Flaw: Bound by the rules of its own riddles and the king's correct answers.
Acts as a narrative device, telling stories that contain moral dilemmas or philosophical questions, which the king must answer correctly to maintain his virtue.
Cunning, philosophical, observant, testing, enjoys storytelling and riddles.
Locations
Anga Palace Garden
A lush royal garden within the Anga kingdom, featuring ponds with lilies and ripples, and inhabited by swans and cranes. It is a place of beauty and tranquility, designed for leisure and romantic encounters.
Mood: Romantic, serene, initially neglected by the king, later filled with happiness and longing.
King Glory-banner spends six days of heavenly happiness with Moonlight here after their return from the fairy realm, before she loses her magic.
The Magic Tree in the Ocean
A wondrous tree suddenly rising from the ocean, with beautiful branches, boughs of gold, and fruits of jewels. Splendid blossoms adorn it. A lovely maiden sits on a jewelled couch within its branches.
Mood: Magical, mysterious, awe-inspiring, ephemeral.
Farsight first encounters the fairy Moonlight (then unnamed) here, singing about fate, and witnesses her magical disappearance.
Fairy City and Deserted Spot
A hidden city in the fairy realm, containing a crystal room and a magical pool. Nearby is a deserted spot where Moonlight worships Shiva, a place of ancient ritual and a site of her curse.
Mood: Mysterious, magical, initially blissful, later tense and dangerous due to the giant's appearance.
King Glory-banner follows Moonlight, witnesses her being swallowed by the giant, and breaks her curse. This is also where Moonlight's father cursed her.