ink drawing of a chapter heading for The Fisherman and his Wife featuring title and figure of a man back turned to fish in the sea, black and white

The Old Man, His Wife, and the Fish

The source for this Russian version of the story is: Folk-Lore and Legends: Russian and Polish (London: W. W. Gibbings, 1890), pp. 35-41. The Grimms published a similar one and stories of the same type can be found in Japan, India, and elsewhere.

There once lived in a hut on the shores of the Isle of Buyan an old man and his wife. They were very poor. The old man used to go to the sea daily to fish, and they only just managed to live on what he caught. One day he let down his net and drew it in. It seemed to be very heavy. He dragged and dragged, and at last got it to shore. There he found that he had caught one little fish of a kind he had never before seen, a golden fish.

The fish spoke to him in a man’s voice. “Do not keep me, old man,” it said; “let me go once more free in the sea and I will reward you for it, for whatever you wish I will do.”

The old man thought for a while. Then he said, “Well, I don’t want you. Go into the sea again,” and he threw the fish into the water and went home.

“Well,” said his wife, when he got home, “what have you caught today?”

“Only one little fish,” said the man, “a golden fish, and that I let go again, it begged so hard. ‘Put me in the blue sea again,’ it said, ‘ and I will reward you, for whatever you wish I will do.’ So I let it go, and did not ask anything.”

“Ah, you old fool!” said the wife in a great rage, “what an opportunity you have lost. You might, at least, have asked the fish to give us some bread. We have scarce a crust in the house.”

The old woman grumbled so much that her husband could have no quiet, so to please her off he went to the seashore, and there he cried out:

Little fish, little fish, come now to me,
Your tail in the water, your head out of sea!

The fish came to the shore. “Well, what do you want, old man?” it asked.

“My wife,” said the man, “is in a great passion, and has sent me to ask for bread.”

“Very well,” said the fish, “go home and you shall have it.”

The old man went back, and when he entered the hut he found bread in plenty.

“Well,” said he to his wife, “we have enough bread now.”

“Oh yes!” said she, “but I have had such a misfortune while you were away. I have broken the bucket. What shall I do the washing in now? Go to the fish, and ask it to give us a new bucket.”

A man in a red hat stands in the water in boots with a flat flounder like brown fish looking up at him, painted, cliffs behind
Illustration by Anne Anderson

Away went the man. Standing on the shore he called out:

Little fish, little fish, come now to me,
Your tail in the water, your head out of sea!

The fish soon made its appearance. “Well, old man,” it said, “what do you want?”

“My wife,” said the man, ” has had a misfortune, and has broken our bucket. So I have come to ask for a new one.”

“Very well,” said the fish, “you shall find one at home.”

The old man went back. As soon as he got home his wife said to him, “Be off to the golden fish again, and ask it to give us a new hut. Ours is all coming to pieces. We have scarcely a roof over our heads.”

The old man once more came to the shore, and cried:

Little fish, little fish, come now to me,
Your tail in the water, your head out of sea!

The fish came. “Well, what is it?” asked the fish.

“My wife,” said the man, “is in a very bad temper, and has sent me to ask you to build us a new cottage. She says she cannot live any longer in our present one.”

“Oh, do not be troubled about that,” said the fish. “Go home. You shall have what you want.”

The old man went back again, and in the place of his miserable hovel he found a new hut built of oak and nicely ornamented.

The old man was delighted, but as soon as he went in his wife set on him, saying, “What an idiot you are! You do not know how to take good fortune when it is offered to you. You think you have done a great thing just because you have got a new hut. Be off again to the golden fish, and tell it I will not be a mere peasant’s wife any longer, I will be an archduchess, with plenty of servants, and set the fashion.”

The old man went to the golden fish.

“What is it?” asked the fish.

“My wife will not let me rest,” replied the man; “she wants now to be an archduchess, and is not content with being my wife.”

“Well, it shall be as she wishes. Go home again,” said the fish.

Away went the man. How astonished was he, when, on coming to where his house had stood, he now found a fine mansion, three stories high. Servants crowded the hall, and cooks were busy in the kitchens. On a seat in a fine room sat the man’s wife, dressed in robes shining with gold and silver, and giving orders.

“Good day, wife!” said the man.

“Who are you, man?” said his wife. “What have you to do with me, a fine lady? Take the clown away,” said she to her servants. “Take him to the stable, and whip some of the impudence out of him.”

