diff options
Diffstat (limited to '35458.txt')
| -rw-r--r-- | 35458.txt | 5840 |
1 files changed, 5840 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/35458.txt b/35458.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..8742ebe --- /dev/null +++ b/35458.txt @@ -0,0 +1,5840 @@ +Project Gutenberg's The Green Forest Fairy Book, by Loretta Ellen Brady + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Green Forest Fairy Book + +Author: Loretta Ellen Brady + +Illustrator: Alice B. Preston + +Release Date: March 2, 2011 [EBook #35458] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GREEN FOREST FAIRY BOOK *** + + + + +Produced by David Edwards and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was +produced from images generously made available by The +Internet Archive) + + + + + + + + + + [Illustration: "And now, Yvonne, to set your mind at rest, gaze into + the pool at your feet." + _Frontispiece._--_See Page 168._] + + + + + THE GREEN FOREST FAIRY BOOK + + + + + THE + GREEN FOREST + FAIRY BOOK + + BY + LORETTA ELLEN BRADY + + WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY + ALICE B PRESTON + + [Illustration] + + LITTLE, BROWN AND COMPANY + BOSTON + + + + _Copyright, 1920_, + BY LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY. + + _All rights reserved_ + + + + + TO THE BOYS AND GIRLS + OF LITTLE JIM WARDS + SAN FRANCISCO CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL + IN LOVING REMEMBRANCE OF + OUR TWILIGHT STORY-HOURS + THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED + + + + +CONTENTS + + + CHAPTER PAGE + PROLOGUE 1 + I DAME GRUMBLE AND HER CURIOUS APPLE-TREE 6 + II A TALE OF THE NORTHLAND KINGDOM 61 + III THE LITTLE TREE THAT NEVER GREW UP 92 + IV THE TALE OF PUNCHINELLO 109 + V THE STRANGE TALE OF THE BROWN BEAR 125 + VI THE BEGGAR PRINCESS 132 + VII SWEEP AND LITTLE SWEEP 170 + VIII KINGS AND QUEENS AND PEASANT FOLK 216 + IX THE GOOSE GIRL AND THE BLUE GANDER 231 + X THE LITTLE BROWN MAN 239 + XI A TALE FOR HALLOWEEN 248 + + + + +ILLUSTRATIONS + + + PAGE + + "And now, Yvonne, to set your mind at rest + gaze into the pool at your feet" _Frontispiece_ + + "Oh, you wicked creature!" Dame Grumble would + exclaim when he began to shake the Apple Tree 9 + + For many days these three companions journeyed + on through soft white clouds 86 + + From this bag the Night Wind begged a dream + for the Little Tree 96 + + "Look, look, dear Punchinello!" little Beppo + cried. "I am no longer lame" 116 + + "Hide me, Little Sweep," cried Red Cap. + "My brother is after me" 175 + + So at last, after much thought, the goose girl + did as the blue gander bade 237 + + It was the gayest company one ever could + imagine, as they marched along 262 + + + + +THE GREEN FOREST FAIRY BOOK + + + + +PROLOGUE + + +Long, long ago, when all the world was young and there were but few +people dwelling on it, the strangest things could often come to pass. +Then fairyfolk still lived in the greenwoods and elves sang and danced +in the soft summer dawns. Then trees could sing and flowers speak and +birds would carry messages about the world; wild beasts were often loyal +friends to men and helped them in their difficulties. In these old days, +most noble dukes and earls would fall in love with dairymaids whose +gentle ways and manners charmed their hearts. Sometimes great kings grew +weary of the splendor of their courts and left their thrones to live as +simple peasants. Each princess had a fairy godmother who showered her +with magic gifts. Then wise men read the stars and seers would gaze in +crystal bowls to tell the coming good or ill they saw. + +In those old days, the housewives left a bit of bread and cheese upon +the pantry shelf each evening, that the brownie who was said to dwell in +every kitchen might have a midnight feast. These brownies, 'twas said +also, would make much mischief if they were not treated very well. In +early dawns, when fields of flowers were asparkle in the sun, the +milkmaids used to bathe their eyes and ears with dew that they might see +the fairyfolk forever afterward and hear them sing at midnight in the +glen. The farmers' boys would search among the hedges in hopes of +meeting The Red Caps who were said to bring much luck. These Red Caps +too were said to give a magic purse of gold to those they fancied,--a +purse that was always brimful no matter what was spent from it. The +witches still rode broomsticks through the skies and there were wishing +wells and magic charms and spells. + +In those delightful days of which I tell, there were not scores and +scores of books as there are now. Travelers journeying about the world +told tales of the wonders that they saw and heard. It was not then +thought strange that kings and queens or royal counselors and such wise +folk should love to hear these wonder tales. In those dear days, indeed, +the grown folk all loved wonder tales as well as children love them now +and were not worse because of it. Sometimes these wonder tales were told +by magic chairs or chests; sometimes by birds or beasts that were +enchanted and had power of speech. + +It has been related that in those olden days there was a lovely bird +with plumage all of the purest gold and it was called The Golden Bird. +The Golden Bird had a voice so rare and sweet that when it sang the +nightingales stopped midway in their songs to listen. The Golden Bird +likewise possessed the gift of speech and could tell wonder tales the +like of which were never heard before or since. When it began to sing in +any land, news that The Golden Bird had come spread swiftly everywhere. +The king would then declare a holiday which lasted all the time The +Golden Bird was in the land. The people hastened to the greenwood and +there beneath the trees would listen while The Golden Bird told wonder +tales and sang for their delight. And thus, The Golden Bird flew all +about the world, to every land and clime, beloved by all folk +everywhere. + +But sad to tell, at last there came a time when The Golden Bird was seen +no more. The folk of every land looked anxiously for its return and +thought it stayed too long in other places. But years passed by and +still The Golden Bird came not. Then travelers journeying about the +world declared The Golden Bird was nowhere to be found and all the +people mourned at these sad tidings. Some thought the lovely bird had +perished at some greedy hunter's hand; others said the world had grown +too wicked for The Golden Bird to dwell here any longer. However, what +had happened to the lovely creature, no one ever knew. + +But sadder still to tell is this: When The Golden Bird was seen to fly +about the earth no more, the people did not hold its memory dear. As +time passed on and it came not, they thought about it less and less and +very few recalled the wonder tales The Golden Bird had told. Then as the +world grew older and all folk began to doubt about the fairies and to +scoff at wishing wells, The Golden Bird was quite forgot by all save +one. This one, a little girl who tended flocks upon a mountain, gazed in +the clouds at dawn each day in hopes to see The Golden Bird come +soaring. Sometimes she wept because The Golden Bird came not. At last, +to please the child, her aged grandame, who had heard The Golden Bird +tell wonder tales when she had been a child, took pen and ink and wrote +them down as she remembered them. She wrote, 't is said, a hundred tales +or more but through the ages that have passed between they have been +lost, until there are but eleven; these are the eleven that I have set +down in The Green Forest Fairy Book. + + + + +CHAPTER I + +DAME GRUMBLE AND HER CURIOUS APPLE TREE + + +I + +Long, long ago, in a country quite close to the top of the earth, where +the North Wind blew fiercely each spring, there lived a woman called +Dame Grumble. Now Dame Grumble had an Apple Tree which she loved +exceedingly, although it vexed her beyond all compare. It was a very +fine large tree, and well shaped for shade, just the sort of tree that +should have yielded a bushel or two of fruit each autumn; but it did +not. Each year when the cuckoo flew over the earth, calling the trees +and flowers to waken because spring was come again, the Apple Tree would +be covered with clouds upon clouds of fragrant, pinky-white blossoms. +Then Dame Grumble's heart would rejoice. But no sooner was the Apple +Tree thus bedecked than the North Wind would blow furiously, tearing +off the blossoms and carrying them off in clouds. The curious part of it +all was this: When a few of the blossoms chanced to fall to the ground, +they made a chinking sound like that of small coins in children's banks. +Then when these blossoms had withered, Dame Grumble would find nice, new +shining pennies where they had lain. From this she supposed the Apple +Tree would one day bear apples of gold. + +Now Dame Grumble, it must be confessed, was not very amiable. Indeed, it +was from her nature that she drew her name. Some said Dame Grumble +complained from the time she rose in the morning until she sought her +bed at night. Even then she complained of her hard pillow or thin +coverlets until she fell asleep. Her poor son, Freyo, thought his mother +must surely grumble all night in her dreams, for on waking each day she +began directly where she had left off the night before. Many a time this +poor lad wished that he were not lame, but could go out in the world to +seek his way for himself. Dame Grumble led him a dreadful life. + +If the day were hot, Dame Grumble thought longingly of the days when the +snow lay on the ground and she sat in comfort before the blazing logs. +But when the winter came again, she complained bitterly because she had +to break the ice on the well each morning. She declared it was a shame, +since she had but one son, that he should be lame, and thus be a burden +instead of a staff. Her ceaseless scolding and carping often made poor +Freyo so miserable that he would put aside his wood carving, for he had +no heart to work. If the East Wind blew ever so lightly, Dame Grumble +complained that it gave her strange pains in her face, and would wish +instead for the West Wind, which she thought mild and gentle. But when +the West Wind blew over the forest and fields and dried the linen she +spread on the hedges, Dame Grumble cried out that he was a thieving +creature. She would hasten to gather her dried linens, vowing all the +while that the West Wind would steal them if he dared. Oh, there was no +pleasing Dame Grumble! Freyo, her son, was well aware of that. + +Now seeing that Dame Grumble was of a disposition to grumble and +complain when there was no cause at all, you may have some idea of her +bitter feeling when the North Wind robbed her of her apple blossoms each +spring. + + [Illustration: "Oh, you wicked creature!" Dame Grumble would exclaim + when he began to shake the Apple Tree.--_Page 9._] + +"Oh, you wicked creature!" Dame Grumble would exclaim when he began to +shake the Apple Tree. "Just wait, and some day I will catch you and shut +you up in some dark place where you shall remain forever. No one would +miss you. The North Wind is the most hated wind that blows!" + +"Indeed, Dame Grumble!" the North Wind would reply. "How would the boys +and girls ever skate if I did not blow in winter time? How would the +forest and orchards ever have time to make their new green leaves and +flowers for the springtime, if I did not lock the earth tight each +winter? You make a mistake, Madam. The North Wind would be keenly +mourned and missed. But beware! Some day I will catch you and carry you +off to a certain desert island in the middle of the sea, and there you +may complain for all your days." + +Then the North Wind would roar and blow his hardest, and Dame Grumble's +petticoats would spread out like sails, until she feared she might be +blown away, and would seek refuge in the cottage. There in anger she +would watch the clouds of blossoms blown from her favorite tree. When +the North Wind had gone off again, she would rush out and scold the +Apple Tree severely. + +"Oh! Such a tree!" Dame Grumble would exclaim in vexation. "If you would +but cling more firmly to your blossoms, at least a few would remain on +your branches, and then I should have a golden harvest. From the pennies +I find where your blossoms have withered, I am quite sure that you would +bear apples of gold, if you bore apples at all. Then I could sell these +golden apples and make a fortune for myself." + +"But, Dame Grumble," the Apple Tree would protest, "you cannot withstand +the North Wind, either. Your petticoats spread out like sails, and you +can scarcely keep your feet on the ground." + +"And what of that?" Dame Grumble would answer crossly. "I have but two +feet, while you have roots as numerous as your branches. Moreover, they +reach far down beneath the earth, and there spread far and wide as your +topmost boughs. You are stronger than I. You should fight the North +Wind, who is naught but a wicked robber in disguise. I am sure that he +has stored up a fortune in pennies from my blossoms that he has stolen +this many a long year." Then Dame Grumble would shake the Apple Tree +until Freyo would beg her to stop. + +It must not be supposed that Dame Grumble did not contrive various ways +to save her blossoms from her enemy. Indeed, she spent many hours every +day thinking of plans to defeat the North Wind, but she had never +succeeded. All one winter she worked in the cold and snow, chopping tall +thorn branches to make a barrier about the Apple Tree. "Thorn branches +are very strong, and will protect the Apple Tree," thought she. Freyo +told his mother this was useless work, but she would pay no heed to what +he said. + +"Then, Mother," pleaded the poor lad, "since you will not stay indoors +this bitter weather, please bring me a branch of walnut from the +forest. I would like to carve a clock-case in a certain design I have in +mind. If I had but proper tools for wood carving and a store of oak and +walnut, I might one day make a fortune for you. Then you would have no +longer need to quarrel with the North Wind about the blossoms." + +"Oh, hold your silly tongue!" cried Dame Grumble. "A great simpleton I +would be to sit here quietly and wait for you to make a fortune with +your bits of woods! Each year the North Wind steals a fortune in pennies +from me, and I mean to try to stop him if I can. Should I find a bit of +walnut that will fit into my pocket, you may have it; otherwise you must +do without." + +Poor Freyo had but few tools, and those few were very poor; +nevertheless, he had skillful fingers and could carve lovely pictures in +wood. Dame Grumble always laughed scornfully when the lad spoke of the +fortune he hoped one day to make. To her mind, wood carving and clumsy +chests and clock-cases were naught but folly. She rarely remembered to +bring Freyo a branch of wood from the forest. Dame Grumble was always +thinking of her blossoms and her enemy, the North Wind, and had no time +to think of Freyo. So the poor lad had to content himself with bits of +wood he found in the chimney corner, and he carved frames and treasure +boxes from these. + +Now, as we have told, all one winter Dame Grumble worked diligently +dragging thorn branches from the forest, until she had a great heap. +When the snow began to melt, she planted these branches of thorn about +her favorite tree. Then when the Apple Tree was decked once more in +clouds upon clouds of fragrant, pinky-white blossoms, the North Wind +came roaring over the fields and lanes. He laughed loudly when he saw +the barrier of thorn branches. + +"And so, Dame Grumble," cried the North Wind, "you do not know my +strength better than this!" Seizing a branch of the thorn, he tore it +from the ground as though it had been a twig and hurled it in the air. +Then he did likewise to the rest, and in half an hour he had torn up +every vestige of Dame Grumble's barrier. + +"Many times I have left you a few blossoms, Dame Grumble," he cried, as +he blew on his way, "but you have never thanked me for the pennies, so +this time you shall have none." + +Naturally Dame Grumble was more vexed than ever before. She shook the +Apple Tree with fury and left off only when she was too weary to shake +it longer. All evening she scolded so bitterly that Freyo wished himself +far away. Life with this scolding dame was far from pleasant for the +poor lame lad. Still he never complained. "Mother complains enough for +both," thought he. + +When Dame Grumble arose next morning, she had another plan in mind. "My +son," said she, "I am going on a journey to seek in all places for the +fortune in pennies which my wicked enemy, the North Wind, has stolen +from me. When I have found it, I shall return, and all things will be +well. I shall buy you a fine coach and build a noble house where we +shall live like kings and queens, and there we shall be very happy, I +daresay." + +"But, Mother!" cried Freyo in dismay, "the North Wind travels all over +the earth, and that you cannot do. When winter comes what will you do +for shelter? Besides, I do not long for a coach, but for a crutch +instead; and as for happiness--it is to be found in kind hearts rather +than in noble houses. In our little cottage we could be as happy as +kings and queens, if you would but leave off scolding and be content." + +"That shows how little you know!" replied Dame Grumble. "I cannot be +content without a fortune, and a fortune I mean to have. If I have not +found the hollow that I seek before winter comes again, I shall return. +But I have a feeling that my search will not be all in vain." Then, +bidding Freyo take good care of the cottage, Dame Grumble tied on her +bonnet and shawl and set out on her journey. + +When Dame Grumble had gone, Freyo was greatly puzzled. He was not sure +that he was really lonely. He missed his mother's presence about the +cottage because she was a famous housewife, always busy with some savory +broth, or baking great loaves of brown bread. However, he was relieved +that he did not hear her sharp tongue scolding all day long. He +carefully tidied the kitchen until it looked spotless and shining, as +though Dame Grumble herself had done it. Then he sat down before his +bench. While he was working, Freyo paused; he thought he heard his name +called softly. + +"Freyo, Freyo!" spoke a gentle voice. "Only come to the door, and you +can see me. I have something to tell you that will make you happy. +Please do come!" Freyo set down his work and hobbled to the door. + +"It is I, the Apple Tree," spoke the voice again; "come nearer that I +may talk to you. You have always been kind to me, when Dame Grumble has +abused me, Freyo, and now I shall reward you." + +Freyo made his way to the Apple Tree, and she continued: "Do you see my +two stoutest branches quite close to the ground? These I mean to give +you for crutches." + +"Oh, Apple Tree!" cried Freyo. "I would not cut off your branches! I +would not give you such pain." + +"But cutting off these two branches of mine will cause me no great +pain," the Apple Tree insisted. "They are over-heavy, and next spring +when the North Wind blows, I fear that he will snap them off. What the +North Wind cannot bend he will break, as well you know. When you have +made your crutches, you may go to the forest and gather more wood for +your work of wood carving, until you have the store that you desire." + +At last Freyo was persuaded. The branches were cut, and all day long he +sat beneath the Apple Tree, while he fashioned a pair of crutches. By +evening they were finished, and when he slept that night, Freyo dreamed +of wandering in the greenwood; he had never yet been so far from the +cottage door. + +"How well you have done!" exclaimed the Apple Tree next morning, when +Freyo stepped out briskly on his crutches. + +"And you too have done well," replied the lad. "I see two tufts of green +leaves already at work to cover the places where I cut your branches." +He waved farewell to the Apple Tree and set upon his way. Freyo was gone +the whole day long. When the sun set that evening, he had not returned, +and even when the moon rose slowly, still he did not come. The Apple +Tree began to worry and to fret lest her branches had not proved strong +enough for crutches. Then presently she saw Freyo with a heavy pannier +strapped upon his back; but not one bit of oak or walnut wood had he. + +"Ah, Apple Tree!" cried he, "never in my life have I been happy as I was +to-day. Only to wander beneath the trees and see the blue forget-me-nots +that make a lovely carpet underfoot, or to hear the birds sing sweetly +was like paradise. I wished the whole world were one great forest, and +that the time were always spring. I could not bear to come away!" + +"But Freyo," said the Apple Tree, "you have brought nothing for your +work! How will you make chests and clock-cases?" + +"I could not find it in my heart to cut the smallest twig," confessed +the lad. "The trees looked all so beautiful and stately that it seemed +to me a shame. Instead I gathered brown bells and forget-me-nots to +plant about your roots. I am sure you must be lonely in this bare +wind-swept spot, and they will serve for company." + +"Now that was kind," replied the Apple Tree, "but you must now give heed +to what I say. In the forest there are many trees that will gladly give +you a fine branch or two. When next you go there, tell them that you are +the friend of the Apple Tree whose blossoms fall to earth with a +chinking sound, like small coins in children's banks. Then they will +know you and will be generous as I have been. Besides, I warn you that +at the first approach of winter, Dame Grumble will return. She will be +crosser than ever, for she will never find the fortune in pennies that +she seeks. Now be advised, Freyo, and gather a goodly store of oak and +walnut while you may." + +When Freyo went again to the forest, he told the message of the Apple +Tree to the tall pines and low bending oaks, and to shady maples too. +These trees all gave him such a bounteous supply of boughs and branches +that Freyo soon had store to last him for his carving a whole year or +more. + +'T was well he had. One day as he sat working beneath the Apple Tree, he +noticed that the leaves fell fast and that the wind blew chill. Another +morning, when the maples on the hillsides flamed like fire, Freyo heard +a shrill familiar voice borne on the air, and presently Dame Grumble +herself appeared before the cottage door. + +Now, as the Apple Tree had foretold, Dame Grumble was crosser than ever. +She had not found the fortune in pennies she had sought, and she was out +of humor with her journey. She vowed she had not had one pleasant moment +from the time she had set out; she said that she had longed unceasingly +for her little cottage. Dame Grumble solemnly declared that she had done +with journeys forevermore and looked forward to great happiness, now +that she was home at last. She praised Freyo's housekeeping and said the +cottage looked as tidy as a pin. When she had laid aside her bonnet and +shawl, she began to make a fine supper for him. + +"How nice that you have crutches, my son, and can get about so well!" +she cried with pleasure. + +"Are they not a blessing, Mother?" asked Freyo. "They are not bad for a +poor lad who never before had seen a crutch, but made them just as best +he knew." + +Dame Grumble continued to praise the crutches and to admire them until +she learned that they were made from branches of the Apple Tree. Then +she was furious; her anger knew no bounds. She rushed out to the Apple +Tree and shook it with all her might. Then she ran in to throw the +crutches in the fire, but this Freyo would not permit. + +"The Apple Tree herself gave me her branches, Mother," said he, "and the +crutches are mine." + +"Give them to me at once, I say!" stormed Dame Grumble. "The Apple Tree +is mine, and consequently her branches are mine also. I must punish you +for this disobedience. Do you not know that I prize the Apple Tree above +all else on earth? Do I not expect a harvest of golden apples from it +some day? Now when that day is come, I shall not have nearly so many, +because of your wickedness. Why did you cut as much as a twig from the +Apple Tree?" + +"Mother," answered Freyo, "if there be any harm done, it is done. To +burn the crutches will not make the branches grow upon the Apple Tree +again." Dame Grumble first commanded and then entreated that her son +give her the crutches to burn, but Freyo was firm. At last she burst +into tears. + +"Oh! Oh!" she sobbed. "It is not enough that I have had many troubles +and cares in the past; each year my wicked enemy, the North Wind, steals +a fortune in pennies from me! And now added to this I must suffer +disobedience from my own ungrateful son." She sobbed and wailed until +Freyo was nearly distracted. + +"Oh, Mother!" he begged. "If you would only cease your weeping and look +at these wonderful things I have made in your absence. Here is a +clock-case with the four seasons carved upon it. The hours are told by +twelve lovely nymphs dancing through the forest; it is a treasure worthy +of a king. Some day a duke may come a-riding by and fancy it--then, who +knows--my fortune may be made, and I would give it all to you, Mother." + +In spite of all his pleadings, however, Dame Grumble would not look at +his treasures. She was so deep in her woes that she could think of +nothing else. She would not touch a crumb of supper but said mournfully +that she had no heart for either food or drink. + +Freyo sat before the fire, sad and desolate. With the scolding dame's +return, the quiet and contentment of the little cottage had fled. "Ah," +sighed the poor lad, "I have no doubt that Mother is right; perhaps I am +wicked and ungrateful after all." + + +II + +During the winter that followed, Dame Grumble led her son a dreadful +life. He could no longer talk to his good friend, the Apple Tree, for +she was sleeping her deep winter's sleep and would not waken until the +spring. So while the snow whirled high without and piled itself in +drifts at door and chimney, Freyo sat patiently carving his great oaken +chests and settles. When he carved fields of wheat with wild fowl flying +over, the poor lad fancied himself afield once more; when he carved +forest scenes, he lived again the memories of his happy summer. If Dame +Grumble spoke to her son, it was but to call him wicked and ungrateful. +She often vowed she would forgive him if he would but give her the +crutches to burn. But Freyo had a plan in mind. With the first sign of +spring, he meant to be off and seek his own way in the world, and this +he could never do without his precious crutches. The poor lad had no +desire to spend another winter with this cross, fault-finding dame. + +Now, as was her usual fashion, Dame Grumble spent much time in planning +means to spare the blossoms of the Apple Tree. It happened that on her +journey she had found a book which told of orchard trees and how to care +for them. So in this book Dame Grumble now began to study diligently. +She found a picture of an apple tree encased with strong, coarse +netting. This strong, coarse netting, so the book said, would protect +the fruit and blossoms from all harm. Accordingly, Dame Grumble sat her +down before her wheel and