LYDERIC, the ORPHAN
by William Elliot Griffis · from Belgian Fairy Tales
Adapted Version
Long ago, in a far land, a special thing happened. People were sad. Their cows were sick. They walked a hard path. They asked for help.
A kind lady joined the walk. She would have a baby soon. She walked in the big forest. She got very, very tired. Her strength went away. Her baby boy was born there. The boy's Mommy closed her eyes. She went to sleep always. She did not wake up.
A Kind Old Man lived there. He heard a baby cry. He found the baby boy. A Gentle Deer gave him milk. The Kind Old Man made a soft bed. It was for the boy's Mommy. It was under a big tree.
The Kind Old Man helped the boy. The Gentle Deer helped him. He drank her milk each day. He played in the forest. The boy grew big and strong. He was a happy boy.
One night, magic fairies came. They saw baby the boy. The Magic Fairy came too. She gave him good wishes. She said he would be a great hero. She would always like him very much.
The boy grew up. He was very strong. He was very kind. He helped many people. He became a famous hero. All people knew his name!
The Magic Fairy wanted the boy to stay. She gave him a magic stick. It had a little fire. This magic stick helped him live long. He lived in that place. Brave knights lived there too. It was a special, magic land. He stayed there a long time.
The boy missed his home. He took his magic stick. He came back to his land. He was happy to be home! He liked his own land. He liked being back.
The boy met a new friend. He liked her very much. He played with his new friend. He forgot his magic stick. The little fire went out. Poof! The magic was gone. It was a sad thing.
The Magic Fairy was sad. The boy forgot her. She took him back to that place. The boy sleeps in a cave now. Brave knights sleep there too. He waits for a new day. He sleeps a long, long time.
The boy's story is still told. All people know him. He was a strong, kind hero. They know the special fairy. And the gentle deer helped him too!
Original Story
LYDERIC, THE ORPHAN
In the middle ages, the holy saint Willebrod spent his life in doing good among the Dutch and Belgian tribes. His relics rest in the church at Echternach, in Luxemburg.
When trouble of any sort came upon the country people, they looked to him for help and advice.
In a certain year, a plague came upon their cattle. The poor dumb creatures acted as if they had brain fever. They were giddy, and staggered about, going round and round, but seemed to be unable to go forward. So the fields could not be ploughed and the cows would not give milk. The babies cried, the land was threatened with barrenness, and the people feared starvation.
In their distress, they came before the tomb of the good bishop, and made a vow that, if the pestilence ceased, they would, every year, make a pilgrimage to the church in which he was buried.
Now the curious thing, about this pilgrimage, was the manner in which it was carried out. To some extent, the people imitated, in their dancing and gestures, the odd behavior of the cattle, during their brain disorder. It became the fashion to leap and stagger, as the smitten beasts had done. In times, however, the celebration took the form of a processional, with bands of music.
So, every year, the long line of thousands of people, old and young, rich and poor, strong and weak, sick and well, led by the musicians, and all singing as they went, started from the river bridge. They walked hand in hand, and four abreast, and this was the method of their march; they would take three steps forward, and two steps backward. In this way, they would advance, very gradually, to the hill where the church stands. Having reached this, they laid their gifts upon the altar and then danced down the church aisle, to the porch, door and outside.
One can see, that, to make an advance of one step, the dancers and singers had to take five distinct steps. In this way, although the route from the river to the church was only one mile, in length, five hours were required to go the whole route. Many joined in the procession who were so old and weak, that they were likely to fall down. Nevertheless many weak folk, tried it, for they hoped to get rid of their pains and aches.
Especially hard was the ascent of the sixty stone steps, on the hillside. To mount to the top, five hundred human steps were necessary.
Thus it happened that not a few fell down along the march. Fainting and weary, they were left by the wayside. On the church steps, strong men stood by, on either side, to watch for any, who, from weakness, should lose their balance and fall down. Those who were likely to do so, or could not keep up, had to be dragged away quickly, lest they should be crushed by the waves of the oncoming dancers. In the frenzy of fervor and excitement, those who were waltzing, with giddy brains, might be so absorbed in their own motions, as not to notice what they were doing.
Now there was a young widow, who, out of grief, and hoping for comfort, had come to join in the procession. Being the bride of a few months, she was hoping for a son, and had vowed to St. Willebrod that, if she became the mother of a boy, she would dance from the river’s edge to the saint’s tomb. She prayed fervently that her hopes might be fulfilled.
She joined in the procession, and followed faithfully the rules laid down, but, when scarcely half way to the church, she felt her strength giving out. Fearing lest, if she continued, she might be trampled to death, she left the procession. Then, after a brief rest, she walked out from the open road, some distance into the forest.