The servants seized the old man, took him off to the stable, and when they had him there beat him so that he hardly knew whether he was alive or not. After that the wife made him the doorkeeper of the house. She gave him a besom, and put him to keep the yard in order. As for his meals, he got them in the kitchen. He had a hard life of it. If the yard was not swept clean, he had to look out.

“Who would have thought she had been such a hag?” said the old man to himself. “Here she has all such good fortune, and will not even own me for her husband!”

After a time the wife got tired of being merely an archduchess, so she said to her husband, “Go off to the golden fish, and tell it I will be a czarina.”

The old man went down to the shore. He cried:

Little fish, little fish, come now to me,
Your tail in the water, your head out of sea!

The fish came swimming to the shore. “Well, old man!” it said, “what do you want?”

muted image of a man with a rope in his hand standing on a rock by the ocean with a large fish above a wave
Image from page 120 of “Reading and Literature First Reader” (1911)

“My wife is not yet satisfied,” said the man; “she wants now to be a czarina,”

“Do not let that trouble you,” said the fish, “but go to your house. “What you ask shall be done.”

The man went back. In place of the fine house he found a palace with a roof of gold. Soldiers were on guard around it. In front of the palace was a garden, and at the back a fine park, in which some troops were parading. On a balcony stood the czarina surrounded by officers and nobles. The troops presented arms, the drums beat, the trumpets blew, and the people shouted.

In a short time the woman got tired of being czarina, and she commanded that her husband should be found and brought to her presence. The palace was all in confusion, for who knew what had become of the old man? Officers and noblemen hurried here and there to search for him. At length he was found in a hut behind the palace.

“Listen, you old idiot!” said his wife. “Go to the golden fish, and tell it that I am tired of being czarina. I want to rule over all the ocean, to have dominion over every sea and all the fish.”

The old man hesitated to go to the fish with such a request.

“Be off!” said his wife, “or your head shall be cut off.”

The man went to the seashore and said:

Little fish, little fish, come now to me,
Your tail in the water, your head out of sea!

The fish did not come. The man waited, but it was not to be seen. Then he said the words a second time. The waves roared. A short while before it had been bright and calm, now dark clouds covered the sky, the wind howled, and the water seemed of an inky blackness. At length the fish came.

“What do you want, old man?” it asked.

“My old wife,” answered he, “is not satisfied even now. She says she will be czarina no longer, but will rule over all the waters and all the fish.”

The fish made no reply, but dived down and disappeared in the sea. The man went back. What had become of the palace? He looked around, but could not see it. He rubbed his eyes in wonder. On the spot where the palace had stood was the old hut, and at the door stood the old woman in her old rags.

So they commenced to live again in their old style. The man often went a-fishing, but he never more caught the golden fish.

Were you familiar with this story? Why do you think a society would tell stories like this? 

Comments

22 responses to “Fish and the call of the Sea”

  1. Naurah Romulus Avatar
    Naurah Romulus

    I actually was not familiar with this story. Societies tell stories like this to teach lessons about being greedy and not appreciating what you already have. It shows how wanting too much can lead to losing everything.

    1. Anthea longville Avatar
      Anthea longville

      I on the other hand is familiar with this story. You are so right about the greed and not being appreciative of what you already have. The more power and wealth she wanted made her lose everything for her selfishness and disatisfation.

    2. Anthea longville Avatar
      Anthea longville

      I on the other hand is familiar with this story. You are so right about the greed and not being appreciative of what you already have. The more power and wealth she wanted made her lose everything for her selfishness and dissatisfaction.

  2. Mahnoor Avatar
    Mahnoor

    I was not familiar with this story. I think that society would tell a story like this to show how greed can be the cause of one’s own downfall. Not being content or satisfied with the things one is blessed to get can lead them to lose everything. While the old man was happy to let the fish go, the wife could not get enough, which led them both to suffer in the end.

  3. Nitzan Naim Avatar
    Nitzan Naim

    Yes, I am familiar with this story. Similar to Naurah, Anthea, and Mahnoor, I think societies tell stories like this to warn us about the dangers of greed and the corrupting influence of power. As I mentioned in my comment about Bluebeard, cruelty and greed often lead to downfall, and in this tale, the wife’s growing greed ultimately takes everything away. This theme of greed and its consequences keeps repeating itself in many fairy tales,

  4. Ariana Loyfman Avatar
    Ariana Loyfman

    I am not familiar with this story. Societies tell certain stories to pass around a specific message that they think would be valuable for the citizens of that community. I agree with the comments above that this story is sharing a message with its society that being greedy and selfish and power-hungry can lead to negative impacts on not only yourself but the people that are around you as well.