spun endless miles of heavy thread. From this +she next wove yards upon yards of strong, coarse netting. Often and +often Freyo begged his mother to cease this useless labor. The North +Wind would soon tear the whole thing into shreds, said he. You may be +sure Dame Grumble always had a sharp retort for him. + +"Had I a son who was a comfort and a blessing, I have no doubt that he +would long ago have found a way to save my precious blossoms from the +North Wind," she would say. "I daresay, too, that I would have had a +harvest of golden apples long since. Even now I might be dwelling in +some noble mansion with slaves to do my bidding and a different carriage +for every day in the week!" + +So the winter dragged on wearily. At last the snow began to melt, and +the sunbeams to make bright spots on the kitchen floor. The hedges here +and there showed patches of green leaves; the birds returned from the +southland whither they had gone for the winter. Forget-me-nots and brown +bells blossomed about the Apple Tree, and the green grass for miles +about was thick with yellow buttercups. It was then the Apple Tree awoke +from her winter's sleep and decked herself in clouds of fragrant, +pinky-white blossoms. Then it was that Dame Grumble went forth from her +cottage with yards upon yards of strong, coarse netting with which she +covered her favorite tree. Seeing the bare places that marked the two +missing branches, she cried out afresh that she was a sad, sorrowful +woman and had too many cares. + +While Dame Grumble was thus occupied, Freyo unlocked the cupboard where +he had hidden his precious crutches. But, alas! The wood of the Apple +Tree was not suitable for such use, and the crutches fell to pieces when +he touched them. Freyo tried to mend them here and join them there, but +it was in vain. They broke again in other places. Now when Dame Grumble +learned this, she vowed it was a just punishment for Freyo's +disobedience. However, with her usual perverseness, she took no more +interest in the crutches. She did not trouble to burn them, and there +they lay in the cupboard for many a long day. + +"You will obey your mother when she commands, another time, I daresay," +she would often remark, and point to the useless, broken things. + +Now that spring was come, it was not long before Dame Grumble's old +enemy, the North Wind, came also. Shouting and hallooing he blew over +the fields and forests one sunshiny day, and when he reached the Apple +Tree, he stopped still in amazement. + +"Ho! Ho! Ho!" laughed the North Wind, "who has thus cleverly covered the +Apple Tree?" + +"I have!" shouted Dame Grumble from within her cottage, where she had +run to hide. "Now you had best be off, for you can never undo this +strong, coarse netting I have woven; it is tied in a thousand tight +knots!" + +"Ah! is it indeed, Dame Grumble?" inquired the North Wind with mock +politeness. "Will you kindly have patience for a little until I try my +skill?" With that he blew a blast that unloosed all the yards upon yards +of strong, coarse netting and bore them off like puffs of thistledown. +Dame Grumble's heart sank; but, strange to say, the North Wind did not +blow away the blossoms of the Apple Tree. Instead, he lingered about the +cottage until night fell and played all manner of tricks to bring Dame +Grumble running out. He blew soot down the chimney and blackened the +clean-scrubbed kitchen floor; he put out her candle when she had lighted +it for evening; and whisked her linen from the hedges into the fields +and far away. Not one word of anger or reproach would Dame Grumble +utter, even so. If the North Wind would but spare the blossoms of the +Apple Tree, nothing else mattered. At last the North Wind grew weary of +his teasing and departed. + +"Just you wait, Dame Grumble!" he called in farewell. "Some day I shall +catch you unaware, and I will carry you off to that desert island that +waits to welcome you as Queen of Grumblers!" Then he blew on his way. + +Dame Grumble waited, fearful lest perhaps he would return, but the North +Wind returned no more that spring. The blossoms on the Apple Tree began +to wither, and presently tiny fruit began to form on its branches. It +seemed at last as though Dame Grumble would gather the harvest of golden +apples for which she had so longed; but even so, this cross, +fault-finding dame was not content. + +"Alack!" she often mourned, "if I had had this strong, coarse netting +years ago, I would have had many a golden harvest long ere this. Without +doubt this covering hath a charm above the power of the North Wind. Had +I a son to assist me, I daresay he would have thought about it long +since." + +"But, Mother, I cannot help it that I am lame and do not assist you," +sighed Freyo. + +"But you can help it when you are wicked and disobedient; and wicked and +disobedient you were when you cut the two stout branches of the Apple +Tree. For now, though I shall gather golden apples, there will not be +nearly so many because of your rash act." + +So the springtime passed and the summertime came. Day by day the fruit +on the Apple Tree grew larger, and day by day Dame Grumble took pencil +and paper to count the number of apples that hung upon each branch. She +tried each day to reckon just how many more she would have had but for +the branches Freyo had cut off, and every day she grew vexed afresh. +Dame Grumble would not permit Freyo to go near the Apple Tree. She vowed +he might take a notion to cut down the whole tree, for all she knew. + +The summer grew older; the meadows turned brown, and the fields grew +bare. Dame Grumble watched eagerly for a sign which would show that the +apples were turning to gold; but no sign she saw. The apples turned +bright red instead. The summer began to wane, and a sharp chill in the +air warned Dame Grumble that winter was not far away. The maples on the +hillsides flamed crimson and scarlet once again, and yellow leaves fell +from the poplar trees like rain. + +"Now can it be that you are going to disappoint me!" exclaimed Dame +Grumble to the Apple Tree. "Why, pray, do not your apples turn to gold?" + +"How you talk, Dame Grumble!" replied the Apple Tree. "You will be +disappointed no matter what happens! Though I gave you a thousand golden +apples, you would never cease to mourn that you might have had a hundred +more had not Freyo cut off my two branches. Then you would make the poor +lad's life more miserable than ever. I sometimes wonder that you are not +ashamed to plague and torment him as you do. You do not deserve golden +apples, and I will not give you golden apples. So you had best make +haste and gather these red apples of mine before the frost will nip +them." + +But this Dame Grumble would not do. She was assured that the red apples +would turn to gold, in spite of the Apple Tree. For if young and tender +blossoms yielded bright new shining pennies, did it not follow that the +ripened fruit would be of purest gold? Dame Grumble so believed. "The +Apple Tree does not love me and never did," she thought within herself; +"it is but a plan to make me angry." + +By and by the leaves fell from the Apple Tree itself, until its branches +were quite bare and brown. The apples shone tantalizingly red, and then +Dame Grumble realized at last that they would never change to golden, as +she hoped. Now this new disappointment, you may be sure, did not tend to +sweeten her disposition. All day she sat gazing mournfully at her +favorite tree and wept bitter tears at her new loss. + +"Oh, Mother, pray do not weep so!" begged Freyo. "You will make yourself +ill. My store of wood is gone; but if you would bring me two stout +branches from the forest, I would fashion another pair of crutches for +myself. Then I would set off to make a fortune to take the place of this +fortune you fancy you have lost." + +"Fancy I have lost!" repeated Dame Grumble scornfully. "The fortune I +_fancy_ I have lost! I do not fancy I have lost a fortune; I know full +well I have lost a fortune. Besides, who would give a copper farthing +for your clumsy chests and boxes!" + +So all day long Dame Grumble dwelt on her woes. At night she sat sighing +in the chimney corner until the little cottage quite close to the top of +the earth was as dull and gloomy as though a thousand crows had settled +suddenly upon it. + + +III + +Now it happened at this time, when all Dame Grumble's troubles seemed +too many to be borne, that the good dame and her son enjoyed a visitor. +Visitors in that country quite close to the top of the earth were very +rare, you may be sure. This visitor was not an ordinary sort of person; +far from that was he, indeed. Because he journeyed ceaselessly about the +earth and was well known to folk of many lands, he was called the +Traveler. But though he roamed thus everywhere, the Traveler seemed +never bound for any certain land or country but went his ways just as +the winds of heaven went theirs. The Traveler never remained long in +any city or village, nevertheless he stayed long enough to do a kindness +for some sad one, or to help some poor one on his way. Few people ever +could agree about his age; the old thought him young, and the young +thought him old. However, young and old alike agreed that the Traveler +seemed possessed of magic powers to banish cares and troubles. Wherever +he found quarrels and spites, he left love and kindliness; where he +found envy, he left content; where he went once, the Traveler always +found a warm welcome awaiting him on his return. + +What was the secret source of the Traveler's noble qualities was a +mystery to all folk. Some said the Traveler kept his cheerful spirit +because of a certain great cloak that he always wore. This cloak, they +said, was made of wool woven from the fleece of fairy sheep and had +great powers of happiness. Others said that in a far-off country the +Traveler had drunk deeply of a certain magic well, the waters of which +were said to bless one with a kindly heart forevermore. Still others +thought the Traveler's power over cares and sorrow lay in the plain +wood staff he always carried. But though the secret of his soothing +charm was thus uncertain, certain it was that the Traveler paid a visit +to Dame Grumble and her son one chill autumn evening, and the story of +it all is this: + +It happened one day, as the Traveler was walking along the road that led +up to the country quite close to the top of the earth, he chanced to +meet the North Wind. Now the North Wind loved to tease and play his +tricks on every one, and so he seized the Traveler's hat and blew it +five fields off; he swept stinging dust into his eyes and wrapped his +cloak so tightly around him that but for his staff the Traveler would +have stumbled. Though he was so bothered and annoyed, the Traveler did +not complain. He loosed his cloak and wiped his eyes of the dust, then +once again he set upon his way. + +"Ah," said the Traveler, "it is a strong wind that blows here; but how +clean the road is swept in consequence! It is also a good wind." + +The North Wind had expected blame instead of praise and was abashed. So +straightway he brought back the hat, and then he blew gently in the +direction which would best suit the Traveler's footsteps. So it was that +this visitor knocked at Dame Grumble's cottage one evening just at +candlelight. The Traveler begged her hospitality, and Dame Grumble bade +him enter. She placed a chair before the hearth and began to prepare a +supper for him. All the while she complained most bitterly that she +should thus receive a guest in her kitchen. When she set forth the +supper, Dame Grumble sighed because the bread was brown instead of +white. + +"Never sigh, Dame Grumble!" urged the Traveler with his kindly smile. +"Seldom have I seen a pleasanter kitchen, and never have I eaten better +fare. Your brown bread is fit for a king, and your broth would give +courage to a weary army!" + +"That is all very well for you to say, good sir," replied Dame Grumble +sulkily, "but you do not know all my troubles." She did not often find +one to give ear to her tale of sorrow, and if the Traveler would, Dame +Grumble meant that he should hear her. Above all else in the world, +Dame Grumble loved to talk about her woes. + +"Then perhaps after supper, when you sit before the fire, you will tell +me of your troubles, good dame," said the Traveler. You may be sure Dame +Grumble agreed. Indeed, so eager was she to begin that she hummed a +lively tune to hasten her work. At the unusual sound of his mother's +singing, Freyo left his bench to learn the cause of it. When he saw the +Traveler, he greeted him with warmth. + +"We do not often have a visitor, good sir," said he, "so I shall leave +my work and join you by the fireside." + +"But first," exclaimed the Traveler, "you must let me see this work of +yours; you must dearly love it, thus to be about it after darkness has +fallen and all men sit to take their ease." + +"Good sir," replied Freyo, "my work is wood carving, and I do love it +better than the whole world!" + +The Traveler regarded the great chests and clock-cases with deep +admiration and begged Freyo to tell him of his work; of whom he had +learned his skill; and whence his designs had come. To these questions +Freyo replied that he did not know, he supposed he had taught himself. + +"Good sir," said he, "some folk make pictures on a canvas with bright +colored oils and brilliant paints, and other folk make pictures with +fair words, as they tell wonder tales. I have not skill like those, but +I have dreamed bright dreams and have loved to sit and carve my dreams +upon my chests of oak and walnut wood. Think you that my skill is fair +or that my pictures would please aught beside myself, who carved them?" + +"I have no words to tell you how high I hold your skill," declared the +Traveler, "and as for the pictures you have carved in wood, they would +delight a queen or please a king as well. They are truly lovely." + +"Then, good sir," replied Freyo, "to the Apple Tree that stands before +our door you must give all this praise. The summer before the summer +that has just passed, this good tree of her own accord did give me her +two stoutest branches, from which I made a pair of crutches. Then I +could wander in the woods from dawn till dark, and hear the birds sing +songs the whole day long. 'T was then I learned to dream my finest +dreams; it was like heaven, sir!" The poor lad sighed in memory of the +happy time, and before he could say more, Dame Grumble interrupted. The +good dame could no longer restrain her tongue or her impatience, it +seemed. + +"Now, good sir!" cried she, "you have heard my son; you must hear me. +The Apple Tree was not an ordinary tree, as my son knew very well! He +did wrong to cut the smallest twig whilst I was gone. + +"Each year, when the cuckoo came calling in the spring, there was no +finer sight in all the world than the Apple Tree. So thick was it with +blossoms that scarce a branch or twig could be seen. Its fragrance +floated on the breeze, drawing every bee and butterfly for leagues and +leagues about. Surely with such a tree I might look for a bounteous +harvest, one would think. But, alas! No sooner was the Apple Tree thus +decked like a bride than my wicked enemy, the North Wind, would come and +blow these blossoms far away. But mark you now the wonder of my tale: a +few blossoms would sometimes fall beneath the tree, and when they fell +they made a chinking sound like that of small coins in children's banks. +When they had withered, I always found bright, new shining pennies where +they had lain. + +"Now from this curious fact I have believed that when the Apple Tree +would bear fruit, the apples would be of gold. If young and tender +blossoms yield bright, new shining pennies, does it not follow that the +ripened fruit should be of purest gold?" + +"It would seem so, good dame," agreed the Traveler. "What then were the +apples--silver, perhaps?" + +"Indeed sir, no!" replied Dame Grumble with deep feeling. "For all I +know, in cutting off the branches of my favorite tree, my wicked son +bewitched it. For though the Apple Tree bore fruit this year, it bore +naught but red apples of a common sort; I scorn to gather them! + +"Oh, Oh!" wept Dame Grumble, bursting into tears once again at the +memory of her loss. "Thus to have my own son so wicked and disobedient, +whilst I, footsore and weary, was seeking for the fortune in pennies +which the North Wind had stolen from me these many years! It is too +much! I am sure, good sir, you will agree that I have many troubles, and +that it is not right to call me Dame Grumble because I sometimes speak +of them." + +"I had rather agree that you have also many blessings, good dame," +returned the Traveler, with his kindly smile. "Come, let us draw our +chairs before the hearth, and perhaps you may learn to see them too. +There is nothing that does so help us see our blessings as the bright +flames dancing up the chimney when all the world without is dark and +cold." + +But ere she sat down, Dame Grumble recollected yet another grievance. +"And added to my other troubles," she complained, "I have a son who is +lame and must be always a burden instead of a staff." + +The Traveler nodded gravely. "That is a sorrow, I agree," said he, "and +I have no doubt, good dame, that your motherly heart must often ache +with the pity of it all." + +To this Dame Grumble made no reply; she began to think instead. For +years her mind had been so busy with the plans for her blossoms and her +golden harvest that it had quite forgotten how to think of aught else. +As for her heart, it ached only when she thought of the fortune in +pennies that the North Wind had stolen from her, and that she had not +found. + +"Then too, Dame Grumble," continued the Traveler, "I must tell you that +I think the North Wind no more than a rough playful fellow, and not +wicked as you say. Only this afternoon he stole my hat and ran away with +it, but before I had gone twenty yards, the amiable fellow had brought +it back to me again. And since he blew me to your cottage door, I will +henceforth claim the North Wind for my friend." + +"Then since it was the North Wind that brought you to our door, I will +no longer call him my enemy, but instead will call him my friend also," +declared Dame Grumble with a smile. In the firelight her face suddenly +looked so sweet and gentle that Freyo sighed deeply. Dame Grumble heard +the sigh, and asked her son the cause of it. + +"I sighed because I wished you would smile often, Mother," replied the +lad. "You looked so sweet and pleasant." + +"And now," began the Traveler, "since we are all so happy, let us begin +to think about the good dame's difficulties,--the fortune in pennies +which she sought and could not find, the precious blossoms which the +North Wind blows away each spring, and the Apple Tree which should have +borne apples of gold, but which bore red apples instead. For these three +evils we must find a remedy without delay." + +Now all the while she had been sitting with the Traveler by the +fireside, because of his magic power, Dame Grumble had been thinking +busily. Not of fortunes or of golden apples, or yet of red apples +either; instead, quite to her own surprise, she was thinking of how +wearied she had grown of all these things. She wished suddenly that she +would never hear of them again. Judge then of her son's astonishment +when she answered the Traveler in the following fashion: + +"Good sir, although I sat me down to talk about my troubles, now that I +have told them, they seem light and trifling; I am indeed amazed that I +have heeded them at all! Though for years and years I have quarreled +with the North Wind because he robbed me of a fortune, I seem suddenly +to care no longer for fortunes or gold or riches, or any such. + +"For as I peer into the flames, it comes to my mind that there are many +in this world not so blessed as I. Many a one is hungry and has naught +to eat, while my larder is filled; some are cold whilst I sit in comfort +before a fire of pine knots that sputter and glow. I see now that I have +many blessings." Dame Grumble did not know she had these thoughts +because of the Traveler. + +"Ah!" cried the Traveler, "did I not say the blazing logs helped one to +see one's blessings, and was I not right?" + +"I have often fancied that was so, good sir," agreed Freyo, "and now, +since my mother no longer wishes to talk about her troubles, perhaps you +will tell us tales of your journeys; you are a traveler and have seen +far distant lands." + +"Pray do, good sir!" begged Dame Grumble too. "It is long since my son +and I have heard tales of any sort. Also from your great wisdom I have +a notion that we shall be highly entertained." + +So the Traveler told them tales of other lands. He told of strange birds +with bright-hued feathers of such great length that they swept upon the +ground like queens' trains. He told of burning mountains and of fiery +lakes, of lovely flowers blooming in the snow, and gardens that grew +underneath the sea. The wind without howled dismally; within, the flames +leaped high and made queer elfin shadows to dance on the walls; the +clock ticked off the minutes into hours, but still Dame Grumble and her +son sat listening, wrapt in wonder. At last the candles snuffed out, and +naught but the back log smoldered and glowed in the darkness. + +"Now good sir," cried Dame Grumble, "I am sure you must be weary." She +bade him take the best room, but the Traveler refused. The comfortable +chair in which he sat was all he needed, he declared, and he bade the +good dame and her son good night. + +When they awakened next morning, he had gone; but on the chair they +found his staff. Fastened to the staff there was a note which bade Freyo +use it in place of the crutches, and said when he had no longer need for +it to give it to some other one that had. + +"Mother," said Freyo, when he had read the note over and over again, +"would this not seem to say that I might one day walk without the aid of +either crutch or staff? What think you of it?" + +"It would seem so, my son," replied the dame, "and then how happy I +would be!" + +A knock at the door startled them both. Dame Grumble, thinking it was +the Traveler returned, hastened to open; but it was not he. It was a +king's herald dressed in scarlet satin and silver laces. + +"I am the herald of King Silversword," said he. He bowed low to Dame +Grumble as though she were a duchess. + +"And I am Dame Grumble, at His Majesty's service," answered Dame +Grumble, with a bow equally fine. + +"Then hearken to my message," began the herald. He unrolled a scroll of +parchment, set thick with king's seals and written all in silver +letters, and read the following proclamation: + +"Know ye that the apple crop of the whole world has failed. From north +to south, from east to west, there is not one apple to be found, nay not +for a king's ransom. Now that of itself could be borne, none the less, +for apples be great luxuries. However, the little Princess Silverstar, +the only daughter of King Silversword and Queen Silverland, has fallen +ill and craves constantly for red apples. The doctors and the medical +men hold no hope for her recovery unless she has to eat the fruit she +craves. Wherefore, if good Dame Grumble will sell a dozen or more red +apples to His Majesty, King Silversword, she may name any sum of gold or +portions of rich jewels in payment; nay, whether she demand both gold +and jewels, or even His Majesty's entire fortune, it shall be hers in +exchange for her red apples." + +"Come now, good dame, what do you say?" asked the herald, as he rolled +up the scroll once more. + +"I say, good Master Herald, that my red apples are not for sale," the +dame replied, "but if they have a power to restore the little Princess +Silverstar, she may have them all. They shall be a gift from me and my +son Freyo." + +Now the herald was amazed at this. From the humble surroundings, he knew +the good dame and her son were naught but worthy peasants, and he +reasoned wisely that riches would not be amiss. Accordingly, he tried to +persuade Dame Grumble to accept some gift, a tract of fertile land, a +noble mansion, or at least a bag or two of gold; but Dame Grumble was +firm in her intention and would not be persuaded. + +"If my red apples have a power to heal," she declared, "they will have +thrice that power if given with a good heart instead of in barter or +exchange." So the herald besought her no more. He called the servants +and bade them strip the tree, and then, with many thanks, he hastened on +his way. + +"Oh, Mother!" cried Freyo, as they watched the royal coach depart. "How +fine of you to refuse such riches! All your life you have so longed for +a fortune, too!" + +"Indeed, my son," replied the good dame earnestly, "the only fortune I +desire now is the fortune that you will one day make for me. However, I +must confess that all the while I spoke with the king's herald, it +seemed that the Traveler was close beside to tell me what to say, and +that the words were not my own. Now, was that not a strange thing--and +he gone these many hours?" + +As she went about her daily tasks, the good dame seemed to have +forgotten her old woes and troubles and Freyo whistled like a thrush as +he sat working at his bench. The little cottage had never known such a +happy day. Freyo's tools seemed to fly as though by magic, and the gloom +that had been slowly settling down upon the little cottage quite close +to the top of the earth now seemed to take wings and fly off. It was +just at sunset when they heard the blowing of horns and trumpets, and +again the coach of King Silversword drew up before their door. + +Freyo, wishing to hear news of the Princess Silverstar, seized the +Traveler's staff and hobbled toward the door. But wonder of wonders! No +sooner had he leaned his weight upon it than he grew tall and straight +as a young poplar tree. Like an arrow he sped from the cottage door, and +Dame Grumble rubbed her eyes lest she should wake and find herself +a-dreaming. + +"Now look you, good Master Herald!" she cried in amazement. "You saw my +son only this morning, and he was lame as lame could be; and now, +behold, he walks as well as you or I! Truly, say I, it is a day of +miracles!" + +"Thou sayest right, good dame!" declared the herald. "It is to tell you +of another miracle that I have come hither. Only this morn the little +Princess Silverstar did eat but one of the red apples, and to the +delight and wonder of the court, she began to grow stronger. When she +had eaten three or four, the doctors and medical men pronounced her +cured; they believed that the red apples coming as a gift, rather than +for barter or exchange, had worked an important part in this miraculous +recovery. To-night there is great feasting and rejoicing in the land of +King Silversword, and the praises of Dame Grumble and her son are sung +by rich and poor and high and low alike." The herald then unrolled +another scroll and read the following proclamation: + +"Wherefore His Majesty, King Silversword, to show his gratitude, doth +now create Freyo the First Wood Carver of his kingdom and master of all +other wood carvers in the land." + +Freyo could scarcely believe his good fortune and begged the herald to +read the