There, in her loneliness, her child was born, and it was a boy. Though she rejoiced to have her own, and its father’s hopes fulfilled, yet she felt that she had so overtaxed her strength, in the dancing procession, that she was likely to die.
So, wrapping her babe in one of her own garments, she laid it down on a little bed of fallen leaves. Then scraping clean a part of the ground, she wrote, with a stick, upon the dirt, the name “Lyderic.” Then, her last measure of strength having ebbed away, she died.
A pious hermit, whose dwelling was a hut in the forest, while strolling about, heard the infant’s wail. Coming near the place, whence the sound proceeded, he found the dead mother and the living child. Something else also met his sight and a very wonderful picture it was. There on the bed of leaves, which the mother had scraped up, lay the baby boy. Beside him, lying along the floor of the forest was a doe, and this female deer was suckling the infant. This dumb mother of fawns seemed as careful and as anxious, as if the baby had been her own offspring; and indeed, it was not far away in the deep woods, that the doe kept her little family.
The baby boy, not knowing anything about different kinds of mothers, or qualities of food, was as active, as if living in the nursery of a house, and fondled on a human mother’s lap.
The fawn’s large, deep, lustrous eyes, were appealing to the old hermit’s heart. The wild creature did not tremble, or show any fear, for every beast of the forest seemed to know, and love the old man; as if realizing that he was their friend, and not an enemy, as the hunters were. They could see that he had no weapons, and even a bird could understand that.
The body of the human mother was given Christian burial, though the only conscious mourner was the old man, who hastily made a rustic cross, and set it over the grave; on which, also, he planted some wild flowers.
Now the hermit was not accustomed to take care of babies, but he made a rude cradle; and, every day, the doe mother came, as regularly as to her own little deer, to furnish nourishment to the child. So the infant grew to double his first weight and gave every promise of health and vigor. In a few months, he was crawling on the floor, in the hermit’s hut; and, according to his mother’s writing on the ground, Lyderic was his name.
To the old man, the days and months seemed to fly very fast, as babyhood was left behind, and a robust boy was growing up.
The old hermit recalled his own boyhood’s skill at such things, and made toys for the little fellow, who played happily with them. Anything bright, or shining, was especially attractive to the child.
One day, while the hermit was out among the willow trees, which skirted the stream, to make a whistle, for the baby boy, the fairies came into the hut and visited him at his cradle. They were traveling fairies, for they had come all the way from Wales. One of them, was named Morgana, or, as she was well known, Morgana la Fay. She fell in love with the little fellow, and promised that when he grew up, he was to be her love, while all the fairies agreed to bestow on him the gifts of mind and body, through which he might become a great man and conquer all his enemies.
It would make our story too long, to tell how Lyderic, even while a baby boy, was looked upon as the leader of men, in one of those civil wars, which so long troubled Belgic Land. Once, during battle, his cradle was hung upon a tree branch, and he was called the baby leader, and centuries afterwards, a statue and a fountain were reared at Brussels in his honor.
Lyderic, when fully grown, was known as a man of fine character and tremendous strength. He was unselfish, and always ready to help the weak. In time, he became a crusader, and, going off to fight the Saracens, in Syria, won renown for his bravery. There was no Turk, that could stand against his lance, or sword, or battle axe; and their weapons had no power over him. So he came back, unhurt, to Belgium.
After his return home, he built a castle, but soon tiring of a quiet life, he crossed the sea and traveled in Britain. There he met Gratina, the beautiful daughter of Angart, or Edgar, the King of England. By this alliance, he became very powerful. Then the great monarch, Charlemagne, recognized him as an ally and vassal, and gave him, in fief, the Belgic provinces of Hainault and Brabant.
The flag of Lyderic, as Duke of Brabant, was a tricolor, of black, yellow, and red, in vertical bands. To his mind black stood for the dark forest and the difficulties which are always overcome by the brave. Yellow represented property and gold, the precious metal, which added to human prosperity, and must be guarded; while red was for blood and life, which all brave men willingly gave for their country, when they are called to go to war. Centuries afterward, when all the provinces of Belgic Land were united in one kingdom, and the people in one nation, and the country (in the English form of the name) was known as Belgium, this tricolor became the national flag.
Lyderic spent most of his time in Wales, on the lovely aisle of Avalon. Here he was in fairy land, for Morgana, jealous of his marriage to Gratina, had cast a spell upon him. So, while others died and were buried, he lived on. The time passed without his notice, or his asking about age, until two hundred years had slipped away.
