Student: Dana-Georgiana
MORTAN, Xth D grade;Coordinating teacher: Melania EGYED; School: Samuil Vulcan National College
I think that the most interesting place that I visited in Poland was the
caves of the Wawel Dragon. Its
legend attracts many people. Also, both children
and adults cannot pull themselves away from the stalls with regional souvenirs
and folk handicrafts in the Cloth Hall.
In a cave, at the bottom of Wawel Hill, there once lived a terrible
fire-belching dragon. This dragon roamed around the countryside and did
whatever he wanted to. He ate sheep and cattle and scared the farmers so much
that they didn't let their animals graze in the field near the Vistula River.
Many brave knights had tried to kill the monster, but before they could get
close enough to him, he blew fire on them and they were burned to death. The
king wanted this dragon to be destroyed. He invited knights and noblemen to
come and slay the dragon, promissing that whichever one killed the dragon could
marry his beautiful daughter and become king when he died. Many tried to slay the dragon so that they
could marry the princess, but the dragon killed them. The people became even
more frightened; they were afraid to leave their homes and the country became
poorer.
One day, a young, handsome but poor shoemaker's apprentice named Krak
asked the king if he could try to slay the dragon. The king said he could try,
but noted that he had no armor, no horse and no sword. The apprentice had only
his shoemaker tools and a plan. He didn't need armor, a horse, or a sword. Krak
bought a dead sheep from the butcher and some sulphur (a powder that is used in
making matches) from a miner. Then he cut the sheep open with his sharp shoemaker's
knife, stuffed it with the powdered sulphur and then sewed the sheep up with
the shoemaker's thread. He put the sheep by the dragon's cave and waited behind
a rock for the dragon to come out.
After a while,
the greedy dragon came out of his cave. He saw the dead animal and greedily ate
it. The sulphur caught fire, like a match, and the dragon felt his stomach
burning. He ran to the river to quench the fire in his stomach, but drank so much
water that he filled up like a balloon. He kneeled down and was very sick.
Krak came out from behind the rock,
and began to throw stones at the dragon. The monster tried to blow fire at him
but because of all the water he drank, all that came out from his mouth was
steam.
The dragon kept trying to breathe fire, but
because he was so swollen, he exploded and died. At last, the people were free
again.
Krak and the princess married. After the King died, Krak became King, as
promised. He built a castle on top of Wawel Hill and for hundreds of years it
was where the Kings of Poland lived. Around the hill, the people built a city
which they named Krakow, after their new king.
So, I’m sure that it was a great experience to visit this place and to
hear the impressing legend of the Wawel Dragon from Krakow. I will never forget
the wonderful time spent there.
No comments:
Post a Comment