scroll once more. Then he began to shout with joy. "And only to +think, Mother!" he cried, "I am no longer lame, but can walk about like +all the youths whom I shall meet at court." + +"I am rejoiced!" declared Dame Grumble, "but if there be feasting in all +the lands of King Silversword, there should likewise be feasting in our +little cottage. You are whole and strong, and the Princess Silverstar is +restored to health through our gift. Let us be merry too! + +"And you, good Master Herald," continued the good Dame, "though our food +be plain, if happy hearts alone be needed, there will be no merrier +household in all the world than ours to-night. Will you not sup with +us?" The herald vowed he would be honored, and so Dame Grumble popped +another pudding in the steaming pot, and they all sat down. While the +three ate and drank, the good dame and her son recalled the wonder of +their visitor the evening before. + +"One could scarce believe the change the Traveler wrought upon my mind +and heart," said the good dame. "Before he came, I was scolding and +complaining always from morning until night. Yet since he entered into +my door, I have had scarce a vexatious thought." + +"It would seem, good dame, that the Traveler was some gentle spirit come +from afar," agreed the herald. "I do not doubt that he and his magic +arts are the secret cause of these miracles we have seen to-day." + +When he departed with the herald the next day, Freyo left behind the +Traveler's staff; the good dame fancied it would be a guard against the +return of her low spirits. She leaned on it as she stood by the cottage +door and waved her son a farewell and thought with pride how handsome he +was now that he was tall and straight. Thus we must leave Dame Grumble +in the country quite close to the top of the earth, and journey off +with Freyo on the way to seek his fortune. + + +IV + +At the court of King Silversword, Freyo was welcomed with much honor and +ceremony. Dame Grumble's gift to the little princess had made a thousand +good friends for him, it seemed. King Silversword looked at him with +eyes of gratitude; Queen Silverland could not praise him enough. The +Little Princess Silverstar took much pleasure in the tales that Freyo +told her of the North Wind and the Apple Tree. Before many days had +passed, Freyo had become the child's favorite courtier, and was a +favorite of the whole Court likewise. The noble lords vowed that Freyo +had wisdom beyond his years and vied with one another to do him +kindnesses. The noble ladies declared that Freyo had a kindly heart as +well as handsome features. They said his gentle manners were worthy of a +duke's son. King Silversword gave orders that a fine workroom be built +at the top of the royal palace and fitted with every sort of tool that a +wood carver might fancy. He also sent great ships a-sailing off to +distant lands to bring rare woods for Freyo's work. + +When all things were in order, Freyo began his first task for the great +King Silversword: it was to carve seven great chests which would be used +as dower chests for the little princess by and by. So fine was the +design upon each chest, and so delicate and intricate the carving and +the traceries, that seven long years passed before the seven chests were +finished. In all that time, although the princess grew to be a lovely +maiden, tall and stately, she still took pleasure in the tales that +Freyo told her of the Apple Tree that grew up in the country quite close +to the top of the earth. Now when these seven chests were shown at +court, it was the opinion of wise men and artists from far and near that +their equal could not be found in all the world. King Silversword was +greatly pleased, and in reward he commanded that Freyo be made Duke of +Freyoland. Ten thousand leagues of land in the country quite close to +the top of the earth were given him for his domain, and a noble castle +was likewise built there for him. + +The seven dower chests were next filled full of gold and jewels, and +orders for a splendid ball were given. Princes and dukes as well as +lords and marquises from every court on earth were bidden to attend, and +from this assemblage of noble youths, the Princess Silverstar would +choose her husband. Some gossips at the court declared it was assured +that Princess Silverstar would choose Prince Goldenmines, the richest +prince in all the world. Others thought that she would surely favor +Prince Palmire, because he was so handsome. Judge then of the surprise +of all when Princess Silverstar chose Freyo for her prince and begged +her royal parents to consent. + +"Is it not to Freyo's noble gift, so long ago, that we do owe our +daughter's life!" exclaimed these grateful monarchs. "How then shall we +deny him for our daughter's husband? Announce the betrothal, heralds!" + +Then straightway the wedding day was set. Dame Grumble journeyed down +from the country quite close to the top of the earth and was made +welcome by Queen Silverland and her noble ladies. (To be quite formal, +we should now call the good dame Duchess Freyoland, for as mother of a +duke, she had likewise become ennobled. However, as the good dame liked +her old name best, perhaps we had best call her just Dame Grumble after +all.) + +In order that all folk might rejoice in goodly earnest at her wedding +feast, the Princess Silverstar besought her father two favors. First, +that he would forgive all debts and moneys that his people owed the +crown, and second, that he would take no taxes for a whole year and a +day. She then commanded that every subject be given fine new holiday +attire and a well-filled purse, according to his rank and station. In +all the history of the kingdom there was not known a finer feast than +this. The noble lords and ladies rode and drove or danced at splendid +balls. The common people sang or played games on the highways and +feasted on the village greens. Then when the seven days of fun and +feasting passed at last, and Freyo with his lovely bride drove off to +their castle, Dame Grumble sat beside them in the royal chariot. But not +for long could the good dame content herself in their splendid castle. +Her heart began to yearn, and she began to pine most sadly for her +home. Though Freyo and his lovely bride begged her to stay and dwell +with them forever, the good dame would not hear of it. + +"Ah, no, my children!" cried Dame Grumble. "Long, long ago, 'tis true, I +wished for a noble house and fancied I would be happy as a queen if I +might live in one. Since the visit of the Traveler, I have grown much +wiser. I know that I can be happy as a queen if I am but content. So in +my little cottage with the North Wind and the Apple Tree for friends, I +shall dwell all my days." + +So saying, Dame Grumble bade Freyo and his lovely bride farewell, and +leaning on the Traveler's staff she set off for home. She reached her +little cottage on a bright spring day, just when the Apple Tree was +decked in clouds of fragrant, pinky-white blossoms, and looked as lovely +as a fairy tree. Dame Grumble gazed with satisfaction on her favorite +tree, and as she gazed it came to her mind that in all the noble sights +she saw at court, she had seen nothing half so lovely as the Apple Tree +in spring. + +It was not long now before the North Wind came roaring over field and +forest in his usual fashion, but when he saw Dame Grumble he ceased +suddenly. He asked most civilly how the good dame did and whether she +had liked the life at court. To all his questions Dame Grumble made most +amiable reply and hoped the North Wind's health was fair. For, if you +will believe me, these two old enemies were now good friends. They had +not had a cross word or a quarrel since the evening of the Traveler's +visit long ago. + +"And now, Dame Grumble," said the North Wind, "for seven long years you +have ceased your scolding and grumbling, and if you will it so, the +spell that bound the Apple Tree may now be broken. Only command me to +cease my mischief, and I will touch your blossoms nevermore. Likewise +command the Apple Tree to bear you golden apples, and you shall have +them." + +"But North Wind!" cried the Apple Tree. "First tell my mistress what you +have done with all the pennies from my blossoms. My mistress has a heart +of gold and needs not golden apples." + +Dame Grumble smiled with pleasure that the Apple Tree should speak thus +kindly of her. Well she remembered the olden days when she had often +been most harsh with her favorite tree, and she hoped the tree had now +forgiven her. "The Apple Tree praises my heart too highly," said Dame +Grumble modestly. "Still, North Wind, I must own that I have been most +curious about the pennies from the blossoms you have blown away." + +"The pennies were not stored in some hollow of the earth, as you +supposed, long, long ago, when you set out to find them," said the North +Wind. "Each springtime, when I blew the blossoms of the Apple Tree +around the world, I dropped the pennies at the feet of poor children who +had none but me to love them. These poor children then ran pell-mell to +the nearest sweet shop to spend their pennies and were happy as larks in +consequence." + +"The Apple Tree is right!" declared Dame Grumble. "For all the golden +apples in the world, I would not rob a single poor child of its penny. +So blow your fiercest, North Wind; and Apple Tree, see to it that there +be a penny for every orphan child on earth." The North Wind obeyed, and +Dame Grumble smiled to see the lovely blossoms flying through the air +like April snow. + +And so the good dame settled down to dwell in peace and happiness. +Kings' palaces and dukes' castles were all very well, said she, but +after all, there was no place like home. As for climate and a clear blue +sky in summer, there was no place to equal the country quite close to +the top of the earth, Dame Grumble thought. Often and often, just at +candlelight, Dame Grumble peered into the dusk and gloom in hopes of +seeing the Traveler coming toward her door; but he came not. Sometimes +she asked the North Wind for news of him, but he could tell her little. + +"I think," said the North Wind, "that the Traveler still journeys round +the earth, but always in advance of me. Sometimes I travel over cities +where all folk are content, and where there are no strifes nor quarrels. +I hear folk speaking of a noble traveler who has lingered with them, and +I have often thought it is the Traveler whom we seek. If I should ever +meet him, I shall tell him that Dame Grumble waits each evening to +welcome him." + +"But my mistress, and you too, North Wind," said the Apple Tree, "have +you not heard it said the Traveler visits only those who are sad and +sorrowful, or who are afflicted with cold, selfish hearts? If that be +true, he will return to our little cottage no more; there is no need for +him." + +Now it would seem that the Apple Tree was right, for the Traveler +returned no more. And in all the world there was not such another place +for comfort and good cheer as Dame Grumble's little cottage quite close +to the top of the earth where the North Wind blew fiercely each spring. + + + + +CHAPTER II + +A TALE OF THE NORTHLAND KINGDOM + + +I + +Long, long ago, in a certain far-off region of the world, there was a +land of ice and snow, and this land was called the Northland Kingdom. +There each year the ice broke on the rivers and flowed out to the sea, +and the snow melted in the valleys. Then corn and rye and other good +grains would grow; but these mild seasons were short, and for the most +part ice and snow abounded everywhere. + +Added to this, in the time of my tale there was no light in the +Northland Kingdom. All time was deep gray twilight or inky darkness, and +there was no day. Neither Moon nor Stars had ever pierced the +overhanging gloom and mists, and the sun had never shone upon the +Northland Kingdom. Reindeer flitted silently through this land of +shadows, and great white bears made their homes in icy caves by the sea. +When birds of passage reached this land of darkness, they trilled their +softest songs and went to rest, and when they waked, they soared away in +search of brighter lands. But knowing nothing of the light of day, the +folk of this dark land mourned not its lack and were content to dwell +ever in shadow. A thousand silver lamps and myriads of waxen tapers +gleamed always in the palace of the king; and in the fields the workers +sowed and reaped by light of flaming torches. The herders built great +fires on the hillsides, and in their light and warmth told their flocks. +The housewives spun by firelight. + +Now in the time of which I tell, the good king Tamna ruled the Northland +Kingdom. He was a wealthy sovereign even as the wealth of kings is +reckoned. King Tamna owned a thousand mountains of gold and silver and +the fish of ten thousand streams. Herds of reindeer and caribou beyond +all counting were also his, as well as the forests and plains over which +they roamed. Beside all this, King Tamna was sovereign lord of one +hundred princes of the Northland Kingdom. These hundred princes paid +King Tamna tribute; that is to say, they brought him yearly certain +portions of their flocks and herds and of their grain and gold and of +all that was theirs, for such was the law of the Northland Kingdom. + +Now good King Tamna had a daughter, Maiden Matanuska, Princess of the +Silver Birches. She was so called because her marriage portion was a +forest of silver birch that lay between two swift-flowing streams and +reached from sea to sea. Some folk thought Maiden Matanuska was part +wood sprite, for in spite of dark and shadows she would roam for hours +in the paths and lanes among the birches and was not afraid. The Maiden +Matanuska understood the language of the trees and learned from them +just when the ice and snow would melt. + +The silver foxes that roamed this forest were her pets. They frisked and +followed her about like faithful dogs; and though their furs were worth +a king's fortune, Maiden Matanuska would not consent to have them slain. +For this the silver fox were grateful and loved her dearly. They taught +her secrets never known before by men, and from their wisdom Maiden +Matanuska learned to tell when icy winds would blow and snow begin to +fall and when the grain would grow again. Maiden Matanuska understood +the songs of birds as well, and when the birds of passage sang of other +lands, where there was light of day, she listened eagerly. But when she +begged these birds to sing her more, they answered her with sleepy +chirps, for birds would not sing long in that dark land. + +It was from these sweet songs the birds of passage sang that Maiden +Matanuska came to know that there was such a thing as light of day. The +more she heard, the more she longed to see this marvel. While she +wandered in her birchen forest, she would dream bright dreams of other +lands, she knew not where,--lands where ice and snow were not, but where +gay flowers bloomed instead, and there was day as well as night. + +"Oh, my father," said she with a sigh, "how pleasant our land would be +if all the shadows and the gloom departed for a time and we had light of +day as well as night." + +"Ah, yes, my daughter," said King Tamna, with an answering sigh, "but +how to brighten this dark land I know not. For your sake I would that I +could; but for myself, I care not. Now I am growing old and soon must +journey all alone to lands where light or darkness matters not." + +"Oh, my father! Speak not of that time," cried Maiden Matanuska, +bursting into tears. She loved her father tenderly and knew he spoke of +the time when he must die. "If you were not here with me, neither light +nor darkness would matter to me, and I should be desolate and lonely." + +"Then speak no more of your longing for light," replied the king. "It +grieves me that I cannot give you what you most desire. But before I +have departed from this life, I hope to see you wedded to some brave +prince who will love you and protect you in my place." + +And though Maiden Matanuska vowed she wished no prince at all, her +father gave her protests no heed. "There is a handsome youth who wears a +feather mantle with whom I see you wandering in the forest. Who is he?" +King Tamna asked. + +"He is Prince Kenai of the burning mountain," said the maiden. "He, too, +has dreams of light and tells me wonder tales which I do love to hear." + +"Prince Kenai is the poorest prince in all the Northland Kingdom," said +the king; "but if his wonder tales please you, I shall say nothing." + +Now, as may be supposed, there was no lack of suitors for the maiden's +hand. Indeed these hundred princes of the Northland Kingdom each longed +to marry her. She was the fairest maiden in the land, and moreover, she +was as lovely of mind and manner as she was fair of face. + +There came at last a certain night when good King Tamna sat in state to +greet his tribute-bearing princes, and Maiden Matanuska sat beside her +father. In robes of purple velvet bordered deep with ermine and thickly +sewn with threads of beaten gold, with golden crown and sceptre too, +King Tamna looked a very king of kings,--a monarch of great state and +dignity. The Maiden Matanuska, robed in shimmering gossamer white, her +golden hair, that fell about her like a cloak, crowned with a wreath of +leaves, and in her hand a holly branch, looked like some angel newly +come from paradise. She seemed some lovely maiden in a dream, who would +perhaps take flight and float away in the encircling gloom and mists. +These hundred princes knelt before the throne and begged the lovely +maiden's hand in marriage. + +At this the king was troubled, for clearly Maiden Matanuska could not +wed them all, and how to choose among them he knew not. At last the +royal counselors advised him in the following way: + +"Now since these hundred youths be princes all, and therefore suitable +in rank to wed your daughter, let Maiden Matanuska for herself decide +which one she'll wed." + +When this was told, the Maiden Matanuska sat some time in thought and +then she spoke. "I'll wed the prince who brings to me the thing which I +have never seen before, for which I long with all my heart, and which I +shall love well." + +The hundred princes then departed to their various lands and began to +seek among their treasures to find the thing they thought would please +the maiden. Some princes brought her toys of ivory wrought in wondrous +ways, and some brought robes of doeskin, soft as satin, white as milk, +embroidered all in beads of many colors. But these proved not the thing +for which the maiden longed. Some princes brought her great carved +silver chests, and some brought chains and bracelets made of purest +gold; but none of these were what the Maiden Matanuska wished, and all +these princes failed to win their suit. So fared they all until at last +there were but three to try their fate,--Prince Kathalan, Prince Katala, +and Prince Kenai. + +Now Prince Kathalan was the greatest warrior of all the Northland +Kingdom. He had won a hundred battles and boasted that he would win a +hundred more. He gloried in his warlike fame and doubted not that Maiden +Matanuska would favor him above all others. + +Katala, who was wealthiest prince of all, rejoiced because his slaves +had lately found a diamond mine, the like of which was never known +before in all the Northland Kingdom. Prince Katala had great faith in +the power of his riches and was full sure that Maiden Matanuska would +smile upon his suit. + +Prince Kenai dwelt in the land of a burning mountain whose fires +destroyed his forests and laid waste his lands, and the land itself, +moreover, was not enriched with gold or silver or with any other metal. +Because of this, Prince Kenai was called poorest prince of all; but +because in all the Northland Kingdom none other dared venture near this +burning mountain, he was counted bravest prince of all. + +Of these three, Prince Kathalan spoke first. "Oh, Maiden Matanuska, +Princess of the Silver Birch," cried he, "I bring to you this magic bird +of battle, my raven. Black as its wings are, wise is the bird, and +moreover it hath the gift of speech and prophecy. With this magic raven +as my omen, no warrior can worst me in battle, and I can conquer +legions. So marry me, O Maiden, and I will make you the most powerful +queen the world has ever known." + +The Maiden Matanuska shook her head. "You have not guessed my meaning +rightly," answered she. "I care not to be a queen of power, for such +queens are unhappy, I have often heard; and I hate the thought of +battle. So keep your magic raven, warrior prince. I love far better the +gentle doves that flutter around me in my forest." + +Prince Kathalan departed in a rage, and Prince Katala stood before the +throne. + +"Oh, Maiden Matanuska, Princess of the Silver Birch," cried he, "I bring +to you a golden casket filled full of gems called diamonds which you +have never seen before, and which you will love well, for they are truly +lovely. And these are not a thousandth part of all my wealth; so marry +me, O Maiden, and I will make you the richest queen the world has ever +known." + +The gems within the casket flashed forth purple fire and shone like +brilliant stars; but Maiden Matanuska sighed again. + +"I care not for great riches, Prince Katala," answered she, "for I have +riches of my own in goodly store. As for thy diamonds,--though they be +truly lovely, as you say, I should as soon love the icicles that cluster +round my casement in the storm. They are as hard and cold." + +Prince Katala departed likewise in a rage, and Prince Kenai bowed low +before the throne. + +"And now what treasure do you bring to win my hand, brave prince?" +asked Maiden Matanuska. + +To which the prince replied, "I bring you none, and neither do I seek to +win your hand. Your heart is what I do desire, O Maiden, for I do love +you truly and would die to serve you. + +"Now in your father's halls are treasures and all riches in great store. +Fair silken banners hang the walls to shut the cold drafts out; a +thousand gleaming silver lamps light the way; great chests are filled +full of ornaments of beaten gold, as well as many other things my eyes +have not discovered. With all this wealth heaped high on every hand, if +you still long for that which you have never seen, think you that in my +barren land it will be found? In my land so poor that even crows forsake +it?" + +"Well said, brave prince," the king replied, "and if you have not +treasures such as men hold dear, you have indeed a noble gift of speech. +But even so, some gift or token you must surely bring, or otherwise you +had not come at all but stayed within your barren land. Come, tell us +what it is." + +"I bring no treasure save the treasure of a wonder tale which you will +hear," said Prince Kenai, and then began to tell. + +"Within my land, as well you know, there lies a burning mountain from +which men flee in fear, but which I love. Now when my mountain has burst +forth in flames, and tongues of fire that reach to heaven light the sky +of all the world, I have seen wondrous things. I have seen other lands +far distant, where ice and snow are not, but where the green grass +clothes the hills and plains; where poppies shaped like golden chalices +grow thick, and birds sing hour after hour. And in these pleasant lands +of which I tell, there is a time of light as well as dark. This time of +light lasts many hours long and is called day." + +"Then tell me this, Prince Kenai," cried the king. "How comes this light +of day to other lands? It comes not to this dreary realm of ours, where +it would be most welcome." + +"I'll tell you that," replied the prince. "There is a wondrous traveler +called the Sun who high up in the clouds does journey ceaselessly about +the world. He has great power over night and causes darkness to break +forth in light wherever he does turn his face toward any land. + +"And now farewell, good king and Maiden Matanuska, whom I love. I go to +seek the Sun and beg him to return with me and shine upon the Northland +Kingdom as he does on other lands upon the earth. Then will we have the +light of day as well as night, and Maiden Matanuska will have that which +she has never seen, for which she longs with all her heart, and which +she will love well. Farewell." + +Prince Kenai wrapped his flowing feather mantle around him and took +leave of the king. The Maiden Matanuska walked with him through her +forest where the silver birches grew down to the borders of the sea, and +there they parted. + +"Oh, my brave prince," wept Maiden Matanuska, "my heart cries out +against your going, for since the day I met you I have loved you dearly; +but I was always fearful lest my father bid me wed another because you +had no fortune. Therefore I set the riddle which only you did guess. And +now, may all good powers guard you on your quest and bring you safely +back to me. While you are gone, the waking hours will often find me +standing on this shore, awaiting the glad sight of your return." + +"My beloved maiden!" sighed the prince. "With such sweet faith and love +to bless me, I cannot fail." He rent his flowing feather mantle in two +parts and wrapped a portion of it around the maiden. "I would I had a +richer token for you, love," said he. "But even so; this feather mantle +is no mean gift. Who wears it will be ever safe from icy blasts and snow +and cold and will be ever young and fair as on the day they wore it +first. Now kiss me in farewell and promise me that when I do return and +bring the Sun, you'll marry me." + +The Maiden Matanuska kissed him thrice and promised, and springing into +his boat, Prince Kenai sailed away. She stood upon the shore and blew +him kisses and caresses, but soon his form was lost in darkness and the +mists, and Maiden Matanuska was left forlorn. + + +II + +Now in those olden days, when princes journeyed around the world on +errands for the maidens whom they loved, the space of time they usually +were gone was a year and a day. So when a year and a day had passed, the +Maiden Matanuska often wandered through the birch wood and stood upon +the border of the sea. She strained her gaze far to the south to see the +sight of any sail; but Prince Kenai came not. + +She asked the birds of passage if they had seen her prince, and +sometimes they had news of him. "Oh, tell me, ye wild Gulls, of the wild +skies," she asked, "do you know aught of my brave Prince Kenai? He wears +a feather robe like mine and seeks in lands afar to find the Sun for +me." + +"Ah, yes," replied the Gulls. "We've seen a prince so dressed, and he +was sailing westward on the sea and seemed to seek the Sun." + +"And found he what he sought?" cried Maiden Matanuska eagerly. + +"Alas!" the Gulls replied. "The truth is, he did not. For many evenings +when the day was done, we saw this prince sail westward. He hoped to +meet the sun just where the sky bends down to meet the sea, but though +he sailed for days and days, the place he sought seemed sailing too, +and so he reached it not." + +"That is sad news," the maiden sighed. "But when again you see my +prince, tell him that all my thoughts are his, and I am sure he cannot +fail." + +Another time she asked a Kite-bird had he seen Prince Kenai. + +"Oh, yes, dear maiden," the