Morgana, the fairy, had given Lyderic a fire brand, which, as long as it kept burning, his life would be prolonged; but when it went out, he would die. Lyderic lived with the knights of King Arthur, enjoying, with them, jousts and tournaments, and many wonderful sports and adventures. Yet at last, he tired of the company even of the knights of the Round Table, and longed to cross the sea, and live again in Belgic Land.
One day, when this desire became too strong to resist, he had an iron box made, and carefully keeping the fire alight, he left Avalon, and crossed the sea to his old home. Meeting the handsome widow of King Philip, this royal lady wished to marry him. Lyderic, while yielding to her wishes, and his mind occupied with his love affairs, forgot to attend to the fire, to keep it kindled, and so let the brand go out.
Then Morgana, the fairy, who had been jealous of the Princess Gratina and was now even more jealous of Lyderic’s new wife, carried him off to Avalon, and shut him up in the cave, where sit King Arthur and his knights, awaiting the day when they shall come forth, in time of greatest need. There Lyderic sleeps yet.
The fame of Lyderic lives in the myths of the fairy world, in many lands, from Denmark to Wales, and from Belgium to Italy. All the boys and girls of Europe have heard his story, in one form or another. As for Morgana, she is known all over the world, and in all time, as the conjurer. There are those who can discern her dwelling place on the clouds and vapors, especially off the coast of Calabria in Italy. At certain seasons of tide and weather, one may see, in the sky, and far above earth, or sea, a colossal picture of the trees and hills, of the houses and palaces of the wonderful city of Reggio, magnified many times, as it is reflected on the sky. One thus gets an idea of how the land looks where fairies live.
Story DNA
Plot Summary
In medieval times, a young widow, participating in a unique pilgrimage, dies after giving birth to her son, Lyderic, in the forest. Found by a hermit and nursed by a doe, Lyderic is later visited by fairies, including Morgana la Fay, who bestow gifts and claim him. He grows into a renowned hero, crusader, and duke, but Morgana, jealous, casts a spell of prolonged life on him, keeping him on Avalon with a magical fire brand. After two centuries, Lyderic returns to Belgium, but, distracted by a new love, he allows the fire to extinguish. Morgana, further enraged, carries him off to a cave on Avalon, where he now sleeps with King Arthur and his knights, his legend living on.
Themes
Emotional Arc
suffering to triumph
Writing Style
Narrative Elements
Cultural Context
The story weaves together the historical Echternach dancing procession, medieval crusades, and Arthurian legends to create an origin myth for a Belgian hero and national symbols.
Plot Beats (12)
- A cattle plague leads people to vow an annual, difficult pilgrimage to St. Willebrod's tomb, involving three steps forward, two steps back.
- A young pregnant widow joins the pilgrimage, but her strength fails, and she gives birth to a son, Lyderic, in the forest before dying.
- A pious hermit finds the infant Lyderic being suckled by a doe and buries the mother.
- The hermit raises Lyderic, with the doe continuing to nurse him, and the boy grows strong and healthy.
- Fairies, including Morgana la Fay, visit baby Lyderic, bestowing gifts and promising him greatness and Morgana's love.
- Lyderic grows into a man of great strength and character, becoming a crusader and earning renown.
- He marries Gratina, daughter of the King of England, and is granted Belgic provinces by Charlemagne, establishing the Belgian tricolor flag.
- Morgana, jealous, casts a spell on Lyderic, giving him a fire brand that prolongs his life, and he lives on Avalon with King Arthur's knights for two centuries.
- Lyderic eventually tires of Avalon and returns to Belgium, bringing his magical fire brand.
- He falls in love with a royal widow, and, distracted by his new romance, neglects the fire brand, allowing it to go out.
- Morgana, enraged by his new love, carries Lyderic back to Avalon, where he sleeps in a cave with King Arthur, awaiting a future awakening.
- Lyderic's legend and Morgana's fame as a conjurer persist in myths across Europe.
Characters
Lyderic
As an adult, Lyderic is described as a man of tremendous strength and fine character. He is robust and vigorous, growing from a healthy infant to a powerful warrior. His physique is likely muscular and imposing, reflecting his prowess in battle and crusades.
Attire: As a crusader, he would wear chainmail or plate armor with a surcoat, possibly emblazoned with his ducal flag (black, yellow, red vertical bands). As Duke of Brabant, he would wear rich, era-appropriate noble attire, perhaps incorporating his tricolor. Later, living with Arthur's knights, he would wear medieval knightly attire, possibly with a distinctive cloak or emblem.
Wants: Initially, to survive and thrive. Later, to achieve renown, build a legacy, and eventually, to return to his homeland and live a normal life.
Flaw: Forgetfulness, particularly when distracted by love, which leads to the extinguishing of his life-prolonging firebrand. He also tires of eternal life.