  5. Kateryna Senkovych Avatar
    Kateryna Senkovych

    I am familiar with this story but I have read it in Russian and I have seen different animated and not animated videos made about it. I think it is a very interesting story and it teaches us that you can not be too greedy or in one moment you can lose everything. It can show that if you get good luck with something in your life, you shouldn’t take advantage of it and be happy with what you have.

  6. Anifat Abumislimova Avatar
    Anifat Abumislimova

    Yes, I am familiar with this story, but I read it in Russian. I think a society would tell stories like this in order to teach that we need to be grateful for what we have, and not be jealous of things that we do not have.

  7. Sofia Buttaro Avatar
    Sofia Buttaro

    I was actually not familiar with this story. Nonetheless, societies use tales such as these to teach moral lessons about the pitfalls of greed, the boundaries of ambition, and the significance of happiness. By encouraging individuals to obey the divine order and accept their place in society, they help to sustain societal stability.

    1. Shiraz Biggie Avatar
      Shiraz Biggie

      Accepting their place in society is a key idea here.

  8. Alexa Mendez Avatar
    Alexa Mendez

    I was not familiar with this story and I think the purpose of it was to show the importance of being appreciative and to not be greedy. It teaches society about gratitude. Most fairytales have a lesson including this one

  9. Brittany Giler Avatar
    Brittany Giler

    I was not familiar with this story.Many stories like this, including those about nature, contain moral lessons or messages. These lessons can help to guide people’s behavior and shape their values.

  10. Michelle Cortes Rodriguez Avatar
    Michelle Cortes Rodriguez

    I was not familiar with this story. I think society would tell stories like these because they give a lesson.

  11. Selina Chen Avatar
    Selina Chen

    No, I am not familiar with this story but I think there’s another story that is quite similar to this one that I can’t really remember. I feel like society would tell these stories to talk about greed and gives a lesson regarding that as well.

    1. Amy Khait Avatar
      Amy Khait

      I agree that these stories talk about greed and helps deliver a lesson.

  12. Amna Syeda Avatar
    Amna Syeda

    I wasn’t familiar with this tale before. Stories like this are often told to teach moral lessons, especially about greed, gratitude, or the consequences of wanting more than what you have. Societies use such tales to reinforce values and pass down important life lessons across generations.

  13. Amy Khait Avatar
    Amy Khait

    I am vaguely familiar with this tale. I believed I read it in either elementary or middle school. I believe that societies will use tales like this because it teaches valuable lessons about life and cherishing what you have. I believe the lessons will help with people’s behaviors today.

  14. Tory Sen Avatar
    Tory Sen

    I am not familiar with this story. It tells moral lessons about greed, desire, and happiness, and it also tells people to follow divine rules and be happy with their place in society. It says that behavior that is based on appreciation, not greed, leads to more gratitude and peace in society.

  15. Victoria Lucenti Avatar
    Victoria Lucenti

    Before reading, I was not familiar with this story. I think a society would tell stories like this because it teaches a moral lesson of desire and greed, and how one’s desire can fall out of place within an aligned society after the expression of greed overtakes the purpose of an individuals place in society that was meant to be. The expression of greed is powerful, and being grateful for what you have is one of the most important lessons someone can learn, and it especially does not even have to be limited to teaching and reading to children about this story, and other similar ones as well because of the important societal message it shows to all.

  16. VANESSA Avatar
    VANESSA

    I’m not familiar with this story. I think society told stories like this because they would like people to learn to be happy where they are in life. Live in the present. They try to rely the message that less is more. Similar to our other stories, financial wealth and power can change you. Sometimes change you into someone who doesn’t remember where they came from. Sure we all want a better life but always remembering what we’ve done to get there and being humble will get your further.

  17. Kaylee Pontone Avatar
    Kaylee Pontone

    I have not heard of this story. I think society would tell a story like this to pass values in terms of finance and work ethic on to the communities.

  18. Jaylyn Calles Avatar
    Jaylyn Calles

    No i wasn’t familiar with these stories. I think a society would tell stories like these so other behave accordingly and learn from the lesson that the story is telling greed can lead you to losing everything it teaches you principles you must have in life

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