Kite-bird made reply. "And he was in the +Southland, whither he had gone to seek the Sun. But he was worn and +wearied with much wandering, and the road was long; and by the time he +reached there, the Sun had long departed on his journey to the +Eastland." + +"That is sad news, good Kite-bird," said the maiden, "but when you see +my prince again, pray tell him that my hopes are his, and I am sure he +cannot fail to win his quest." + +And still another time did Maiden Matanuska ask an Auk to tell her of +Prince Kenai. + +"I saw him," said the Auk, "and from the feather robe he wore I judged +him first to be some bird. In lands where scarlet poppies lull the weary +travelers to deep sleep, and waterfalls make thunder down the mountain +sides, Prince Kenai I saw toiling up a rocky slope where it is said the +Sun does rise." + +"And did he reach the top of this steep slope?" asked Maiden Matanuska. + +"Now that I could not say," the Auk replied, "for I was flying swiftly +and paused not at all. But this I know; the Sun's a mighty, glowing +being and is like to burn all those who venture near his presence. +Unless Prince Kenai have some magic charm, I doubt if the Sun will heed +him." + +"That is the saddest news of all," sighed Maiden Matanuska. "But even +so, I shall not weep but pray for him instead. When you next see my +prince, good Auk, tell him that all my love is his, and I'll await his +coming though he remain a thousand years." + +"I shall," replied the Auk, and soared away. + +And so the Maiden Matanuska waited while the time sped on. Wrapped in +her feather mantle, she wandered through the birches like a lonely +spirit, and the trees were grieved for her. She still dreamed dreams and +loved to think about the time when she would greet her prince; when the +light of day would banish all the gloom and shadows of the Northland +Kingdom. Still years passed on, and still Prince Kenai came not. King +Tamna feared him dead or that perhaps he had lost his way and was a +wanderer forlorn; but Maiden Matanuska knew no fears. + +"The journey to the Sun is long, my father," she would say, "and my +brave prince no magic hath to make it short. He will return and bring +with him this wondrous traveler whom he seeks, and what a pleasant place +the Northland Kingdom then will be!" + +But as the time went by there came great sadness in the Northland +Kingdom. The good King Tamna laid him down to sleep one night and never +waked again. All folk both high and low mourned deeply, for good King +Tamna had been like a kindly father rather than a king. When at last the +time of mourning passed, Lord Boreas, cousin to King Tamna, came to rule +the Northland Kingdom. + +Now Lord Boreas was a cruel sovereign, a tyrant, and the people were +unhappy under his rule. He made harsh laws, and if these laws were not +obeyed, he punished with severity. Lord Boreas, it was whispered, had +an evil power over the icy winds and rivers in the Northland Kingdom, +and few dared resist his will. His anger, it was said, had caused many a +village to be blown into the sea and noble cities to be flooded with a +rush of waters. But while the rule of this harsh king fell hard on all +alike, on Maiden Matanuska it fell hardest. Lord Boreas was her +guardian. He scorned the simple customs of the good King Tamna and +straightway ordered all things to his liking. He planned to fell the +Maiden Matanuska's forest and build a city in its place. + +"However, my sweet cousin," said Lord Boreas, "I'll wait until the next +mild season is at hand. Then when the silver foxes come from their +winter's sleep, my hunters shall lay traps for them and slay them every +one. Their skins will sell for gold, and for your marriage portion you +shall have a noble city and ten thousand chests of gold, and I myself +will marry you and make you queen." + +Though Maiden Matanuska's heart was sad, and she wept bitter tears for +her loved trees and pets, she made no protest at her cousin's words. +She feared his wrath, and so she bowed her head submissively. But when +the palace slept and all was still, wrapped in her feather mantle, she +stole softly out. Down through the shadowy lanes and misty isles among +the silver birches she sped, until she reached the border of the sea. +Then through the gloom she peered to see the sight of any sail; but no +sail she saw. + +"Oh, my beloved prince," she wept, "I fear that when you come 'twill be +too late. For rather than to wed my cruel cousin, I'll fling myself into +the sea and die!" + +"Now, Maiden Matanuska, what grave sorrow can this be?" a gruff voice +spoke beside her. It was old Reynard, chief of all the silver foxes. He +had stolen from the burrow to learn how went the season and to know when +he might waken all his sleeping tribe. + +"Oh, Reynard, my good friend!" exclaimed the maiden. "Since first you +did begin your winter's sleep, I have had many sorrows. My father, good +King Tamna, is no more, and now my cruel cousin Boreas rules the +Northland Kingdom." She told her tale of sorrows, and old Reynard +listened, all alert. + +"Without a doubt, your cruel cousin Boreas hath an evil power over the +winds and streams," said he, when she had finished, "but he shall learn +it is not simple to outwit the cunning fox. Now in the past, as you, +dear maiden, have protected me and all my tribe from harm, so will we +now protect you in your need. Come, follow me; do as I bid, and all will +yet be well." So saying, old Reynard then led the maiden down beneath +the earth to where the silver foxes still slept their winter's sleep, +and birch roots wound about in and out. + +"Now, Maiden Matanuska," said Reynard, "if you will place a feather from +your mantle at the root of every tree, they will be safe from cold and +icy blasts, in spite of all Lord Boreas in his wrath may do. Then when +that's done, wrap you all warmly in what's left of it and rest you +safely with my people. When Prince Kenai comes I'll waken you." + +The Maiden Matanuska did as Reynard bid, and far beneath the earth she +hid herself from cruel Boreas. 'Twas well she did, for when her cousin +found her fled, his anger knew no bounds. He sent great parties out to +search the land, and he himself, with flaming torch in hand, set out to +seek her in the forest. Among the birch trees he found traces, showing +that the Maiden Matanuska passed that way. Upon a branch he found a +scarlet ribbon she had worn, and in the thorn-bush was caught a silken +scarf; but though he sought for hours and called her name, Lord Boreas +could not find the maiden. + +"Because I do not know the winding paths among the trees as well as you, +you think to trick me, Maiden Matanuska," he cried at last, in fury, +"but you shall know my vengeance now." Then climbing up the steep slopes +of a near-by mountain, and summoning all his powers of evil, he +commanded thus: + +"Rise, rise, ye rivers that flow swiftly to the sea, until the birchen +forest in the valley be all flooded with a mighty rush of waters! Then +blow, ye chill winds, from the east and north until these waters to a +solid wall of ice are all transformed." + +The rivers, obedient at his command, then rose swiftly and overran their +banks so that soon the tallest trees were all submerged, and nothing +but a lake was seen. The winds began to blow their wildest, and the lake +became a solid bank of ice that threw off chilling mists. + +Then Boreas called the people of the Northland Kingdom and addressed +them thus: "Behold the fate of Maiden Matanuska and beware! For so shall +perish all who dare defy me." + +The people wept and mourned in secret for the maiden whom they dearly +loved, but there were none who dared cry out against the cruel Boreas. + + +III + +Meanwhile Prince Kenai, bent upon his quest, was wandering still in +lands afar. Each morning in the dawn he saw the wondrous traveler that +he sought rise in the eastern sky and scatter clouds of darkness; and +each evening, when the day was done, he saw the wondrous traveler set +far in the west and take with him the day. But though Prince Kenai +journeyed all around the earth and halfway back again, he found no road +to reach the Sun, and he was sad. Still he continued on his way with +hope and courage. + +It happened once, while he lay sleeping on a mountain, an eagle wounded +by a poison dart dropped down beside him. + +"Ah!" cried the eagle bitterly, "from the great cloak of feathers which +you wear, I thought you to be one of my own race. But since you are a +man and I am wounded and can fly no more, I must prepare to die. You'll +take my beak and claws to show your fellow men your skill at hunting and +stuff my body to adorn your walls. Alas! That I, a prince of air, should +come to this!" the great bird moaned. + +"Fear not that I shall take your life, good eagle prince," said Prince +Kenai. "For though I am not of your race, I am a prince of earth, and to +my mind all princes, whether of the earth or air, should be as +brothers." + +Prince Kenai fetched water from a near-by spring and dressed the eagle's +wound with healing herbs. For many days he did the same until the pain +grew less, and by and by the great bird's wound was healed. + +"Now, brother," said the eagle, when he could fly once more, "you've +served me nobly, and in my turn I shall serve you to prove my gratitude. +You told me of your quest to reach the Sun, and I will tell you this. +There is no road to reach the Sun that mortal man may tread. The way +lies through the clouds, and indeed, 'tis only I and all my brother +eagles that have strength to travel there. So get you on my back without +delay, good Prince Kenai, and we shall start." + +Straight upward soared the eagle through the clouds, and when the day +was nearly done they reached the splendid mansion of the Sun. Good luck +was theirs, because the wondrous traveler had returned from his day's +journey round the world and was well pleased to see them. He bade them +welcome and asked the reason of their visit. + +"Oh, Golden Sun," said Prince Kenai, "far in my land which is the +Northland Kingdom, I learned that you had power over night and brought +the light of day to lands wheresoever you did turn your face. Therefore +I set out to seek you and entreat you to return with me and shine upon +the Northland Kingdom, which is a land of night and darkness. All around +the world I've followed you in vain, and never would have met you had +not this good eagle borne me thither on his wings." + +"Prince Kenai does not tell the reason why," exclaimed the eagle. "He +saved my life when it was in his power to slay me, and, therefore, I +have brought him hither, as was his wish." The eagle told his tale, and +when the Sun had heard, he praised Prince Kenai. + +"Now see," the Sun declared, "the mighty power of a kindly deed. Had +you, Prince Kenai, slain this noble bird, as most men would have done, +he had not brought you to my mansion, and you could not have begged this +boon of me. For your reward, I'll go with you. To-morrow morning when I +rise, we'll start for this dark land, and thou, my eagle, bear Prince +Kenai on thy wings that he may all the faster lead the way." + +For many days these three companions journeyed on through soft white +clouds and summer skies until thick, gloomy mists came into view. The +wind blew chill as though from fields of ice and snow, and the dull +skies were leaden gray. From this, Prince Kenai knew the Northland +Kingdom was at hand, although a pall of darkness overhung the landscape, +and nothing could be seen. + + [Illustration: For many days these three companions journeyed + on through soft white clouds.--_Page 86._] + +"I'll soon change this!" exclaimed the Sun, and then began to shine full +on the Northland Kingdom. Straightway all the scene began to change as +though by magic. The lowering mists dissolved and rolled away in rosy +clouds or formed gay-colored rainbows in the skies; the skies themselves +changed to bright blue, all flecked with white instead of leaden gray. +The birds of passage wakened from their sleep and sang their sweetest +songs. Upon the mountain side the snow began to melt away, and +many-colored flowers bloomed where it had been. No bank of ice or snow, +however high or deep, was able to withstand the genial warmth of all the +beams the Sun poured down. The wall of ice that bound the birchen forest +broke and with a roar plunged down into the sea. Then upon the waves +were seen a thousand glittering banks of ice that seemed like noble +palaces afloat. The birch trees all began to bud and bloom with silvery +leaves that rustled softly; and green grass, thick with violets, went +creeping underfoot. + +On learning what had come to pass, old Reynard wakened Maiden Matanuska +and led her from the burrows until she stood once more upon the border +of the sea. + +"Oh, my beloved Prince Kenai!" she cried, as she beheld him. "Though in +your absence I have suffered many sorrows, now that you are returned, +I'll soon forget them all. How marvelous is the light of day! And how +divine the Sun!" + +"And tell me, maiden," said Prince Kenai, "now that you see all around +the light of day, dost love it still as well as in the old dark days +when you did dream of it?" + +"Indeed, I find the light which you bring more lovely than my wildest +dreams," she answered. "To see the smiling skies, the blue sea all +a-sparkle with great glittering banks of ice, the green grass thick with +flowers everywhere, and over all the Sun shine down in wealth of golden +beams--I knew not how to dream a dream so fair; and next to thee, my +prince, I love the light of day above all else." + +Here they heard shouts of cheer and praise, and soon great multitudes of +folk went running through the forest. "A miracle! A marvel 'tis," cried +they, "that Maiden Matanuska is alive!" And then, in deep amazement, +they listened to the tales the Maiden Matanuska and Prince Kenai told. +Such tales were rare, even in those olden days of wonders. When both +were done, the Chief Counselor of the Northland Kingdom spoke. + +"Now listen, all good folk," said he, "and learn that in this very hour +the cruel Boreas, fearing the great power of the Sun, has fled the +Northland Kingdom, and we are now without a king. Whom shall we choose?" + +"Prince Kenai! Prince Kenai!" cried the people. "'Twas he who gave our +Maiden Matanuska the magic robe that saved her life; and he it was who +brought the Sun to brighten our dark land. He was our benefactor; let +him be our king!" + +"Wilt be our king, Prince Kenai?" asked the counselor. + +"If Maiden Matanuska marry me and be your queen, I shall be king," said +Prince Kenai. "What say you, my loved one?" + +"I'll marry you, my prince," she answered, "for I do love you truly. Our +feather mantles which have so nobly served us in the past shall be our +wedding robes; the birds our royal choristers; the birches tall our +stately chapel walls, and the blue sky above all, glowing with the +Golden Sun, shall be our ceiling. Your good eagle and my good Reynard +shall stand beside us and let all folk both high and low be bidden to +our feast to wish us joy and happiness." + +All things were done as Maiden Matanuska ordered, and they were married +on that very day. A royal feast was made, and sports and games were set; +indeed there was a holiday that lasted forty days. The Sun was bidden to +attend, and so well pleased was he that he stayed in the sky above the +Northland Kingdom and set not once until the forty days had passed, and +all that time was burning daylight. + +Then, when the holiday was done at last, the Sun took leave. "Farewell, +all folk, and you good king and queen," said he. "And though night come +when I have turned my face from you, fear not. For in the morning I will +come again and bring with me the light of day." Which thing he did. + +And from that time the Northland Kingdom was no more a land of darkness +and of gloom. The overhanging mists returned no more, and when 't was +night, the Moon and Stars shone softly down. The Sun his face turned +toward there every day, and though his beams were pale and wan when he +was in the Southland, he stayed each summer forty days and nights and +set not once; which custom he continues to this very day. + +Prince Kenai and the Maiden Matanuska reigned many years and were +beloved by all their subjects. Though scores of years passed, by virtue +of their feather mantles they were always young and fair as on the day +they wore them first. Indeed, 'tis said they never died, though folk who +dwell still in the Northland Kingdom differ as to what became of them. +Some say that when Prince Kenai and Maiden Matanuska grew weary of this +life at last, they wrapped their feather mantles round them, and borne +upon the eagle's wings, set off to visit at the mansion of the Sun. But +other folk declare that on dark misty nights a pair resembling them are +often seen to wander through the dim aisles of a certain birchen forest +where the silver foxes are found. + + + + +CHAPTER III + +THE LITTLE TREE THAT NEVER GREW UP + + +Long, long ago, when the world was very young, so young that the flowers +and trees and grasses had voices and talked with each other, or sang +with the breezes that blew softly around them, there lived in the midst +of a forest a very little tree. + +Now, though the Little Tree was straight as an arrow and had glossy +green leaves, she was the most unhappy little tree in all the world. She +could not sing with the winds, and neither could she speak to the other +trees around her. These other trees often spoke to the Little Tree and +asked her questions. When she did not answer, they thought the Little +Tree stupid and sulky. These other trees that could sing and speak began +to grow tall, and after a time they grew so high their topmost branches +seemed to touch the sky. Then, even though the Little Tree had spoken, +they could never have heard her. These other trees grew tall as giants. +The Little Tree grew each year, it is true; but she grew so slightly +that it could scarcely be noticed. She was greatly ashamed of her small +stature. + +As the seasons went on, the branches of the tall trees grew so very +thick that they shut out the light down in the forest. Then the Little +Tree could not see the sun at all, and one by one the ferns and flowers +at her roots died from the dampness, and the Little Tree was all alone! +Nothing broke the silence of the dark, still forest save the calls of +the birds when they returned each year to build their nests, or the +sound of the branches swaying in the breeze. Then there came at last one +soft spring day when the Little Tree waked from her winter's sleep and +began to sing. She was so happy that she sang for hours; but alas! there +was no other tree to hear her or to answer her song. So the Little Tree, +though she now possessed the voice for which she had longed, was more +lonely than ever before. + +At night, when all the world was sleeping, and while the Night Wind +roamed the forest, the Little Tree would weep softly to herself because +she was so sad. Then, after a time, her lament grew to be a song, a very +sad song, it is true; but oh, so very beautiful! The Night Wind, who was +fond of singing, came to listen each evening for the Little Tree's +lament, and as he blew upon his way, he carried her song to the Stars. +Now it happened one night the Little Tree was so sad and lonely that she +could not sing; instead, she wept until her tiny branches shook with +sobbing. + +"Oh," mourned the Little Tree, "I am so lonely here! I wish I could die. +If only I might burn on some cottager's hearth or warm poor children's +hands; but alas, I am the most useless tree that grows!" + +The Night Wind heard the Little Tree sobbing, and going close, whispered +softly to her: + +"Oh, Little Tree, please do not be so sad. What does it matter that your +singing voice came after all the other trees had grown too tall to hear +you, or that you are such a very little tree? Your voice is so sweet and +lovely that the birds of this forest now model their choicest songs on +yours. Each night I carry your songs to the Stars, and they too have +sung your lovely music." + +"Oh, Night Wind, do you tell me true?" begged the Little Tree. "For I am +such a little tree, how can the Stars hear me?" + +"They hear you thus, my Little Tree," replied the Night Wind, and +brushed aside the branches of the tallest trees. + +Then looking up, the Little Tree beheld the Stars high up in the heavens +shining down on her. They seemed to smile and beckon as she watched, and +so she sang her sweetest songs to please them. The Night Wind and the +Stars themselves sang with the Little Tree, and made such lovely music +that had any one been listening, they would have thought they heard +sweet strains from paradise. But all this happened when the world was +very young, and there were but few people dwelling on it. + +"And now, my Little Tree," the Night Wind said, when he had dropped the +branches of the tall trees once again, "pray do not wish for some +woodman to cut you down. I would miss you sadly, if you were to go away +from the forest." + +Farther on in the forest, the Night Wind met the Spirits of the Woods. +They were two sister spirits robed in floating garments made of mists. +They roamed the forest and cared for all the trees. They knew how long +each tree would dwell in the forest and when the woodman's ax would fell +it. The Spirits of the Woods possessed a magic bag of dreams, and from +this bag the Night Wind begged a dream for the Little Tree. + +"Ah," he pleaded, "the Little Tree is so sad and lonely, the other trees +have grown so far away they cannot hear her sing, and neither can she +talk with them. She would dearly love a beautiful dream from this dream +bag of yours, Spirit." + +"Ah, Night Wind," replied the Spirit doubtfully, "there is but one dream +left, and that is the Little Tree's dream of the future. If we give it +to her, you must promise that you will not answer her questions +concerning it. For it is a strange dream and will puzzle her greatly. +Will you promise?" + +"I promise," said the Night Wind, and blew upon his way. + + [Illustration: From this bag the Night Wind begged a dream for the + Little Tree.--_Page 96._] + +And after that night, the Little Tree was not lonely or sad. She never +became a joyous tree--her youth had been too sorrowful for that--but she +was content. Each night, when all the forest filled with creeping +shadows, she sang her songs to the Stars, and she came to love the Night +Wind dearly. Each night the Little Tree dreamed the dream the Spirits of +the Woods had given her, and strange to tell, it was always the same +dream. It was such a pleasant, lovely dream that sometimes the Little +Tree was puzzled, and wondered whether she really lived in her beautiful +dream, and only dreamed that she lived in the forest. + +Each night the Little Tree dreamed she floated far away, until she +reached a palace which was set on a high hill. Within the palace was a +great hall richly hung with silken tapestries and gleaming softly with +light that shone from carved crystal bowls. Within this palace hall a +great king and his court were seated, and sweet strains of music floated +on the breeze. But the strangest thing of all was this: the Little Tree +often thought she heard her own songs in this palace hall. She was not +sure, but she was greatly puzzled. She knew that she had dwelled always +in the forest, and how could she know the music of noble lords and +ladies? Then one night in her dream the Little Tree was startled to hear +the sound of her own voice singing the songs she had so often sung to +the Stars. She pressed eagerly to the palace window to see within, but +because of her branches she could not go very near, and she could not +see. Then came the dawn, and her dream floated far away. + +All through the day, the Little Tree called again and again to the tall +trees and asked them of her curious dream; but, of course, they could +not hear her. She waited eagerly to see the daylight fade, and when the +Night Wind came, she questioned him: + +"Oh, Night Wind," cried the Little Tree, "will you tell me of my dream? +I am sure I heard my own voice singing; but how could it be that noble +lords and ladies within that palace hall would listen to me? For am I +not the least of little trees?" + +But the Night Wind did not tell her truly. He had given his promise that +he would not, and so he answered her, saying: + +"Now that I do not know, my dear, but though you are indeed the least of +little trees, you are the only Little Tree in all this world to me. Of +noble lords and ladies and their ways I know nothing, for do they not +shut me from their homes and hearths when I would enter and warm myself? +But now, Little Tree, it grows late; will you not sing for me?" + +Thus with the Night Wind and the Stars for company, the Little Tree +lived on for many years. From them she learned much wisdom and came to +know about the great world which lay beyond the forest, and that all +trees would one day go there. And all this time the world was growing +older, and the forest was not so silent as it had been in the time when +the Little Tree first dwelled there. Sometimes the woodcutter's ax rang +out, and the Little Tree would hear a great tree come crashing down to +earth. + +"Oh, why must I leave the freedom of the forest and be torn limb from +limb in some wretched mill!" cried one of the tall trees, as he fell +close by the Little Tree one day. + +"Ah," replied the Little Tree softly, "you would not wish to dwell +forever in this forest, would you? In the world there is much that a +great tree may do to bring happiness." + +"Who is it that speaks to me thus gently?" asked the Fallen Tree. "I do +not know the voice, although I thought I knew all trees growing in this +forest, for I was among the first trees to grow here." + +"And so was I," replied the Little Tree. "Do you not remember the Little +Tree that could neither speak nor sing? I am she. For though I am ages +and ages old, I am scarcely taller than yonder little fir of ten +seasons." + +"In those days we thought you stupid and sulky, Little Tree," replied +the Fallen Tree, "but by your speech I now can see that we were wrong. +Who has taught you all your wisdom, and have you not been lonely all +these years?" + +"Indeed, I was very lonely," said the Little Tree. "Even after I could +sing, it was no better. The flowers and ferns had died, and there was +none to hear me or talk to me. One night I wept and wished to die, and +the Night Wind, who is of a kind heart, cheered me with words of praise. +Since then I have never been sad, for I have had a lovely dream each +night, and I have sung to the Stars." + +But this the Fallen Tree could not believe, and so he answered sharply: + +"Now, Little Tree, how can that be? Tall as I was, and high as I stood +when I was monarch of this forest, never once could I send my songs to +the Stars, although I tried to do so many times. Now surely such a +little tree as you could not accomplish what a monarch failed to do! You +have learned wisdom without doubt, and you sing very sweetly, I daresay; +but take care lest your dreaming lead you in untruthful ways." + +"Oh, pray believe me!" cried the Little Tree. "Wait only until the +twilight comes, and the