From an abandoned infant, he grows into a powerful duke and crusader, achieves great renown, marries, and becomes a vassal of Charlemagne. He then lives an extended life under Morgana's spell, eventually tiring of immortality and seeking to return to a mortal existence, which he achieves through his own oversight.
Unselfish, brave, strong, adventurous, somewhat forgetful (regarding the firebrand), and ultimately weary of eternal life.
Lyderic's Mother
A young widow, likely of slender build due to her recent grief and the physical exertion of the pilgrimage. Her strength gives out quickly, suggesting she was not robust.
Attire: Simple, practical garments suitable for a medieval peasant woman on a pilgrimage. Likely a linen or wool dress, possibly with an apron or cloak, in muted, natural colors.
Wants: To find comfort in her grief, to fulfill a vow to St. Willebrod for a son, and to ensure her child's survival.
Flaw: Physical frailty and exhaustion, leading to her death.
She begins the story full of hope and devotion, endures a difficult pilgrimage, gives birth in the wilderness, and dies shortly after, ensuring her son's name is known.
Grief-stricken, hopeful, devout, determined, and ultimately self-sacrificing.
The Hermit
An old man, likely thin and weathered from a life of solitude in the forest. His appearance would be simple and unkempt, but not dirty, reflecting his pious nature.
Attire: Simple, coarse, earth-toned robes or tunic, possibly made of homespun wool or linen, showing signs of wear but clean. No shoes, or simple sandals.
Wants: To live a life of spiritual devotion and to help those in need, including abandoned infants and forest creatures.
Flaw: Not explicitly stated, but perhaps a lack of experience with raising human children, though he adapts well.
He begins as a solitary figure and becomes an unexpected caregiver, raising Lyderic for his early years, providing him with a safe home and basic care.
Pious, kind, compassionate, observant, resourceful (making a cradle and toys), and accepting of the unusual (the doe suckling the child).
The Doe
A female deer, described as a 'dumb mother of fawns,' implying a healthy, mature doe. She would have soft, brown fur, slender legs, and large, lustrous eyes.
Attire: Natural deer hide.
Wants: To provide nourishment and care for the abandoned infant, as if it were her own fawn.
Flaw: Her animal nature and inability to communicate verbally.
She acts as a crucial life-giver for Lyderic in his infancy, demonstrating profound compassion and an unusual bond with a human child.
Maternal, gentle, fearless (towards the hermit), and instinctively nurturing.
Morgana la Fay
As a fairy, she would possess an ethereal beauty and an ageless appearance. Her form is likely graceful and enchanting, befitting a powerful enchantress.
Attire: Magical, flowing garments that might shift in color or texture, reflecting her enchantress nature. Perhaps in deep, mystical colors like emerald green or midnight blue, with intricate, otherworldly patterns.
Wants: To claim Lyderic as her love, to keep him with her in Avalon, and to exert her power over his destiny.
Flaw: Her jealousy, which drives her actions and ultimately leads to Lyderic's prolonged imprisonment.
She begins as a benevolent bestower of gifts, then becomes a possessive lover, and finally a jealous enchantress who imprisons Lyderic in Avalon.
Enchanting, possessive, jealous, powerful, and manipulative.
Locations
Forest Clearing
A secluded, quiet clearing within a dense forest, away from the main road. The ground is covered with fallen leaves, and there's a small patch of scraped earth.
Mood: Initially desolate and tragic, then transforms into a place of miraculous nurturing and quiet solitude.
Lyderic's birth, his mother's death, and his miraculous discovery and nursing by a doe.
Hermit's Hut
A simple, rustic hut constructed from rough-hewn timber and possibly wattle and daub, nestled within the forest. The interior is sparse, with a rude cradle and basic furnishings.
Mood: Humble, nurturing, and later, subtly magical due to the fairy visit.
Lyderic's infancy and childhood under the hermit's care, and the visit from the fairies, including Morgana.
Pilgrimage Route to Echternach Church
A mile-long route starting from a river bridge, leading gradually uphill to a church. It includes a particularly challenging ascent of sixty stone steps on the hillside.
Mood: Fervent, arduous, communal, and filled with a mix of hope and physical struggle.
The annual dancing procession to St. Willebrod's tomb, where Lyderic's mother participates and eventually leaves the procession.
Cave of King Arthur (Avalon)
A mystical cave on the legendary Isle of Avalon, where King Arthur and his knights are said to sleep, awaiting a time of great need. It is a place of enchantment and timelessness.
Mood: Magical, ancient, dormant, full of sleeping power and legend.
Lyderic's final resting place, imprisoned by Morgana, where he sleeps with King Arthur and his knights.