Literary history German scholar translated a medieval French romance he titled
Die Quelle der Jugend ("The Fountain of Youth"): a king is sick, and the doctors claim only the water from the fountain of life can cure him. He sends his three sons to find and bring him the water, but they have first to pass through four obstacles, the last of which a castle where a maiden resides and holds the very keys to the fountain. The youngest prince is advised by an old hermit on how to defeat the perils and reach the castle. Once there, he begs the maiden for the water, which she obliges and declares to be his wife.
Europe Swedish folktale collectors
George Stephens and
Gunnar Olof Hyltén-Cavallius listed "The Water of Life" as a German variant close to the Swedish tale they collected, (
English: 'The Land of Youth'). They also mentioned a Russian variant titled , which was translated years later as
Story of Lyubim Tsarevich and the Winged Wolf and
Prince Lubim and the Winged Wolf. In several variants, the object that can cure the king is either the water of youth, the waters of life and death, or a magical bird. In others, the king can be healed by seeking both items, such as in the Hungarian variant ('The finch with the golden voice'). At the end of the tale, the fairy maiden or foreign princess travels with her army or navy to the prince's kingdom in order to find the man who stole her wonderful bird or magical water. In
Estonian sources, the tale type is known as ('The Wonderful Mirror') or ('The Mirror That Makes One Younger'), after a homonymous story by author
Juhan Kunder. At least two
Armenian variants combine the tale type ATU 551, "The Water of Life (The Wonderful Remedy for the King)" with ATU 531, "
The Clever Horse". In
Kush-Pari or
The Bird-Peri, three princes search for a cure for their father's blindness, but only the youngest is successful in journeying beyond the realm with his father's magical horse. The prince finds a brilliant golden feather on the way to another kingdom and delivers it to a second king, who wants the bird: the titular Kush-Pari. The prince fetches the Kush-Pari, her handmaiden and forty fiery mares for a ritual. The prince and the king take part in the ritual, but the king dies and the prince marries the Kush-Pari, now in human form. As the tale concludes, the Kush-Pari gives her husband the remedy to save his father. In
The Fiery Horse, the three princes must seek, as remedy for their father, a lump of earth from "no human has even trodden". To help them in their quest, they need their father's Fiery Horse, found in the depths of a forest, but only the youngest prince finds and rides it. They ride into the Dark City and find a Luminous Feather. They appear before the king of this city, who wishes to own the bird of the luminous plumage. The second task is to bring the king the maiden who owns 40 cows swift as the wind and their milk as the third task. The prince and the king go through a ritual with the boiling milk, but only the prince goes unscathed and marries the maiden. Some time later, she reveals her husband the location of the fabled lump of earth: at the bottom of a lake, guarded by "ferocious Watery Horses tall as Mares".
Asia India In an
Indian variant,
The Rose of Bakawali (Hindi-Urdu:
Gul-e-Bakawali), the king becomes blind and, on his doctors's orders, sends his five sons for the only possible cure: the magical rose (
gulbakavali) of the fairy princess Bakawali.
W. A. Clouston saw the quest for the magical flower as a parallel to the German fairy tale "The Water of Life". ==In popular culture==