Night Wind himself will tell you so." + +"More foolish talk!" scoffed the Fallen Tree. "The Night Wind is but a +feeble creature to a monarch of the forest, such as I. When I stood +aloft in all my glory, the Night Wind could not bend the smallest twig +of mine unless I willed it so." + +"That is true, my friends," spoke a gentle voice beside them. It was the +voice of the Night Wind, for all unknown to them, darkness had fallen. +"Because you were so proud and held your branches firm against my gentle +breezes, never once did I carry your songs to the Stars; but I have done +so for the Little Tree." Then he brushed aside the branches of the tall +trees, and the Little Tree sang to her shining audience so far above in +heaven. She sang until the Fallen Tree slept, and then the Night Wind +gently dropped the branches until the forest was all dark once more. +Then he kissed the Little Tree farewell and blew upon his way. + +Now, as more people came to dwell upon the earth, more trees were needed +every year to shelter them. The forest was no longer dark and silent. +The woodman's ax rang out, and here and there the sun shone down where +groves of noble trees had once stood. But even so, the ferns and flowers +and grasses did not bloom again. The woodcutters made dusty roads and +trails, and heaps of dead leaves eddied in the breeze. At last one day a +certain king gave orders that all remaining trees of this forest should +be cut down. He planned to build a noble city where the forest stood. +Now charcoal fires flared all night, and herds of oxen tramped the whole +day through, and soon a dreary waste of withering branches whose brown +leaves crackled dismally was all that remained of the noble forest. + +"Ah, Little Tree," the Night Wind mourned, "there is no longer any need +for me. When the forest stood, it was my work and pleasure to brush the +fallen leaves and lull the trees to sleep. Indeed, were it not for you, +I would be desolate. Each night I tremble lest I shall not find you +awaiting me." + +"Ah, Night Wind," replied the Little Tree softly, "it is because you +love me that you fear to lose me; but do not be troubled. I have seen +great trees fall to my right and to my left, and small trees likewise, +yet no one seems to want me. I am such a little tree; I am sure that you +will find me here forever. That does not grieve me, even so, for I have +come to love you dearly, and it would break my heart to be parted from +you." + +Then one dull winter's day, the Little Tree felt a human hand laid on +her slender trunk, and she knew her fate had come. She was such a little +tree that it took but two blows to fell her. When the Night Wind came +again, he found the Little Tree moaning with the pain of her wounds. He +caressed her tenderly and begged her to say her pain was better. + +"Oh, Night Wind, the pain is truly better since you have come," +whispered the Little Tree bravely, and died in his arms. + +When the Night Wind knew the Little Tree was gone, he flung himself down +on the earth beside her, and wept and wailed so bitterly that the +Spirits of the Woods came from the ends of the world to see what +troubled him. + +"Ah," sighed the first Spirit. "How sad it is the Night Wind should be +parted from the Little Tree. Could we not make him a mortal, so that he +may meet her again in the world?" + +"Agreed," replied the second Spirit. So while the Night Wind slept, the +Spirits of the Woods changed him to a mortal and called him Robello. + +Thus it was that some time later a youth called Robello came to dwell on +the outskirts of the noble city which stood in place of the great +forest. Now this Robello did not till the soil, and neither did he herd +flocks on the hillsides. Instead, at evenings, he played his violin so +sweetly and so sadly that some folk could not tell his music from the +wailing of the winds. People from that region, as they passed his +cottage at nightfall, paused to listen to Robello's playing, and many a +one wiped a tear from his eye at the memories it stirred. Robello's fame +began to go abroad, and wise men learned in the arts of song declared +that if Robello but possessed a fine violin, the world could hear no +better music. + +Now, at this time it happened that the king (the same who had ordered +the great forest cut down) received the gift of a rare violin. The maker +of this violin vowed that its like was not to be found the whole world +over, for when 'twas touched with the bow, it sent forth a sobbing sound +like the cry of a broken heart. The maker of this rare violin besought +the king and begged that no mere fiddler be allowed to touch it, and +that a music master should play it always. The king agreed and +accordingly commanded that all who played the violin should appear at +the palace. Robello went in company of a thousand other players. + +The palace of the king was set on a high hill, and as Robello entered, +he seemed dimly to remember it, although he knew well that he had never +been within its gates before. The king and court sat waiting within a +great hall richly hung with silken tapestries and gleaming with lights +that shone softly through carved crystal bowls. The violin players were +gathered together, and to Robello fell the lot of playing first. + +The king himself placed the violin in Robello's arms, and slowly, as +though in a dream, Robello drew the bow across the strings. With the +first notes wakened memories that had long been slumbering. Then as he +played, Robello felt the great hall grow dim, until at last it seemed to +fade away, and he saw naught but a vision: the deep dark forest just at +dusk, and he was once more the Night Wind caressing the Little Tree. + +"Ah, my Little Tree," he whispered, as he bent lovingly above the +violin. "This is the dream that you did love so dearly. Do you remember +me?" + +"Ah, Night Wind," sang the Little Tree, "although they call thee by +another name, to me thou wilt be the Night Wind forever. He who +fashioned me thus spoke truly when he said I sobbed like a broken heart, +for my heart has been broken with longing for thee. Let us sing the +songs we sang to the Stars so long ago." + +Then Robello played as he had never played before, and the violin sang +as never violin had sung before. When the last notes died away, there +were tears in the eyes of the noble lords and ladies, and the king sat +silent for a time. At last he spoke, and ordered that all other players +be sent away, and declared that none save Robello should ever touch this +rare violin. + +So Robello remained in the palace of the king and was made chief +musician to his majesty, and never had the Little Tree sung so sweetly +in the forest as she sang now at Robello's magic touch. Robello played +at all court festivals, and nothing had such power to soothe the king as +had Robello's music when he played his violin at nightfall. + +Then came a sad day when his servants went to waken him and found +Robello dead, his beloved violin clasped closely in his arms. The king +and all his court mourned the passing of Robello for many days. Then one +evening, just at dusk, they buried him with his beloved violin still +clasped closely in his arms, and strewed his grave with boughs of trees. +And in that region, to this day, there are some folk who say that when +night falls Robello can still be heard playing his violin within the +palace hall; but others say this is not right; it is the Night Wind +calling softly to the Little Tree that never grew up. + + + + +CHAPTER IV + +THE TALE OF PUNCHINELLO + + +There lived once long ago, in days of jesters and court fools and +harlequins, a certain clown called Punchinello. This Punchinello, like +all others of his trade, whitened his face and painted it in grotesque +fashion. He wore gay satin robes of many colors all hung with silver +bells that jingled when he danced, and pom-pom slippers turned up at the +toes. This Punchinello was a clown of clowns, and his droll dances and +his merry tricks and songs had made thousands laugh. + +Punchinello traveled around the world in company with a circus. Whenever +this circus reached a city, it formed a great parade before it entered. +Then would the people throng the streets and highways, eager for the +show. They clapped their hands when lions roaring in their cages and +elephants led by their keepers passed along; but when this famous +Punchinello, prancing and twirling, came in view, the crowds cheered +wildly with applause. + +"Oh, welcome! Welcome, Punchinello!" they would shout. + +The ladies threw him flowers and children blew him kisses. Kings and +queens had often hailed him thus, for Punchinello pleased all folk. +Those who were sad and those who sorrowed often sent for Punchinello +when the circus show was done, and he would dance and sing to cheer +them. But for this service he would take no gold or present. So though +he grew to fame, this Punchinello grew not rich. + +"It is enough that I can make sad faces glad," said Punchinello, and +wrapping his great cloak about him, he would steal away, leaving +happiness behind him. + +"My store of wealth lies in the golden smiles my antics bring," he often +said, "and when my merry songs and dances please the world no more, I +shall be poor indeed." But with his light, fantastic dancing, and his +songs and jests, with his twirlings and his leapings,--was it likely +that the world would ever cease to smile on Punchinello? The world is +always fond of fun and laughter. + +"Punchinello is the greatest man in all the world," some folk said when +they had seen him dance and heard him sing. + +"That is not right," said others. "He would be emperor if that were +true; but Punchinello is the greatest man in all the circus." + +"But neither is that right," still others said. "For if he were, he +would be owner of the circus. But Punchinello is the greatest clown in +all the world." And on this all folk agreed. + +Now on its way about the world, the circus chanced to journey to a city +where a king and queen held court. These royal folk and all their court +watched the gay procession from their balconies and were delighted. The +king and queen sent heralds, saying on a certain night that they would +grace the show and to be sure that Master Punchinello played before the +royal box. Then as the pageant wound upon its way, with banners flying +and with music of the fife and drum, they passed a building where the +sick were tended. It was a hospital. No eager faces gave them welcome +here, and lest they should disturb the sick, the fife and drum ceased +playing. Punchinello fell to walking soberly along. Suddenly he chanced +to spy a tiny, wistful face pressed to the window pane. Then Punchinello +bounded lightly up the ladder, and leaping into the room, began to dance +and twirl about to please this little child. + +"And does my dancing please you, little one?" asked Punchinello when he +paused. + +"Oh, yes, sir!" cried the child. His name was Beppo. "Please dance again +for me. It makes my pain grow better." + +"Alas! I cannot, little one," said Punchinello, pointing to the circus +that was passing. "I must make haste to join my friends again." + +"Then would you come to-night when it is dark and dance for me?" begged +little Beppo. "The pain is always worse when it is dark, you know." + +"Indeed, I'll come, my little one," said kindly Punchinello, and his +gayly painted face grew sad. "Just leave your window open, little one, +and I'll steal in and dance for you and sing you to the land of happy +dreams." + +And that night, when the circus show was done and all the lights were +out, while other tired players slept, this kindly Punchinello wrapped +his cloak about him and stole out underneath the stars to visit little +Beppo. The little lame child was delighted with his songs and dances, so +kindly Punchinello vowed that he would come each night and do the same, +while the circus remained in the city. Each night the child lay waiting +for him eagerly, and how he hugged and kissed this Punchinello when at +last he came! + +"Last night I dreamed of running through the woods," cried little Beppo +to him one night. "I saw tall trees that seemed to touch the sky and +heard the birds sing in their nests. I never had a dream like this +before, and your sweet songs did give it to me, Punchinello. Come, dance +and sing for me." + +Then Punchinello danced his best. His slippered feet like lightning +flew; the bells upon his robes rang out, and he would twirl upon his +toes until his many-colored baggy robes stood out and he seemed like a +brilliant human top. He jumped, he twirled, he leaped high in the air +and bowed before the little cot as though it were a royal throne. When +he at last grew weary, he would stop, but then the child would beg for +more. + +"Oh, please, dear Punchinello," he would say, "just once again. It makes +my pain grow less to see you whirl." Then Punchinello could not refuse, +and he would whirl and twirl again until he was too weary to do more. +Folding little Beppo in his arms, he sang him lullabies until the child +fell fast asleep. And so the nights went on. + +The nurses noticed that little Beppo's cheeks grew plump and that his +eyes grew bright. He said his pain was better, and they thought it was +the medicine. They knew nothing of this Punchinello. He entered each +night through the window and departed the same way. The circus folk said +Punchinello was not well and told him he must rest. + +"Our show would be as nothing if it were not for you, Punchinello," they +declared. "To-morrow the king and queen will come to see us play, so +rest you well to-night that you may dance your gayest for them." Though +Punchinello promised, late that night, when all the world lay sleeping, +he stole away to dance for little Beppo. + +"Oh, Punchinello!" cried the little lame child. "I'll tell you of my +dream. I dreamed I wore a spotted satin robe like yours and pom-pom +slippers turned up at the toes. I dreamed I danced and twirled as +lightly as you do yourself. Now is that not a pleasant dream for one who +cannot even walk?" + +"It is, my little one," said Punchinello. "Come sit upon my knee and +wind your arms about my neck. Now tell me, has your pain been less +to-day?" + +"Much less, much less, good Punchinello," said the child. "Indeed, I +think your dances and your songs have charmed it all away. I think about +my lovely dreams by day, and lie and wait for you by night, and have no +time for pain, it seems. Come dance for me, my Punchinello." + +"To-night I'll sing instead, my little Beppo," answered Punchinello. He +was weary, and when he whirled his head grew dizzy. "I'll sing you a +song of ships that sail through seas of clouds; and trees as sing the +world to slow sleep when winds do blow." + +But little Beppo wished to see him dance. "See, Punchinello," said he +softly, "around your neck I tie my locket. It is my only treasure. They +say my mother placed it on me when she died. It has a bluebird painted +on it which is the only bird I've ever seen. Now wilt thou dance for me, +dear Punchinello?" He kissed the clown's queer painted face, and +Punchinello danced. + +And never had he danced so well before. As though he heard afar the +music that the fairies make at midnight, he waltzed and twirled faster +and yet faster, pausing not at all. He pranced, he leaped and spun upon +his toe as though he were a dancing doll wound up to dance so long. The +little lame child watched him eagerly, and as he watched, as though he +too heard magic strains from fairyland, he sprung up from his cot and +straightway danced and whirled about in Punchinello's footsteps. + +"Look, look, dear Punchinello!" little Beppo cried. "I am no longer lame +but dance as well as you yourself." + + [Illustration: "Look, look, dear Punchinello!" little Beppo cried. + "I am no longer lame."--_Page 116._] + +But Punchinello, whirling like a leaf, made no reply. He sang his gayest +songs and leaped so lightly in the air, there seemed to be a thousand +harlequins, and little Beppo followed lightly after. Suddenly the child +stopped, for Punchinello was no longer dancing. + +"Oh, my good Punchinello!" he exclaimed. "Why did you run away? I'll +follow after you," and down the ladder he swiftly sped. He saw the white +tents shining in the moonlight. "Indeed, I'll join the circus with my +Punchinello," said he to himself, "and travel around the world with +him." + +But alas! Poor Punchinello had not stolen off, as little Beppo thought. +For while in his wild dance that charmed the lame child's pain away, +poor Punchinello felt himself grow ill. His head grew giddy, and at last +he fell upon the floor, and there the nurses found him in the morning. +They placed poor Punchinello on the bed where little Beppo had lain for +so many years, and wondered whence the clown had come. + +And so it was the king and queen who went next day to see the show were +displeased because the famous Punchinello was not there to dance and +jest for them. No other clowns or harlequins would please their royal +majesties, and so they left in anger. They bade the circus owner strip +his tents and in that very hour depart, and when another morning came, +our little Beppo found himself in a strange city with the circus folk. +At first these circus folk were puzzled what to do with him, but as the +child could dance and cut droll capers, they made for him a spotted +satin suit and gave him pom-pom slippers turned up at the toes. They +would have called him Little Punchinello, but this the child would not +allow. + +"Good Punchinello was my friend," said little Beppo. "And 'twas from him +I learned to dance before I ever walked. I will not take his name, but I +will seek him everywhere until I find him." + +Some circus folk thought Punchinello had run off to join a show of +traveling jugglers, and others thought perhaps he had grown tired of +dancing and grimacing. Then by and by they ceased to talk of him, and +all forgot him, save little Beppo. + +Meanwhile poor Punchinello lay in a raging fever. The nurses thought +that he would die, for he was very ill. But after a long time the fever +left him, and then they knew he would grow better. He asked one day for +little Beppo, but they could tell him nothing of the child. + +"We came to waken him one morning, but the child was gone and you were +lying ill," said they. "We could not see how this could be, for little +Beppo was too lame to walk; but though we searched the city, he could +not be found." + +Another day poor Punchinello asked about the circus, and again the +nurses shook their heads. + +"The circus folk have gone long since," said they. "The king was angry +with them and bade them go in haste, 'tis said. We cannot say which way +they went." + +When Punchinello was all well at last; he rose and donned his +many-colored robes that jingled when he walked. He had grown thin and +pale, and they became him poorly, but he had not money to buy others. He +wrapped his great cloak all about him and started out to earn his bread. +Poor Punchinello was too weak to dance; he could not plow or dig; he +had not been so trained. And so at last this famous Punchinello stood +upon the highways and sang for pennies that good-natured people threw to +him. + +"I am the famous Punchinello," he would sometimes say. "Have you not +heard of famous Punchinello of the circus?" + +But those who heard him laughed in scorn. "If you be famous Punchinello +of the circus," they would say, "why sing you then for coppers like a +beggar, and where is the circus? You are not Punchinello, but a fraud." + +Thus poor and friendless, Punchinello started out to seek the circus. +His wanderings led him into many lands, and often he met folk who told +him that the circus had passed there. But Punchinello, journeying afoot, +could never travel fast enough to overtake the circus. His pom-pom +slippers soon were torn by stones along the highway, and he went +barefoot. His satin robe of many colors faded and grew worn. Punchinello +patched here with yarn and there with bits of leather cloth or sacking, +until the colors had all fled, and it was naught but rags sewn all +together. Poor Punchinello danced no more, for ragged robes and dancing +do not fit; but even so, his voice was sweet and clear as ever. + +"So I am not yet poor, despite my rags," he would say bravely to +himself. "For yesterday I caught a golden smile from one who flung a +copper; and who knows? Perhaps to-day I may again be favored." + +Then one day in his wanderings Punchinello awakened to the music of the +fife and drum. He saw gay banners flying and hurried to the highway with +the crowds. It was the circus he had sought so long, and as he saw his +old friends marching by, poor Punchinello's eyes filled with tears of +joy. The lion tamers with their roaring beasts strode by, the elephants +in scarlet blankets decked, the jugglers next, and then a little dancing +clown who stepped and pranced in drollest fashion. + +"Oh, welcome, Beppo! Welcome!" cried the crowds, and Punchinello saw it +was the lame child he had known. + +He darted from the crowd and cried, "Oh, little Beppo, dost remember me? +I am good Punchinello." + +But here the circus folk protested. "Be off! Be off! You bunch of +rags!" cried they. "Our Punchinello was no beggar, and you are not he." + +"I swear I am!" cried Punchinello. "Do you not know me, little Beppo?" + +"When I was ill and could not walk," the child replied, "a clown called +Punchinello cured me of my lameness by his merry songs and ways; but his +face I know not. He came always in the night. When he danced, he danced +so swiftly that a million harlequins there seemed to be about me: and +when he held me in his arms, I hid my head against his shoulder, because +I loved him dearly." + +"Do you remember this, then, little one?" asked poor Punchinello, and +showed the bluebird locket, "the only treasure you did own, and which +you gave to me?" + +"I do, and you are my good Punchinello!" little Beppo cried, and flung +his arms about him. He kissed the shabby creature and wrapped him in his +own fine scarlet cloak to hide the rags. "How I have sought the world +for you, dear Punchinello, to tell you of my gratitude; but I could +never find you." + +The circus folk went running and crowded round the pair. "Oh, welcome! +Welcome, Punchinello!" they exclaimed and shook his hand. "A thousand +welcomes. We have missed you sadly and now you will be our clown again." + +"But little Beppo is your clown. What of him?" asked Punchinello. + +"Oh, we shall both be clowns!" declared the child, "like father and like +son. Together we shall dance those dances that you taught me and sing +those songs with which you charmed the world." + +And so this Punchinello found himself once more in satin robes of many +colors, all jingling merrily with bells, and pom-pom slippers turned up +at the toes. His face he whitened and then painted it in grotesque +fashion, and with his little Beppo he danced that night and made his +old-time capers and grimaces. + +"Well done! Well done! Good Punchinello!" cried the people. "We have +missed you sorely, but enjoy you all the more for missing you." They +laughed and cheered him wildly until the show was done. + +"And now," said Punchinello, as he laid him down to rest that night, "I +am the richest man in all the world. A thousand golden smiles were mine +to-night, and better still I have the love and gratitude of little Beppo +whom I dearly love. What more than that could Punchinello ask? And so +good night!" + + + + +CHAPTER V + +THE STRANGE TALE OF BROWN BEAR + + +Long, long ago, in the very far north, there lived a mammoth Brown Bear. +Never in all the world was seen such a gigantic creature. Brown Bear was +so tall his eyes looked over tops of trees, and his footprints were so +deep that a grown man could stand full height in them. They were great +pits. + +Now Brown Bear owned a gold mine so rich that the king envied it. Also +Brown Bear loved gold exceedingly, but as he had no hands he could not +dig for it. Therefore he lay in wait for travelers journeying through +the forest, and seizing them, he would carry them off to be his slaves +and dig his gold. All folk suffered from this cruel custom,--the rich +and poor, the high and low, the young and old. The king of that land +offered rich rewards to the hunter who would slay this monster or to +the trapper who would snare him. But no arrow was made strong enough to +pierce the hide of Brown Bear and no trap could hold him. So he +continued to carry off all captured folk to his gold mine underneath the +mountain side. 'Twas said that Brown Bear had as many slaves as there +were subjects left in the kingdom. 