Phra Rot Meri (พระรถเมรี)
Thai name for
a Southeast Asian folktale based on an
apocryphal
jataka
saga, which relates the story of one of the
previous lives of the
Buddha,
in which Phra Rothasen (พระรถเสน), the son of one
of twelve sisters abandoned by their parents and adopted by an ogress
disguised as a beautiful lady, is the
bodhisattva.
It relates the love story between Phra Rothasen and Meri (เมรี), the
adopted daughter of the ogress. Despite their wealth, a rich merchant
and his beautiful wife were without children. One day, after making an
offering of twelve hands of
bananas
to a tree spirit, the wife became pregnant and
conceived a girl, in spite of her husband's explicit hope for a boy. His
wife, however, became pregnant another 11 times, once for each hands of
bananas, yet all newborns were girls. Then, his fortune turned and the
merchant over time became a poor man. Since he couldn't feed his 12
girls any longer, he planned to abandon his daughters in the forest.
When his youngest daughter found out about the plan, she had left marks
on the path, enabling them to find their way back home. However, on a
second attempt their father's plan succeeded and the girls were not able
to find their way back home, instead got lost deep in the forest. They
caught some fish from a lake to satiate their hunger and playfully poked
out the eyes of their fish with sharp twigs, except for the youngest one
who poked out only one eye. After eating, they arrived at the kingdom of
an ogress, who transformed herself into a pretty woman and adopted them.
She cared for them as her own and they grew up into beautiful young
women. One day, after finding out the true nature of their stepmother,
they fled from the man-eating ogress. When they arrived at a river, they
halted to fresh up and play in the water, and were noticed by a local
king, who fell in love with them and married the twelve maidens. They
soon after all became pregnant. When the ogress found out about this,
she transformed herself in a beautiful young lady, exceeding the
splendor of even the twelve sisters and set out to meet the king, who
was immediately spellbound by her looks and swiftly married her,
promoting her to the rank of first queen. Jealous of the king's
favoritism, the sisters were not kind to the new queen, so she pretend
to be sick and told the king that the cause of her disease was the
ill-treatment of the twelve sisters, and the only cure would be a
medicine distilled from the eyes of the sisters. Infatuated, he ordered
the eyes of eleven his wives gouged out, but the youngest one had -like
the fish before- only one eye removed. After this, the girls were locked
away in a deep cave without food, and from where no escape was possible.
Later, the pregnant girls successively all gave birth, but all babies
died, and since they were being starved, each one chopped her baby's
body into twelve pieces to share with the other sisters to eat. But,
when the youngest sister finally gave birth to a beautiful boy, the baby
lived and was named Rothasen, though she kept it a secret to her
sisters. As the boy grew, he found a secret way out of the deep cave,
and with prize money from winning cockfights (fig.),
he was able to bring the sisters food on a regular basis. As years went
by, Rothasen became a handsome young man, and when the king heard of
him, he was invited to the palace to play games of dice. When the queen
saw Rothasen, she again faked an illness and Rothasen was sent out to
fetch a fruit for her cure, from her own adopted daughter, also an
ogress in disguise and named Meri, who her mother in a letter instructed
to devour Rothasen. On his way over, Rothasen was given a flying horse
by a
reusi,
who also changed the queen's letter to Meri, instructing her to marry
Rothasen. After their
wedding, Rothasen found the medicine that contained the eyes of his
mother and aunts, stole it and returned them by putting them back in
their place with a special magic ointment. Rothasen then killed the evil
queen with a magic club and the sisters were restored to their former
positions within the palace. Afterward, Rothasen hastily returned to
Meri, though he arrived late as she had meanwhile died of sorrow. Full
of sadness he also dropped dead while holding his wife in his arms.
Finally, their spirits flew to their next
chaht
where they would be together again. Also known as Nang Sip Song (นางสิบสอง),
i.e.
‘Twelve Ladies’, yet in English
usually referred to as the Twelve Sisters.
See also POSTAGE STAMP.
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