'Twas also said, the walls of Brown +Bear's cave were lined so thick with gold that they outshone the sun. + +It happened one evening that a poor peasant returning to his hut missed +his little child. His wife had lately died, and there was no one at home +to tend the little one. He asked the neighbors of the child and learned +that it had last been seen running toward the forest. In deep anxiety, +the peasant hurried to the forest, but though he searched all night and +called, he could not find his little one. When morning came at last and +it was light, he saw the child's bright scarlet cloak beneath a tree and +not far off the mighty footprints of Brown Bear. + +"Alas!" the peasant wept, "my little one is carried off by this great +monster. I do not wish to live!" He seized the little scarlet cloak, +and weeping and lamenting pressed it to his heart. Then when he could +weep no more, he rose and began to follow in the path of Brown Bear's +footprints. + +"I'll seek this Brown Bear in his cave," thought he, "and if he make a +slave of me, I shall at least be with my little one, and if he kill me, +I care not." + +For many hours then the peasant toiled through brush and bramble, and +when night came, from weariness he stumbled and fell headlong into one +of the mighty footprints of Brown Bear. He broke no bones, but for a +long time he knew nothing. When he awoke at last, he found beside him a +tiny baby bear that wept and shivered with the cold. + +"You, little one, are not yet wicked," said the peasant; "and though +your race has done me injury, still if I warm and comfort you, so may +some good soul warm and comfort my own little one whom I have lost." + +He wrapped the baby bear all in the scarlet cloak and fed it bread. Then +when it slept he took it in his arms and climbed out of the pit and set +upon his way once more. He had not gone far when he reached a cave all +lined with gold, and this he knew to be the home of Brown Bear. Caring +nothing for his life, the peasant boldly entered. When he was within, he +saw the wife of Brown Bear weeping bitterly. + +"Why come you here, O Peasant?" cried the wife of Brown Bear. "Do you +not know that my husband makes slaves of all men? Hasten away before he +returns lest he do you greater harm than even that." + +"I care not if Brown Bear make a slave of me," the peasant answered. +"Where is thy husband now, and why do you weep?" + +"My husband, Brown Bear, is out seeking in the forest to find our little +one, who wandered off and who, alas, I fear is dead. Therefore I do +weep," she answered sobbingly, "and lest you know it not, O Peasant, let +me tell you this; the loss of children is the greatest grief that ever +parents suffer." + +"Indeed! I know too well what grief is that!" the peasant cried, and +bursting into tears, he told the tale of his own woes. Now as he told, +the wife of Brown Bear fixed her great eyes on the bundle wrapped in +scarlet that he carried. + +"What have you there, O Peasant?" she asked eagerly. + +"A tiny baby bear I found when I fell headlong into one of Brown Bear's +footprints," he replied. "The little one did weep from cold and hunger, +and so I fed and warmed him. And as I could not find it in my heart to +let him die, I took him from the pit with me." + +"It is my little one! It is my little one!" the wife of Brown Bear +cried. She seized the baby bear and hugged and fondled it with joy. "But +for your kind heart, Peasant, he must have died down in the pit; so wait +you till my husband comes for your reward." + +She raised her great voice in a mighty roar, and presently Brown Bear +came crashing through the trees. He seized the baby bear and hugged it +as his wife had done, and when he heard the story thanked the peasant +warmly. + +"Now for this service you have rendered me, I'll give you all my gold, O +Peasant," cried Brown Bear. "For though I do love gold beyond compare, I +love my little one far more." + +"And just as dearly do I love my little one whom you did steal, O Brown +Bear," the peasant cried. "And likewise do all parents love their +little ones. Therefore if you will free all those you hold as slaves, +ten thousand homes will be made happy as this home of yours to-night. I +ask this boon, and you may keep your gold which you do love so dearly." + +But Brown Bear would not have it so. "You shall have what you ask and +all my gold beside," said he. "For while I mourned because my little one +was lost, my gold brought me no gladness, but instead did mock me with +its brightness." So saying, he flung open wide the door that led beneath +the mountain side and bade his slaves go free. With shouts of joy these +folk ran to their homes, and all the forest rang with their rejoicing. +The peasant found his little one and held him to his heart. + +"My little one! My little one!" he cried. "I wish no more reward than +this, O Brown Bear." + +"But you shall have more, even so," said Brown Bear, and gave to him the +key of the gold mine. "Now you are richer than the king himself, and +indeed, 'tis right that you should be. For what his thousand hunters +with their poisoned barbs and cruel traps could never do, with your +kind heart you have accomplished, Peasant. Go tell the king and all his +subjects that they need fear me nevermore. Through mine own grief I know +the sorrows I have caused, and from henceforth I'll live in peace with +man." + +The peasant thanked him and with his little one departed for his home, +and there a multitude of grateful folk were gathered to greet him. And +from that day the peasant was no longer poor. As owner of the rich gold +mine, he now became a man of wealth. The king respected him and made him +noble because he had done noble service for the kingdom. His title was +Duke Kindlyheart. + +In closing this strange tale, I too must say that Brown Bear kept his +word and nevermore molested travelers journeying through the forest. +Indeed, he grew so friendly with the king and court that he fought all +their wars for them and brought them many victories. When Brown Bear +died at last, as creatures all must do, the people wept for him, and all +the kingdom put on mourning. + + + + +CHAPTER VI + +THE BEGGAR PRINCESS + + +Once upon a time there lived a king who had great wealth and also many +daughters, among whom he divided his kingdom before he died. That is, he +gave lands and estates to all but his fourth daughter, the Princess +Yvonne, who from her lack of fortune was forced to seek her living in +the world. Having not a copper piece for her pocket and no gold save the +gold of her hair, which, though it was very beautiful, nevertheless +would not feed or clothe her, she was forced to beg her bread from door +to door and became known as Yvonne, the Beggar Princess. And the reason +of it all was this. + +The king, being very wise, wished his daughters to wed none but princes +from the most powerful thrones in the world. As soon as each daughter +reached the age to marry, the king invited to his court the suitors for +her hand. The first and second daughters married the princes of their +father's choice and went off to their palaces rejoicing, and so likewise +did the third daughter. Because of their obedience, the king was pleased +and gave them land and great riches for their marriage portions. He then +turned his attention to find a husband for his fourth daughter, the +Princess Yvonne, the fairest and most charming of them all. + +Now all unknown to her father, Yvonne, loved Prince Godfrey of the +Westland Kingdom. They had often met in the forest, and there they had +vowed their love to one another. Prince Godfrey had wished to ask for +the hand of Yvonne, but she, knowing her father's iron will, begged him +to delay. + +"My father is a stern king and rules his daughters in all things," said +the princess. "He would part us forever should it come to him that we +had dared to do aught without his consent. Return, I pray you, to your +kingdom and there await my father's summons, for I have heard him say +that you would be bidden to his court as suitor for my hand." + +Prince Godfrey, much against his will, consented to do as Yvonne asked. +He kissed her farewell and departed that very evening for the Westland +Kingdom. What befell him on the homeward journey, Princess Yvonne never +knew, but she saw him no more. She carried his image in her heart and +could love no other prince, though her father sent far and near for +suitors to please her. Knowing nothing of her love for Prince Godfrey, +at last the king placed her refusals to a stubborn spirit. + +"My daughter, Yvonne," said he, after she had refused five princes in as +many days, "how do you know whom you love or whom you love not? You, my +fourth daughter, cannot pretend to know as much as I, your father. Where +have you been to learn of this nonsense that you call love?" + +To which the princess made reply: "That I cannot tell, my father, except +that my heart bids me marry only the prince whom I shall love well, and +of these princes you have brought hither I love none at all. I pray you +now, turn your attention to the affairs of my younger sisters, who are +anxious to wed, and leave me for a little longer in peace." She was so +gentle in her speech and so winning in her manner that the king forgot +his vexation and busied himself with seeking suitors for his younger +daughters. + +They married according to his wishes and pleased him exceedingly. With +each marriage, the king gave portions of his kingdom, until at length +there remained but two estates, and of his nine daughters there were but +two unmarried. Again he sent for the Princess Yvonne, and this time he +spoke sharply to her. + +"Now, Yvonne, my fourth daughter, I have listened to your entreaties and +given you your will in all things, and still you are not wed. I cannot +compel you to marry if you do not wish to please me; but this I tell +you. To-morrow there comes to this castle a prince who has both gold and +lands, and who moreover is handsome and possessed of a sweet temper. If +you wed not him, I will give the remainder of my kingdom to your +youngest sister. Then you will be left portionless, and what disgrace +that will be! A princess without a fortune is a sad creature, and I +advise you to try my patience no longer." + +Yvonne listened with tears in her eyes. She dearly loved her father and +wished to please him, but her heart still treasured the image of the +absent Godfrey. + +The following day, at her father's commands, she dressed herself in her +finest robes and bound her hair with the royal jewels. Thus attired, she +went forth to the throne room to greet the suitor who awaited her. The +king was well pleased with her appearance and smiled encouragement to +her, but alas for his hopes! The Princess Yvonne burst into tears before +the court, thereby offending the suitor and bringing down her father's +wrath. He bade the weeping Yvonne withdraw and commanded his youngest +daughter to appear in her place. So agreeable was this youngest daughter +that the prince forgot his anger and fell in love with her before a +single day had passed. They were married with great splendor and the +king, as he had declared, gave them the remainder of his kingdom as a +wedding gift. + +Thus it was that the Princess Yvonne went forth from her father's castle +without his blessing, without a fortune, without even a copper piece +for her pocket, and without riches of any sort save the bright yellow +gold of her hair. She had been raised in a castle and therefore knew not +how to spin or to weave or even to embroider, which three occupations +were considered suitable for young serving women in that day, so she was +forced to beg her bread from door to door; hence her title, Yvonne, the +Beggar Princess. + +She left her father's kingdom and by and by found service at a farm. The +people were very poor, and she did the work of three, but they treated +her kindly, and Yvonne worked cheerfully. Early in the morning she drew +water from the well, and many a ewer she had carried to the kitchen +before the sun rose. She served the table for the plowmen and took her +own meal in the pantry while she tidied up after they had gone to the +fields. All day long she baked and brewed, or scoured pots and pans +until they shone like silver. In spite of her changed fortunes, the +princess remained as sweet-tempered as in the days when she lived in her +father's castle and had naught to vex her from morning until night. If +the butter would not churn, she would sing instead of scolding as the +other maids did, and presently the butter would come, and such butter as +it was too! When the loaves burned, she did not cry out against the +Brownies, who were said to play tricks with the oven, but received the +scolding from her mistress with humility. At night, no matter how weary +she might be from her long day, the princess went willingly to fetch the +cattle, for the walk through the fields and forest cheered her. + +It was in the forest she had first met Godfrey, and it was in the forest +he had vowed to love her always. So as she sang her shepherd's song and +called softly to the straying herds, she was with her absent prince in +memory. + +"He will come for me by and by," she would whisper to herself sometimes, +when she waked suddenly from a dream in which Godfrey had seemed very +near. Other times she would be frightened lest perhaps he might some day +pass her on the highway. "In my peasant's dress, there is but little to +remind him of the princess whom he bade farewell in my father's hunting +forest," she would say. She had no mirror and quite forgot her lovely +face and her golden hair, which a queen might well have envied. + +One evening in autumn, when the night falls early and the darkness +creeps on swiftly, the princess wandered through the forest in search of +the cattle. She was tired, but as she walked among the trees she grew +rested, and presently she began to sing. In the open spaces she called +softly, but no creatures came to follow her. The wind sighed through the +pines, and once she started, thinking she heard some one call her name. +She stood quite still and listened, but the wind died away and the +forest was silent. She wandered farther, and the trees grew more dense. +There was no moon to guide her, and after a time, the princess perceived +she had lost her way. + +"For myself, it does not matter," said she, "I can find shelter in the +hollow of some tree and there be very comfortable until morning." Never +before had the cattle strayed so far but that at the sound of her voice +they would come slowly down the paths and crashing through the brush. +They followed her like pets. She resolved to call them once more and +began to sing: + + "Oh, tell me, shepherds, have you ever heard, + A wee white lamb that cries at eve--" + +but she broke off her song and caught her breath sharply. An old mill +stood before her in the spot where a great oak had spread its branches +when she began her song! The mill sails turned and creaked in the forest +breeze, but there was not a sound of life about the place. There were no +doors, and though the princess walked all around the walls, she found no +opening save a sort of window heavily barred and crossbarred. On the top +of the walls glistened jagged lumps of glass. + +"It looks more like a prison than a mill," thought she, and then as she +peered into the opening, a voice from the dungeon beneath began to sing. +Yvonne's heart leaped for joy; it was the voice of Godfrey, her beloved! + + "Yvonne, Yvonne, my heart has ached with longing + Since I bade you farewell in the forest. + Each night my spirit has stolen forth + To kiss you in your dreams + Lest you forget me, because I came not. + A cruel king has stolen my throne and enslaved my land, + And until he is driven from it, + I must remain in this dungeon, bound by his evil spell. + Oh, Yvonne, fly to your father, + Beg him send an army to help my people, + For they suffer greatly and I am powerless. + But before all, Yvonne, unbind your golden hair + That its brightness may shine within these prison walls, + And sing to me that your heart is still mine." + +The princess unbound her hair, and in the forest about the mill all +became bright as day. Then through her tears she sang of her life, for +she was deeply grieved to find Godfrey in such a plight. + +"To think that I who love you should be the cause of all your woes!" +cried Godfrey, when he had heard her story. "Return to your father, +Yvonne. Tell him that you will wed whom he wishes and forget me, for I +have brought you naught but tears and sorrows." + +"Ah, my beloved," replied the princess, "though I cannot see you and you +be but a voice, you are the voice of one who loves me, and that to me is +dearer than all the world. I cannot return to my father, for now he is +dead, and my sisters have cast me off because I was portionless; but I +myself shall seek this cruel king and beg him to set you free." + +"Seek this cruel King Ironheart!" exclaimed Godfrey in dismay. "Surely, +Yvonne, you know not what you say, for never in all the world before was +known such a tyrant! Men he casts into prison, nor does he ever release +them, but condemns them to dig beneath the earth that he may fill his +treasury with gold; women must toil all day in the fields and for a few +coppers; while their children die of hunger, this King Ironheart has +granaries filled full of good grains. King Ironheart has vast armies, +each soldier of which is as cruel as his master, and were you to go to +the Westland Kingdom, these same soldiers would seek you out and enslave +you with the rest of my people. You must not go, Yvonne; as you love me, +promise me that you will not." + +"The more you tell me of the sorrows of the Westland Kingdom, the more I +am resolved to seek this cruel Ironheart. If I fail, I fail, but what is +my life to me unless you be set free, Godfrey?" + +"But, Yvonne," pleaded Godfrey from his dungeon, "think of my suffering, +should you do this for my sake. What powerful weapon have you to use +against this wicked Ironheart?" + +"None but courage and a good heart," replied the princess. "In the past +they have worked miracles, and so may they work miracles now. Deny me no +more, Godfrey, but tell me the way to your kingdom, that I may all the +sooner return to free you, for I will not fail." + +No words could move her, and at last Godfrey gave her her will. + +"Dress your feet in the slippers of bark which you will find beneath a +pine tree close to the mill. They will serve you for your travels until +you return again to this forest," said he. "Then watch closely in the +east, and when the sun rises, start at once to follow him as he journeys +across the sky, neither stopping nor staying, and at sunset you will +find yourself on the borders of the Westland Kingdom. Should you grow +weary or should your courage fail you, Yvonne, sing, and my spirit will +fly to cheer you." + +So with the coming of the dawn, Yvonne bound her golden hair and dressed +her feet in the slippers of bark. She looked toward the east for the +first beam of the sun, and when she turned once more to the mill it had +disappeared. In its place stood a great oak with green grass smooth as a +carpet growing beneath it. But Yvonne had no time to marvel at this new +wonder, for the sun rose from the clouds and straightway began its +journey above the world. All day long Yvonne followed after, now wading +shallow mountain brooks, now fording rivers wide as any sea. Now she +walked through cool green forests and again over hot, sandy desert +plains. She grew weary and longed to rest, but remembering Godfrey's +words, she sang instead. And so it was at sunset she found herself upon +the borders of the Westland Kingdom, and too weary for aught else, she +begged shelter of a peasant woman and slept soundly until morning. + +The Westland Kingdom, in the days of Prince Godfrey, had been the +pleasantest place in all the world, but now there was not a sadder spot +on earth. From his desert throne, King Ironheart had long coveted its +great forests and fertile fields, its rich mines of silver and gold +beneath the earth. He had not dared meet Prince Godfrey in open battle, +for Godfrey was a fierce warrior and his nobles were brave soldiers. So +it was secretly and in the dead of night, when Prince Godfrey was away +from his land on a journey, that King Ironheart entered the Westland +Kingdom and conquered it by force of arms. At the same time he caused +Godfrey to be imprisoned in the mill which sank beneath the forest by +day. Then having done thus much, he offered riches and high honors to +all Westland subjects who would swear allegiance to him as their +sovereign lord. The people with one accord refused to listen to his +ministers and remained faithful to Godfrey. + +King Ironheart was furious, but he gave them seven days in which to +change their minds. At the end of the seventh day, he called a council +of the Westland people and was gracious in his bearing toward them; but +from the highest noble to the lowest peasant, there was not one in all +the kingdom who would bow the knee to King Ironheart. From that day, the +reign of cruelty began. King Ironheart bade his army drive the men to +the mines beneath the earth, and when this was done, he rewarded his +generals and soldiers with the palaces and houses of the Westland +people. Driven thus from their homes, there was nothing left for the +women and children but to seek shelter where they could find it. Some +lived in wretched huts; others toiled at cutting logs to build rude +cabins, and all were forced to work like slaves. King Ironheart meant to +punish the Westland Kingdom and spared no one. + +Though the castle of this cruel king lay but a short distance from the +entrance of the Westland Kingdom, the road that stretched between was +filled with such sadness and sorrow that it was many a day before the +princess stood at its gates. Little children struggled with heavy +burdens, and when she had helped these, other little children with heavy +burdens passed sadly down the same road. Women toiled unceasingly in the +forest or drove the plow from dawn until dark; King Ironheart's soldiers +saw to it that none idled. Yvonne had no coins to buy bread, and again +she was forced to beg from door to door, but so willingly did she help +those who labored that the sad-faced women were glad to share with her +their scant store. A Westland woman, noting the slippers of bark, asked +her who she might be and from whence she came; to which the princess +made the following reply: + +"In my country I am called Yvonne, the Beggar Princess. My father cast +me off portionless because I would not wed to please him; and I seek the +tyrant Ironheart, to beg him quit the Westland Kingdom and to free from +his dungeon Prince Godfrey, whom I love with all my heart." + +When the Westland women heard her reply, they marveled at her courage, +but shook their heads and advised her to give up her quest. + +"You seek to move with pity one whose heart is cold as his name would +say!" they cried. "King Ironheart laughs at mothers' tears and takes +pleasure in the wails of hungry children; return to your home, Oh +Yvonne, or this wicked king will enslave you with this sad land." + +"That I will not do," replied the princess firmly. "With courage and a +good heart, I have come hither to beg mercy of King Ironheart. If I +fail, I fail, and here in bondage I shall remain with you who mourn +Prince Godfrey, for he is lord of my heart." + +The princess delayed her errand no longer, but rose with the dawn the +following day and was waiting early at the castle gates. On being +questioned by the soldiers, she said she had come to seek King +Ironheart. They asked who she was, and she answered them truthfully that +she was Yvonne, the Beggar Princess. + +"A Beggar Princess!" exclaimed the soldiers in derision. "Who ever +before heard of a princess without gold?" + +"This gold I have about me," replied the princess, and she unbound her +golden hair. In the morning sun it shone brilliantly and dazzled the +eyes of King Ironheart, who leaned from his balcony to learn the cause +of the sudden bright light. He saw the princess standing at the gate and +commanded that she be brought before him. + +As she entered the throne room, though she had not feared her father's +wrath and was not afraid to walk alone at midnight in the forest, the +princess was seized with a sudden fear that left her almost speechless. +It was not that King Ironheart was hideous as monsters are often +hideous, nor was he misshapen; but beneath his smile there lurked such +cruelty and malice that she feared her cause was lost before she had +begun to plead it. The thought of Godfrey lying in his dungeon stirred +her, and she asked leave of his majesty to sing. King Ironheart was +pleased with her request and graciously ordered his chief harpist to +play the airs for Yvonne. At the end of the entertainment, the king's +servants brought handsome robes and gifts of gold for the singer whom +the king mistook for some peasant maiden. + +The princess refused his gifts with dignity. + +"My lord," said she, "I may not receive gifts from you, for my rank is +equal to your own. I am Yvonne, the Beggar Princess." + +"Then so much the better," replied the king in a hearty tone. "I have +long wished for a princess whom my heart could love, and who would not +fall a-trembling at the very sight of me. We shall be married at once, +and I will make war on your sisters this very day, to recover the +marriage portion which is yours by all rights." He sent then for the +coronation robes and the crown of pearls, but again the princess waved +away the bearer of his gifts. With her singing, courage had returned, +and she now faced the tyrant king bravely. + +"My lord," said she, "I have come hither not to wed you, but to beg you +to leave the Westland Kingdom, for the people suffer greatly because of +your harsh rule; and to implore you to free from his dungeon Prince +Godfrey, whom I love with all my heart." + +King Ironheart was amazed that she should dare to oppose his wishes, but +secretly he admired her courage and fearless spirit and determined to +win her for himself. He promised her great riches and vowed to make her +the most powerful queen in all the world, but Yvonne was firm. When he +saw it was useless to urge her, King Ironheart grew angry. + +"And what powerful weapon or armed force do you bring against me that I +should thus do your bidding, O Yvonne, Beggar Princess?" he asked at +length in sneering tones. + +"None but courage and a good heart, my lord, and those can work +miracles," replied the princess. + +"Then," said King Ironheart, "if by miracles you hope to accomplish +your quest, perform to my liking the task I now set for you, and when it +is finished I shall leave this kingdom and free Godfrey from his +dungeon." + +He called a servant and directed him to bring from the pantry a handful +of corn, and when it was brought he gave it to the princess. + +"When it is spring, plant these kernels, and in harvest time, if from +your planting I do not gather corn to fill to the overflowing every +granary in the Westland Kingdom, I will enslave you with the rest of +this land, and Prince Godfrey shall remain in his dungeon until death +come to free him. Now go," commanded King Ironheart, "and return no more +until your task be done." + +The women who awaited the princess in the market place sighed when they +learned the task King Ironheart had set. From one scant handful of corn +to fill every granary in the Westland Kingdom! It was impossible. Even +Yvonne found it hard to keep a good heart with the thought of the task +before her. If she failed, Prince Godfrey would remain forever in his +dungeon, and yet from one handful of corn how should she reap a harvest +for a nation? + +She tied the corn in a kerchief and carried it next her heart lest some +of the precious grains should slip away. Each night she counted them, +and each night she rejoiced to find she had still one hundred, the exact +number King Ironheart had given her. From her work at the farm, the +princess knew well the labor of the fields and dairy, so she toiled the +winter through with the other women. One evening, as she sat in the +moonlight counting her precious grains, she heard voices near by, but a +hedge hid the speakers. + +"Ah," said the first voice sadly, "that one hundred provinces, the +fairest this side of Paradise, should be so crushed beneath this cruel +King Ironheart! I would that he were driven away, and that the good +Prince Godfrey would return to his own once again." + +"Have patience," answered a second voice which was exceedingly sweet and +gentle. "Know that for the space of the winter months the Princess +Yvonne hath carried next her heart one hundred grains of corn from which +the cruel Ironheart hath commanded her to reap a harvest for the +nation. Now such is the power of a good heart that when she hath planted +these grains, there will spring from them such a harvest as never before +was gathered in any country. Then, according to his promise, King +Ironheart will free Prince Godfrey and quit the Westland Kingdom +forever." + +The voices ceased suddenly as they had begun, but on looking over the +hedge, the princess could see no one. She treasured the words she had +heard, and with a song in her heart, waited until the winter should be +gone. When spring was come at last, she traveled with it through the +Westland Kingdom and planted a single grain in the center of each +province, until her kerchief was empty. It seemed that the land itself +was weary of the cruel Ironheart and longed once more for peace and +happiness, for such a supply of corn was never known in the Westland +Kingdom. In autumn, when it was gathered into the granaries, there was +more than they could hold, and the king's servants built storehouses to +contain the surplus. Then the princess went to King Ironheart to tell +him that her task was done. He had heard of the wonder from his +ministers and had waiting for her another task. The first he now +declared had been but child's play, and he vowed to free Prince Godfrey +when she should accomplish the second. + +"But, my lord, how can I believe you?" cried the princess in dismay. +"Even should I accomplish the second task, when it is done will you not +set for me another and another, and so on until the end of time?" + +"Never fear, Yvonne, Beggar Princess," replied King Ironheart with his +cruel smile. "This time I will keep my word right gladly. Though I set +Godfrey free a thousand times, he will never marry you, for should you +accomplish this second task, you will be the ugliest woman in all the +world. Think twice before you set about it," he warned. "If you fail, +you will be enslaved for the rest of your life; and if you succeed, you +will be hideous. + +"Now you had best marry me and give up this silly thing you call true +love. It hath brought you naught but tears and sorrow in the past and +will bring you no better in the future." He smiled and looked +graciously at Yvonne, but she was unmoved. + +"Because I loved Prince Godfrey, I defied my father and became the +Beggar Princess, Yvonne," she answered scornfully, "and because I loved +Prince Godfrey, I came to his land to beg his freedom of you who hold +him in cruel captivity. How then should I wed you? Tell me what it is +that you would have me do; I care not whether I return from my task the +ugliest woman in all the world!" + +"Then listen well to what I say," replied the king, "for I shall not +tell you twice. My kingdom, which lies just beyond the borders of the +Westland Kingdom, is naught but a great desert plain. There are on this +plain neither rivers nor springs, but instead the wind blows the sand in +clouds above it all day long, and nothing will grow in such a place. + +"Seek this plain, and when you have found it, cause springs and rivers +to water it, the better to nourish a forest which you must plant there +to please me. In the heart of this forest build for me a splendid +palace, the outer walls of whitest marble and the inner walls of purest +gold. Thousands of red roses must climb to the towers of the palace. +When you have done thus much, trouble not yourself to furnish it for me, +but return to me, and I promise that I shall betake myself and my court +to my own kingdom and quit this land forever and ever. I am weary of a +people who smile never but weep from sun to sun for their absent lord." + +"But Prince Godfrey; what of him?" asked the princess. + +"Ah," laughed King Ironheart, "I shall tell you also the secret charm +that will cause his chains to fall from him and his dungeon doors to +open wide." He bade the princess farewell, and his smile was more cruel +than she had yet seen it. Nevertheless she departed from his presence +full of courage. + +The women were again waiting her in the market place, and when they +heard the second task, they despaired of seeing again their rightful +lord and sadly resigned themselves to their fate. They followed the +princess to the gates of the kingdom, and as she was about to depart, an +old wise woman gave her a bag, saying: + +"Within this bag are pine cones and acorns of marvelous power. When you +have caused the first springs to water the desert plain, at nightfall +dip these into the waters, plant them and by morning a forest of oak and +pine will spring from them." + +The princess took the bag and thanked the wise woman. Strange to say, +she was hopeful about her task. + +"Who can tell?" thought she. "One task that seemed at first impossible I +have already finished." So she sang cheerfully as she went her way. In +her mind she pictured the delight and joy of Prince Godfrey when she +should go again to the mill in the forest to tell him that he was free. +For three days and three nights she traveled, and on the morning of the +fourth day she reached the great desert plain. It was even more desolate +than King Ironheart had said. Great stretches of burning hot sands +spread far and wide, and the sky, where it bent down at the horizon, +seemed copper-colored. The blazing sun beat fiercely over all, and there +was neither bush nor tree for shade. When the sun set, darkness came +swiftly and without the gray softening shades of twilight. + +The princess sat sadly and watched the stars come out. In the deep blue +sky above the desert they shone like gold. + +"Their happy gleaming seems to mock the heart of one as sad as I," +sighed she. Now that she was upon the desert plain she wondered how or +where she was to begin King Ironheart's task. + +"The gleaming stars mock no one," said a voice close beside her, "but +instead they shine brightly to cheer all those who sorrow." + +The princess turned to see the speaker, but she was alone on the plain. + +"I am the Spirit you heard by the hedge one moonlight night," spoke the +voice again. "Do you remember?" + +"I remember well," replied Yvonne, "and oh, Spirit, had the cruel +Ironheart kept his promise, Godfrey would even now be free of his +dungeon; but alas! The wicked king hath set me still another task." + +"It is to help you with that task that I have come," said the Spirit. +"Each night when the stars begin to shine in the heavens, expect me, +until your task be done; and now to begin as the king commanded, I must +have the blue from your eyes to make the rivers and lakes." + +"The blue from my eyes!" cried the princess in dismay. "Truly the cruel +Ironheart hath said it rightly. I shall be the ugliest woman alive! But +it is to free my beloved Godfrey, so take it, Spirit!" She felt a +movement of the air close beside her and an invisible hand was drawn +across her eyelids. At the same moment she heard the singing of a brook +near by and in the distance the roaring of a waterfall. + +Remembering the wise woman's advice, Yvonne dipped the acorns and pine +cones in the brook and planted them in the desert sand before she slept. +In the morning she awoke in a wilderness of forest, and the plain, no +longer barren and desolate, was alive with birds that sang, and wild +deer that ran among the trees. The princess sought the heart of this +forest, and there when night had come she awaited the Spirit. When the +stars began to shine, it came as it had promised. + +"The outer walls of the palace must be of whitest marble," said the +Spirit, "and for that I must have the whiteness of your neck and +throat." Though the princess shuddered, she consented, and the invisible +hand was passed over her neck and throat. No sooner had it done so than +in the open space among the trees she could see the outlines of a great +building whose walls gleamed in the moonlight. + +"And now," continued the Spirit, "if you have no wish to wander through +this forest of oak and pine, but long instead to have done with your +task, give me at once the gold of your hair and the red from your lips, +that I may finish the inner walls of the palace and cause thousands of +red roses to climb to the towers." + +"The sooner I finish my task, the sooner will King Ironheart free +Godfrey from his dungeon," replied the princess. "While he lies in +chains, the red of my lips and the gold of my hair bring me no pleasure; +so take them quickly, Spirit." The same hand was passed over her hair +and her lips and the Spirit spoke again. + +"Now look at the palace to see that it is all King Ironheart desired," +it said. "Then when you are satisfied we shall start at once to tell him +that your task is done. I shall remain with you to cheer you until you +go again to the mill in the forest." + +Yvonne did as the Spirit bid. She found the palace of great splendor, +and myriads of red roses blossomed over its white marble walls. Within +all was bright as day; the golden walls glittered like a thousand suns. + +"Even the tyrant Ironheart could ask no more," said she. "Lead the way, +Spirit, and I shall tell him that I have finished my task." + +Traveling by a short road known only to the Spirit, the princess reached +the Westland Kingdom the next day, and was on her way to the castle when +the women went down to the fields to work. They regarded Yvonne as one +they had never seen before, and she was puzzled for the reason. + +"Alas!" cried the Spirit sadly. "You are fair of face no longer, Yvonne. +They do not know that they have ever seen you before." Then straight +past the guards and into the presence of King Ironheart the Spirit led +her. + +King Ironheart cried out in fury as the princess entered the throne +room. "Old crone!" he exclaimed. "How dare you to come into my +presence? Do you not know I cannot abide old age or ugliness? You shall +be punished." + +"Old age," echoed the princess. "I am not old. I am Yvonne, the Beggar +Princess, whom you bid turn the desert plain into a wilderness of forest +and build therein a splendid palace for you." + +Then the cruel king laughed heartily. "Never," cried he, "have I been so +diverted. Go at once to the mill in the forest where the sun rises, O +Yvonne, Beggar Princess, and at the very sight of you the walls will +fall. Tell Prince Godfrey that I have departed his land and have betaken +myself and soldiers to the splendid palace which you so kindly built for +me. However, let me first reward you with this gift." Before the +princess was aware, he had flashed a mirror before her face. + +Yvonne gazed spell-bound as she beheld her changed image. + +"Oh!" cried she, "you are more cruel than I had even supposed. But for +you I had never known how hideous I have become. Truly I am the ugliest +woman in all the world!" She wept and covered her face that she might +look no more in the mirror which King Ironheart continued to hold +before her gaze. The Spirit, with pitying words, led her from the castle +and tried to comfort her; but at the sight of her changed image, +Yvonne's courage had fled. Even when the glad shouts of the Westland +people told her that Ironheart was departing the kingdom, she did not +smile. She wept all the way as she journeyed sadly to the forest where +the sun rose. She now longed only to free Godfrey and then to die. + +"For," thought she, "though he be gallant enough to wed me in pity for +my hideous countenance, I love him too dearly, and I could not bear that +all the world should look with loathing on his queen." + +Late one night the princess entered the forest where she had gone so +often to seek the herds, and at midnight she stood before the mill. It +was dark and dreary looking as ever, and no sign nor sound of life could +be seen about it. Standing close to the window-like opening she began to +sing: + + "Prince Godfrey, my beloved, + I have come to set you free. + The wicked Ironheart hath at last departed your land + And the Westland people await your return with all joy." + +She heard his voice from the dungeon beneath and listened eagerly for +his reply. + +"Oh, Yvonne," cried Prince Godfrey, "your voice is sad when it should be +glad. For even now my chains have fallen from me and I am hastening to +the door of my prison unhindered." The mill sank into the ground, and +Yvonne trembled with joy as she saw Prince Godfrey coming toward her. He +passed her without a glance and then returned to ask eagerly: + +"Old crone, hast seen aught of a beautiful princess who sang from this +spot not a moment since?" + +Yvonne, seeing that he knew her not, pointed silently down a path, and +away sped Godfrey. Then away sped Yvonne down another path and ran until +she found a hollow tree. There she crept in and laid her down to sleep. +"Though Godfrey search the whole night, he can never find me here," said +Yvonne to herself. "Then in the morning I shall go to the farmer's wife +and herd cows once again. None will be there to mock my ugly features, +and since my beloved prince is freed at last, I am content." But though +she spoke so to herself, it would seem otherwise, for Yvonne wept +bitterly until at last she fell fast asleep. + +Meanwhile Prince Godfrey shouted her name and searched the forest in +vain. At last he sat to rest and a voice beside him spoke. + +"You seek Yvonne, the Beggar Princess," said the voice. "I can take you +to her if you so wish." + +"But I see no one!" cried Godfrey in amazement. "Who is it that knows my +secret thoughts thus?" + +"I am the Spirit with which Yvonne set out to rid your land of the +tyrant Ironheart, and with which she gave her beauty that you might be +freed of your prison. The old crone whom you passed in this forest was +none other than Yvonne." Then the Spirit recounted the tale of the +trials and sufferings that Yvonne had borne. Godfrey listened with +dismay. + +"And now," concluded the Spirit, "fearing that you would feel bound to +wed her in spite of her changed face and hideous features, Yvonne has +hidden herself in the hollow of a tree not far from this spot. Shall I +lead you thither, Godfrey, or will you journey to the Westland Kingdom +alone?" + +"Ah, Spirit!" cried Godfrey sadly, "I would have died within my dungeon +rather than gain my freedom at such price. However, what is done is +done, and no regret or vain repining may undo it. So lead me quickly, +Spirit, that I may tell Yvonne how I do honor and love her for her noble +heart and courage." + +Now the Spirit was pleased that Godfrey should speak so. Then, because +it was a good spirit, and had no wish to see folk sad or unhappy, it +resolved that these two mortals had suffered trials sufficient. So while +the Spirit guided Godfrey through the shadowy aisles of dusky cedars, it +caused the earth to tremble mightily three times. Great crashes like +those of thunder accompanied each tremor; Yvonne fled frightened from +her hiding place and found herself face to face with Godfrey. At the +sight of his beloved one, Godfrey knew no fears and cried out in delight +and joy. + +"Oh, Yvonne! The Spirit did but try me," he exclaimed. "Thou art thrice +as lovely as the dawn itself which now appears in yonder sky!" + +But Yvonne would not heed his words, and covered her face with her +hands. Weeping and lamenting, she begged him to leave her. "Pray do not +mock me, Godfrey," she cried, "I cannot bear that you should see my +face. Indeed I am become the ugliest woman in all the world. Let me go, +as you love me. But for my fright at the violent trembling of the earth +I had remained safe hidden until you had departed for the Westland +Kingdom." + +"Then but for the violent trembling of the earth, I had lost you +forever!" cried Godfrey. "So I bless the one who sent the earthquake." + +"Then you bless me and I am free at last to fly to paradise," said the +Spirit. "I caused the earth to tremble. I wished the tyrant Ironheart to +cumber it no more. At the first tremor, in the forest of oak and pine, +the ground opened wide in a great chasm. At the second tremor, the +forest as well as the palace of King Ironheart were swallowed up in this +great chasm. At the third tremor, the chasm closed itself and there now +is nothing in that spot but a hot arid desert plain where the wind blows +the sands about in clouds the whole day long." + +"Then King Ironheart is no more?" asked Prince Godfrey. + +"King Ironheart and all his wicked followers lie deep beneath this arid +desert plain of which I tell," declared the Spirit. "And now, Yvonne, to +set your mind at rest gaze into the pool at your feet." + +Yvonne gazed downward and there beheld an image, so beautiful that she +turned to see the fair maiden whom she fancied had peeped over her +shoulder. The image of Godfrey smiling beside her assured her at last +that it was her own face she saw, and Yvonne's joy knew no bounds. + +"Oh, Spirit!" she cried. "You have done many kind things for me, but +this gift of beauty thou hast given me surpasses all! I am the happiest +woman alive, for now I know I am worthy to be Godfrey's queen." + +"I did but give you what was yours, Yvonne," returned the Spirit, "and +now farewell, for soon the sun will rise and I am off to paradise." + +"But, Spirit, will you not come with us to the Westland Kingdom?" begged +Yvonne. "What shall we do without you to help us with our trials? Pray +stay." + +"Nay, Yvonne," replied the Spirit. "Continue in the way you have begun; +remember always, courage and a good heart can work miracles and there +will be no need of me. Farewell!" + +"Farewell, farewell, Spirit!" called Godfrey and Yvonne together. Then +as the sun rose from the clouds they heard an answering echo of +farewell. So singing for joy, hand in hand, Prince Godfrey and Yvonne +the Beggar Princess followed the sun on his journey to the Westland +Kingdom, where they lived forever after, and where to this very day 'tis +said by some that their descendants reign. + + + + +CHAPTER VII + +SWEEP AND LITTLE SWEEP + + +I + +Once upon a time, in days long ago, there lived a Chimney Sweep and a +little Crossing Sweeper. This Chimney Sweep was called "Sweep." He had a +very black face, from the soot he swept down tall chimneys, but he had a +kind heart and dearly loved this little Crossing Sweeper, whose name was +Little Sweep. Little Sweep had a grimy, gray face from the ashes she +threw on her muddy crossings, and as for her heart,--I suppose it was +kind. Sweep thought it kind, and Little Sweep vowed she loved Sweep +tenderly. + +Now Sweep was his own master and owned a smart little donkey cart, all +filled with brooms and brushes; but Little Sweep had a dreadful master, +who beat her often and gave her scarcely enough to eat. Sweep lived in +a snug little garret, and Little Sweep lived in a cold bare attic just +across the way. The street was so narrow that the two could chat quite +easily with one another. On holidays, when Sweep, so black and sooty, +and Little Sweep, so gray and grimy, rode forth in the smart little +donkey cart, the people all stared and vowed it was seldom one could see +a couple so well matched. + +Every morning Little Sweep was out with her broom, before the sun was +up. Her master would beat her if she dared lie late abed. Now Sweep had +no need to rise so early. His trade of sweeping down tall chimneys did +not begin until later in the day. Nevertheless this amiable fellow +bought himself a clock with a loud ringing bell, and when this clock +rang out at five each morning, he would throw bread and buns to Little +Sweep just over the way. Little Sweep would eat the bread and buns most +eagerly, for she was always very hungry. Sweep bought her red mittens to +warm her poor hands, and wept when he learned that her cruel master had +taken them from her and sold them. + +"Ah, Little Sweep," he would say, "when my golden dollars fill the +stocking, we shall be married, and you will sweep crossings no longer. +Instead, you will sit at home in a neat little cottage and brew me soups +and make strong soaps to wash my black face. Then on holidays we shall +both ride forth, all clean and shining." + +"Oh, please hurry then, and sweep ever so many chimneys, that the +stocking may very soon fill with golden dollars!" Little Sweep would +reply. "My master grows crosser every day, and I cannot bear my life." + +"But you forget me," answered Sweep. "Is not my garret window just +across from yours, and do I not throw you bread and buns each day?" + +"Indeed, if it were not for your bread and buns, I know that I would +die," declared Little Sweep. "My master does not give me food enough to +feed a robin." + +"And I would buy you more bread and buns," sighed Sweep, "except that +bread and buns cost pennies, and if I spend too many pennies, the +stocking will never fill with golden dollars." + +Now in those olden days, as no doubt you know, kings and queens and +noble folk stored all their gold in great carved chests of oak and +walnut; but humble folk like Sweep hid their savings in a stocking. + +One day when Sweep swept down the chimneys of a rich baker, the rich +baker gave him seven tarts and a plum cake, for a present. You may be +sure that Little Sweep enjoyed a feast that night. Her cruel master had +gone off for the day and had locked her in her room with only bread and +water. When Sweep learned that, his kindly heart was touched; he gave +Little Sweep the whole plum cake and kept but one tart for himself. That +was the manner of man Sweep was. Everything for Little Sweep and nothing +for himself. When he swept tall chimneys in the shops of merchants, +Sweep would buy some bits of linen or some ends of lace for Little +Sweep. These Little Sweep would fashion into curtains and tidies for the +little cottage of their dreams. + +Now it is a curious thing to tell, but nevertheless quite true, that +though Sweep's stocking filled at last, and there were even two golden +dollars more than it could hold, still Little Sweep lived in her cold +bare attic. And still her master beat her. The reason of it all was +this. Sweep and Little Sweep could not agree upon a cottage. Sweep +wished a cottage with many chimneys, in order that he might work at his +trade. Little Sweep, on the other hand, who hated ashes and everything +to do with chimneys, wished for a house with all glass doors and windows +and no chimneys at all! Plainly the cottage to suit these two could not +be found. Then Sweep decided on a sage plan. + +"Now do you be content with a house of fewer glass doors and windows, +Little Sweep," said he, "and likewise I shall content myself with fewer +chimneys." So again they set out, and this time soon found a cottage to +please them. Little Sweep swept the crossings before it; Sweep swept +down the chimneys. Then at the doors and windows Little Sweep hung up +the curtains she had made, and pinned the tidies to the backs of the +chairs. Sweep bought a ham and a bacon, and likewise a loaf of white +bread, and behold, they were ready to be married! + + [Illustration: "Hide me, Little Sweep," cried Red Cap. + "My brother is after me."--_Page 175._] + +Sweep was very happy because his darling would sweep no crossings, and +neither would her cruel master beat her any more. Little Sweep rejoiced +because she did not like her trade; she was sure that she would never +again be hungry, for Sweep would buy her all the bread and buns she +could desire. Sweep took the two extra golden dollars and spent them +both on finery for Little Sweep. He bought her a little gray wedding +frock (to match her grimy, gray face, you know), some blue cotton +stockings, and a red ribbon for her hair. For himself he bought only a +gay green feather to wear in his hat and a bottle of oil to polish his +holiday shoes. Always, you will notice, he gave everything to Little +Sweep. + +Then the day before their wedding day, some very strange things came to +pass. Little Sweep was standing at her crossing when a tiny little man, +dressed out in green and wearing a bright red cap, flew through the air +and perched upon her broomstick. + +"Hide me, Little Sweep," cried Red Cap. "My brother is after me." + +"Hide in my pocket," replied Little Sweep, and no sooner had the first +Red Cap crawled into her pocket than a second little creature, larger +than the first, flew through the air and perched upon her broomstick. + +"Tell me, Little Sweep," cried the second little creature angrily, "have +you seen my brother flying north or east or south or west?" + +Now as Little Sweep had heard that Red Caps often did great things for +those who befriended them, she stood silent. + +"Stupid!" cried the second little creature, when she did not speak. Then +off he flew as suddenly as he had appeared, and out from Little Sweep's +pocket crawled the first Red Cap. + +"Ugh!" exclaimed Red Cap, brushing his tiny beard and dusting his green +satin suit. "How comes it that your pocket is so very dusty?" + +"I must keep ashes in it for my trade of sweeping crossings," replied +Little Sweep. "I hate it." + +"Then perhaps I might find you a better trade," said Red Cap, gazing +thoughtfully at Little Sweep's gray grimy face and raggedy garments. "We +Red Caps, although we be very little folk, be very powerful folk, you +know." + +"Yes, I have heard that you grant wishes to poor folk sometimes," +replied Little Sweep; "is that true?" + +"It is," said Red Cap, nodding gravely. "Make three wishes now, and I +will grant them for you." + +Now fairy lore is filled with tales of folk who had three wishes given +them, and, as you have perhaps remarked, these folk have often wished +too hastily and consequently wished unwisely. The old woman who wished +for black puddings is one, and the man who wished his mill to always +grind salt is another. And there are scores and scores of these unwise +folk that I could name. But Little Sweep was not like one of these. She +leaned upon her broom and paused some time in deepest thought. At last +she spoke. + +"First," said she, "I wish to be a beautiful princess, dressed in robes +of satin sewn with gold, my face all clean and shining, and on my head a +coronet of pearls." + +"Second, I wish to dwell within a splendid castle by the sea and have a +hundred rooms all filled full of gold and treasures, and a thousand +slaves to do my bidding. + +"Third, I wish my old master to sweep crossings in my place. That is +all." + +"It is enough!" cried Red Cap in amazement. "To look at you, who would +ever think you would even know enough to wish such powerful wishes! My +store of magic power will be quite gone when all you wish is done; but +even so, I have promised, and we Red Caps always keep our promises. Go +home and wait quietly." + +So Little Sweep flung down her broom, although it was but two o'clock in +the afternoon and she had yet to work until sundown, unless she wished a +beating. Her old master was seated in the kitchen, stirring up a bowl of +porridge, when she entered. + +"Lazy one! Idle one!" he cried out in anger as she entered. "Is it thus +you leave your work at midday? But I have something to make you lively." +He seized the rope. But for once in her life Little Sweep was not +afraid. + +"You had better not," said she boldly. The old master heeded her not, +however, and raised the rope to strike. Before it fell, he screamed in +amazement! Little Sweep's rags fell from her suddenly, and she stood +before him, a beautiful princess robed in satin, and on her haughty +brow a coronet of pearls. + +"Oh! Oh!" cried the old master in dismay. "Had I known you were a +beautiful princess in disguise, never, never would I have beaten you; +neither would I have starved you, you may be sure." + +"That makes no difference now," replied the haughty princess with +spirit; "why did you beat me at all?" As she spoke, the old master +screamed again, this time in wildest terror. His garments changed +suddenly to sweeper's rags, and into his hands flew the very broom that +Little Sweep had just flung down! In this poor guise the old master fell +upon his knees and humbly begged a penny of the haughty princess. But +again she would not heed him. + +"Out of my way, simpleton!" she exclaimed. "Now go and sweep crossings +in my place, and may your new master beat you even as you beat me!" + +With that the new master entered the kitchen, and finding there the old +master dressed in sweeper's rags, sent him off with a cuff to go about +his work. A coach of pearl with silver trimmings drew up before the +door, and away went the haughty princess to her castle by the sea. + +There, as she had wished, she found a hundred rooms filled full of gold +and treasures, and likewise found a thousand slaves to do her bidding. +But in the midst of all her glory and magnificence, the beautiful +princess was greatly worried. Can you think what troubled her? It was +exactly this. She had not a name suitable for her fine situation. +"Little Sweep" would never do for a beautiful princess, dwelling in a +splendid castle by the sea; also she was vexed lest her thousand slaves +should perchance learn that she had once swept crossings, and so despise +her. While she sat thinking thus, and greatly troubled, she heard soft +chimes sounding through the castle halls. Presently a servant dressed in +crimson plush and golden lace entered and bowed low before her. + +"Will the Princess Cendre be pleased to dine?" asked the servant humbly, +and so it was that the haughty princess learned her new name. From that +time forth she quite forgot that she had ever been called "Little +Sweep." + +"Lead the way, slave," she commanded haughtily, "and the Princess Cendre +will follow." + +Then down to a great dining hall she went. Upon the walls were many +mirrors, and the table was laid with dishes of beaten gold. The Princess +Cendre (for we may never again call her Little Sweep, unless we wish to +make her very angry) gazed with delight at her image reflected in the +mirrors and ate with greatest satisfaction from the golden dishes. When +at last the meal was done, musicians played sweet airs for her pleasure. +Princess Cendre enjoyed the music, but oh, much more did she enjoy +gazing about the splendid hall wherein she sat! A thousand tapers made +all as bright as day; the walls were hung with silken tapestries, and +curtains made of lace as fine as cobwebs covered all the windows. It was +while she sat gazing thus that Princess Cendre suddenly bethought her of +the little cottage Sweep had furnished for her. Then it came also to her +mind that to-morrow was her wedding day. + +"Well, to be sure," thought she, "if all these wondrous things had +never happened, I would have married Sweep. But now that would never do. +Sweep could not expect it. His black face would ill become my splendid +castle by the sea." + +The musicians then sang good-night songs, and Princess Cendre sought her +room once more. There on a table she found several books with her title, +"Princess Cendre," stamped in golden letters on the covers. She was more +than pleased to see how it was written; she had been wondering how she +would even manage to spell this fine new name of hers. Before she slept +that night, she took pen and paper and practiced writing "Princess +Cendre" a hundred times, that she might do it gracefully forever after. +(While she had been a wretched little Crossing Sweeper, she had not +learned much in books, you know. So it was that she did not know that +"Princess Cendre" meant naught but "Princess Sweep" in a foreign +language.) + + +II + +Now we must leave this selfish Princess Cendre sweetly sleeping in her +castle by the sea and make our way back to Sweep's snug little garret +once again. On the night of this eventful day Sweep returned home from +his labors very late. There was no light in the attic just across the +way, but he was quite content. He thought, of course, his Little Sweep +was safely tucked up there. Before he ate his bread and cheese, he +tossed three sugar cookies in at her window, and then set about +polishing his shoes and making himself extra smart for the morrow. +Sweep's candle burned very late; but even so, when he lay down to sleep +at last, he dreamed such dreadful dreams that he was glad when morning +came. He dreamed that he had lost his Little Sweep, and that he married +in her stead her broomstick dressed up in the little gray wedding frock. +The clock with the loud ringing bell wakened him at last, and Sweep +dressed himself in all his holiday attire. Then he called softly to the +attic just across the way. + +"Wake up, my Little Sweep," said he; "this is your wedding day." He +tossed in a bright red apple, and presently a head was thrust forth from +the attic window opposite. Not Little Sweep's, as of course he had +expected, but the shocking, tousled head of the old master. + +"Ah, kind Sweep!" exclaimed the old master, "I do most greatly thank +thee for the sugar cookies and the red apple." + +"But those sugar cookies and red apple were not for you, old villain!" +cried Sweep. "They were for my darling Little Sweep. Give them to her at +once, I say." + +"Oh, pray, good Sweep! I cannot give the sugar cookies or the red apple +to Little Sweep, because I have already eaten them myself; besides, she +is no longer here, you know," replied the old master, and then began to +tell the tale of wonders he had seen the day before. + +Sweep listened in amazement. "Now if I find you have not told me true," +cried he, "I will surely do you a mischief!" Then down the stairs he +sped, and over across the way. There, as the old master had declared, +Sweep found the new master in the kitchen. The new master was a pleasant +youth, and of amiable manners. He invited Sweep to stay and eat +breakfast with him, but Sweep, as you may suppose, was of no mind to +eat. Instead, he begged for news of Little Sweep. + +"Indeed, I have seen no such person here," replied Master Jasper, "but +this I did see, which did most greatly astonish me. Yesterday, as I came +into this kitchen, a beautiful princess robed in shining satin swept +past me, and stepping into a coach of pearl was whirled from sight. That +old villain yonder began to mumble that this lovely princess had once +been his slave. Of course, I heeded him not, but fetched him a sharp +cuff on the ear and bade him go about his work." + +Sweep now begged leave to look up in the attic, if the new master would +permit. Master Jasper gave him leave and led the way himself. Sweep +followed him with lagging tread. He now began to fear that this strange +tale might be true after all. Sadly he gazed about the cold, bare little +room. There in one corner he saw the bright-colored pasteboard box that +he had made for Little Sweep's poor treasures, and close by, on a peg, +hung the little gray wedding frock and the red ribbon he had bought +her. + +"Alas!" mourned Sweep, "it is all my fault! If my heart had not been +thus so stubbornly set upon a cottage with many chimneys, Little Sweep +and I would have been married long since, and then, of course, all this +magic would never have happened." The honest fellow wept bitter tears +that left great tracks all down his sooty face and made him look the +very picture of woe. Young Master Jasper felt sorry for him. He too had +lost his love, it seemed, and so he sought to comfort Sweep as best he +could. + +"Come, Sweep!" cried Master Jasper when he had heard. "All is not yet +lost. If Little Sweep loved you as dearly as you say, then she will only +love you ten times more, now that she is a princess! The thing for you +to do is this. Go seek until you find the castle or the palace wherein +she dwells. Who knows--why, even at this very moment she may be crying +her eyes out, because it is her wedding day, and yet Sweep has not +come!" + +These words cheered Sweep. His spirits rose, and so he dried his tears +at once and then set out to seek the castle where his Little Sweep in +the guise of some fair princess might be dwelling. But though he sought +the whole day through, he sought in vain. When it was growing late, he +left the crowded city streets and ways and found himself among the open +fields and lanes. Then by and by, at twilight time, Sweep walked beside +the borders of the sea. There he sat down to rest, for he was very +weary. He tossed aside his cap and sighed to think how happy he had been +but last night, when he thrust the gay green feather in it. Then he +became aware of a voice speaking to him. + +"I know where Little Sweep is dwelling," said the voice, and peering +down, Sweep saw a tiny Red Cap perched upon his knee. (It was the very +Red Cap that had hidden in Little Sweep's pocket the day before.) "If +you wish, I can take you there," continued Red Cap in a friendly +fashion. + +"Ah, Red Cap, if you only would!" cried Sweep. "My heart is broken +because I cannot find my darling." + +"Then close your eyes and do not open them until I say," commanded Red +Cap. + +Sweep closed his eyes and felt himself a-sailing through the air. He +sailed so fast that he had scarcely time to draw a breath before he felt +himself set down upon the earth once more. + +"Now look about you," commanded Red Cap. + +Sweep obeyed. He found himself within a stately hall of marble; the +walls were carved with gold and coral, all in intricate designs, and +there, upon a throne of ivory set with gleaming sapphires, was seated +Princess Cendre. Her flowing robes of shimmering white seemed made of +moonbeams sewn together, so soft and luminous were they. Her hair, black +as a raven's wing, was bound with ropes of pearls and diamonds. The +Princess Cendre sat so still that Sweep at first believed she was some +lovely carven image he beheld. There was little to make one think of +Little Sweep, save that when the Princess Cendre spoke, her voice was +Little Sweep's. + +"What brings you hither, Sweep?" cried Princess Cendre angrily, when she +became aware of him. + +Sweep was astonished, but answered mildly, even so. + +"Ah, Little Sweep," said he, "now who would think that fine new raiment +and a face all clean and shining would make this wondrous change in you? +But perchance, if you had ever worn the new gray frock I bought you for +our wedding, I would have known about your beauty." + +"My name is Little Sweep no longer, but Princess Cendre, I would have +you know," she answered coldly. "And what have I to do with gray wedding +frocks, I should like to know?" + +"Why, Little Sweep," began Sweep in great surprise, but she interrupted +him. + +"Princess Cendre, if you please!" cried she. + +"Well, Princess Cendre, then," said Sweep. "Have you forgot that this is +our wedding day? I thought perhaps you would be grieved as I that we +were parted, and so I came hither to marry thee." + +"To marry me!" exclaimed the Princess Cendre in astonishment. "With your +black face, do you suppose that I would marry you? I am the Princess +Cendre, you must not forget. And Sweep, if this be your wedding day, as +you say it is, my advice to you is this: Marry the Crossing Sweeper of +your choice, and if you cannot find her, choose another. The city is +full of such poor wretches; there are two or three at every corner." + +Sweep could scarcely believe that he had heard aright. He had not +dreamed his Little Sweep would treat him thus. He was surprised and +pained to hear her use so many harsh words all at once. He had not +thought she knew any. In the old days when she had swept crossings for a +penny she had always been a gentle little creature. + +"Surely you are joking, just to try me," cried poor Sweep. "If you had +loved truly, as you did often say, then though you did become empress of +all the world, you would love me still. My face is no blacker to-day +than it was yesterday or the day before that. Do not treat me thus +coldly, Little Sweep, or you will break my heart." + +"And if you call me by that name again, I will have my servants cast you +from my topmost turret and break your head," replied the Princess Cendre +in a towering rage. + +"When I was naught but a Crossing Sweeper, beaten always and half +starved, you gave me bread and buns and bade me love you. To be sure, I +ate the bread and buns because I was hungry. But now that I am become a +princess and no longer need your gifts, my heart bids me to marry none +but a prince. Moreover, the prince whom I shall wed must be handsome and +charming, and his lands and wealth must be greater than my lands and +wealth, which are very great indeed. So get you gone, now, Sweep. You +see how foolish was your errand." + +Poor Sweep stood gazing silently at the haughty princess, so fair to see +and yet so hard of heart. Presently Red Cap bade him close his eyes +again. Sweep closed his eyes and found himself a-sailing through the +air, and once again he found himself upon the borders of the sea. + +"Ah, Sweep, I am the cause of all thy misfortune," said Red Cap sadly. + +"How so, my little friend?" asked Sweep. + +"It is this way," said Red Cap. "If I had not vexed my brother +yesterday, he would not have chased me so fiercely, and I would never +have sought shelter in Little Sweep's pocket. Now, if I had not sought +shelter in Little Sweep's pocket, I would never have given her three +wishes, and she would never have become the Princess Cendre, but would +have married you upon her wedding day." + +"But even so, Red Cap," sighed Sweep sadly, "you are not at fault. Had +Little Sweep desired, she might have wished me to be something high +along with her. But though she has been ungrateful and selfish, too, I +love her dearly and cannot bear to say a harsh word of her." + +Red Cap was surprised at Sweep's gentle speech. He had expected him to +abuse Little Sweep and say unkind things of the haughty Princess Cendre. +In all his dealings with mortals (and he had many, for Red Cap was +nearly, if not quite, a thousand years of age), he had noticed that +mortals were prone to speak ill of those who had injured them. "Without +doubt this black-faced Sweep is of noble heart," thought Red Cap, "but I +shall try him even further." + +Aloud he spoke: "Now, Sweep," said Red Cap, "I have no more magic of the +sort that can raise folk to wealth or high rank and noble station; but +I have still great power to destroy. Say but a word, and in an instant I +will destroy the castle by the sea. The Princess Cendre in a flash will +turn to Little Sweep; the old master will be back in the kitchen, and +young Master Jasper will be in his uncle's house once more. What do you +say to this plan?" + +"To that I must say no," said Sweep. "I think it most unworthy." + +"Then, Sweep, since you will have none of my plan, I must be off," said +Red Cap. "But hark you; although I have not magic power in great store, +if you desire aid at any time, make but a simple wish, and I will +instantly appear to help you. Now farewell!" he cried, and darted off. + + +III + +Poor Sweep! Now that his Little Sweep had treated him so cruelly, he +became the saddest man that one could ever know. For days and days he +did nothing, but would sit with his head in his hands, staring at the +wall, thinking only of his Little Sweep. Nothing could arouse him, until +at last Master Jasper stepped across the way and scolded him roundly. + +"Now, Sweep, this will not do!" cried Master Jasper. "The bread and +cakes and pies will burn in the ovens all over the land, if the chimneys +be not neatly swept down. Then how the housewives will scold, to be +sure! Likewise will the merchants say that Sweep is become a lazy +fellow, who sits idling all day long." Master Jasper, it will be seen, +was a sensible youth, as well as amiable and agreeable. + +So once again Sweep set out with his smart little donkey cart all filled +with brooms and brushes. He found many a housewife angry because he had +delayed her spring house-cleaning; but when these angry housewives +looked at Sweep's black face, so sad and sorrowful, they had not the +heart to upbraid him. Now, strange to say, though Sweep was thus so dull +and disconsolate, his trade of sweeping down tall chimneys thrived as it +never had thrived before. He swept tall chimneys in the north of the +kingdom, and in the south also. Likewise he could often be seen driving +his smart little donkey cart to the east or to the west to sweep tall +chimneys there. The fame of Sweep's skill began to grow; he swept the +chimneys in the halls of dukes and earls. Indeed, the king and queen +commanded Sweep to bring his brooms and brushes and set to work about +the palace. Their majesties, it seemed, had been greatly troubled +because the royal kitchen chimney sent the smoke down instead of up and +made the royal cooks and maidens sneeze and sputter all day long. So +skillfully did Sweep deal with this stubborn chimney that ever afterward +it sent the smoke sky-high, as proper chimneys should. The royal cooks +and maidens sneezed and sputtered no more, and their royal majesties +were grateful as could be. The king with his own hands pinned a royal +decoration on Sweep's sooty sleeve. (But if I am to tell the truth, I +must tell too that from much soot and grime and dust this royal +decoration soon became as black as Sweep's own sooty sleeve and could +not be seen unless one looked quite closely.) + +Now that his trade was thriving thus excellently and he had no longer +need to buy bread and buns for Little Sweep, Sweep's pennies grew to +golden dollars very rapidly. The golden dollars in their turn soon +filled the second stocking full, and even filled a third before Sweep +was well aware of it. But even so, he took no pleasure in his wealth; +he sighed instead because he had no longer Little Sweep to share it with +him. Then, lest he become a miser hoarding gold and spending it not, +Sweep at last bethought him of a kindly plan. Throughout the kingdom +there were thousands and thousands of other little Crossing Sweepers, +two or three at every corner waiting for a penny. These wretches, Sweep +knew well, were just as poor and miserable as his own Little Sweep had +been in days gone by. According to his kindly plan, Sweep now began to +change his store of golden dollars back to pennies once again. Then when +he met a little Crossing Sweeper standing broom in hand, Sweep would +fling a handful of pennies to the little creature. Sometimes he filled +his donkey cart with bread and buns and bright red apples to feed these +little Crossing Sweepers, in memory of his own lost Little Sweep. Until +at last from these good practices Sweep became known as the friend of +all Crossing Sweepers, and was greatly loved throughout the land. + +So seven years passed by. Meanwhile Sweep and Master Jasper continued +friends. Sometimes Sweep stayed to supper in Master Jasper's comfortable +kitchen; other times Sweep would bid Master Jasper step across and smoke +a pipe or two with him. Then, one evening just at dusk, Sweep returned +from his labors and found young Master Jasper packed and ready for a +journey. + +"Where are you off?" asked Sweep, and pointed to a musket flung beside a +knapsack. + +"Have you not heard the news?" cried Master Jasper eagerly. "A whole +year since, a savage tribe invaded Yelvaland and carried off as prisoner +the young and lovely Empress Yelva. Now as this lovely empress has +neither father nor husband nor brothers to protect her, and her people +cry for aid, all youths who long for noble adventure are urged to fight +beneath her banners. Come join me, Sweep." + +But Sweep shook his head. "It is not suitable that I should fight for +Empress Yelva," he replied. "My black face fits me for naught but my +trade of sweeping down tall chimneys." + +"But you are wrong, Sweep," argued Master Jasper; "a black face in +battle is no great matter. Stout hearts and strong arms are sorely +needed. Come, and we shall march and fight together as brothers." + +Again Sweep shook his head. "Indeed, good Master Jasper," answered he, +"I wish with all my heart that I might fight with thee against this +savage tribe and aid the lovely Empress Yelva; but alas! Who, save thee, +would care to march and fight beside a black-faced sweep?" + +"A thousand would! Two thousand would--Nay! ten thousand would be glad +to march with thee, Sweep!" exclaimed a shrill small voice beside them. +On peering down, Sweep beheld a tiny Red Cap perched upon the poker; it +was the same that had befriended him so long ago. + +"Ah, Sweep!" continued Red Cap briskly, "I took a fancy to you when we +first met, seven years ago, and had a notion then that I would like to +know you better. However, since in all these years you have not wished a +wish of me, I could not have the joy of your acquaintance. We Red Caps," +he explained, "although we be such powerful folk, cannot appear to +mortals without they wish for us, you know." + +"I had not known that," answered Sweep politely, "or I would have wished +some simple thing just for the pleasure of a chat with thee. But tell +me, how is it that you thus appear before me now?" + +"Have you so soon forgot your wish?" asked Red Cap. "Did I not hear you +wish a moment since to fight beneath the banners of the Empress Yelva? +It is to grant that wish that I now come. And mark, since in seven years +you have wished no wish of me, my magic now has grown to power +tremendous. Behold thine army!" + +Sweep heard the measured tramp of many feet, and looking through the +gathering gloom, beheld a line of forms that marched by, four and four, +and all were singing gayly as they went. At first Sweep could not tell +what manner of soldiers these might be, but presently his eyes became +accustomed to the dusk, and he perceived that this vast army was +composed of Crossing Sweepers armed with brooms instead of muskets. +Perched atop of every broomstick he could see a tiny creature similar in +looks and dress to the Red Cap perched upon the poker. + +"My brothers and my cousins and likewise all my friends and uncles have +come to help thee too, Sweep," said Red Cap. "And thou, good Master +Jasper, throw aside thy musket, for in Sweep's army, muskets and such +like will be useless things." + +Good Master Jasper quickly did as Red Cap had commanded and followed +after Sweep. Sweep shouldered his long brush and marched proudly at the +head of his strange army. And thus began the journey into Yelvaland. + +Now of that journey there is not much to tell. To be sure, whenever it +was time for breakfast, dinner, or supper, the Red Caps clapped their +hands and there appeared a thousand tables spread with all good fare. +When night fell, or when storms arose, the Red Caps likewise caused a +city of ten thousand tents to spring up on the plains. The Crossing +Sweepers enjoyed the whole march as a holiday. In all their wretched +lives before they had not had such good things to eat. Their hollow +cheeks grew plump and rosy with the winds and sun, and Sweep's heart +rejoiced to see the happy changes that came upon his friends. At night +when they sat grouped about their campfires, the Crossing Sweepers sang +songs loud in praise of Sweep, whom they declared had always been their +friend and who now was the cause of their pleasant holiday. + +Now while Sweep and his strange army were marching thus toward +Yelvaland, the people there were plunged in deep despair. The savage +troops had given their soldiers so many drubbings and such bitter +punishments in battle that they had quite lost heart. Judge then of +their great joy when they beheld a friendly force marching to their aid. +But as this horde drew near, and they perceived what manner of army it +really was, their hearts sank again. + +"Alas!" sighed these discouraged folk of Yelvaland, "of what avail +against the savage troops will be this ragged rabble that approaches?" + +But when Sweep's army entered into Yelvaland and began to lay about them +with their broomsticks, that was another story. Aided by the magic power +of the Red Caps, each broomstick fell with the force of fifty giant +fists and resounded loud as thunder on the mountain tops. The savage +troops stood their ground but a short time and then fled in terror +before these strange and powerful weapons which they had never seen +before. (Savages do not sweep their houses, you know, and so they knew +nothing of the useful broomstick.) Sweep, gallantly leading his vast +army, pursued the flying savages and gave them battle all the while. So +dextrously and well did the little Crossing Sweepers wield their brooms +that on the third night, when both armies had agreed to rest, these +savage troops rose up and stole off. Over the hills and far away they +fled and never again were heard or seen from that day to this. The +glorious part of Sweep's great victory was that he had not lost a single +follower in battle! + +"And now to free the young and lovely Empress Yelva," said Sweep to Red +Cap, "and then our work is done." + +"In all good time that too will be accomplished," answered Red Cap. "The +Empress Yelva lies hidden deep down in a well of her own tears. This +well lies close beside the gates of Yelvaland, and so you had best face +your army right about and march there." + +Then once again the Crossing Sweepers shouldered their brooms and +marched gayly off to Yelvaland. They reached the gates of the kingdom +just as the moon was sinking slowly in the sky, and Sweep gave orders +that they wait until the dawn to enter. + +"Come with me, Sweep," whispered Red Cap; "the time has come to seek the +Empress Yelva," and led him to a well within a grove of trees. + +"Now, Sweep, attend me closely," warned Red Cap, "for if you do not as I +say, all will be lost. When the moon's last ray will light the waters of +this well, plunge down into its depths and bring the Empress Yelva up +with you. Lose not a second's time, for if the moonbeam leave the well +before you, the lovely Empress Yelva must forever remain prisoner and +yourself likewise. Do you think that you are nimble enough to try?" + +"I know not of my nimbleness, but I will try," said Sweep, and plunged +down headlong, as a pale moonbeam shone down and silvered the dark +waters. Before the winking of an eye, it seemed, he rose again, clasping +the Empress Yelva by the hand. The moonbeam tarried long enough for +Sweep to see the lovely maiden he had rescued. Her eyes like two blue +violets shone with kindliness, her golden hair fell rippling like a +cloak about her, and when she spoke her voice was like the chime of +silver bells. + +"Ah, sir!" exclaimed the lovely Empress Yelva. "Although from your poor +dress I know that you are naught but a humble Sweep, I honor you for +your brave deed, and I shall wed you." + +At this poor Sweep was covered with confusion. He had not dreamed the +lovely Empress Yelva would so much as deign to thank him; had not the +haughty Princess Cendre scorned him? But even so his heart still longed +for his first love, and knowing nothing better to do, the honest fellow +told his sad tale to the empress, as they stood beside the well. She +listened closely all the while. + +"You have a noble heart, good Sweep," said she when he had done, "and +though you do not choose to wed me, I bear you no malice, but instead +shall help you win your Little Sweep, who has become the Princess +Cendre." + +"Alas, your worship!" said Sweep sadly, "that can never be. The +Princess Cendre would scorn my black face, no matter what my fame or +fortune." + +"Why as to that, Sweep," cried Red Cap, "have no more concern. The +Empress Yelva's tears, it would seem, are magic, for since you have +plunged down the well, your face is become clean and white as though +'twere scrubbed a dozen times. You are now a handsome fellow." + +"And when I have rewarded you suitably, the Princess Cendre will be more +than glad to wed you, rest assured, good Sweep," said Empress Yelva. +"But now the dawn is here, so let us hasten that I may see my people and +my own dear Yelvaland once more." + +You may imagine that there was wild rejoicing when Sweep and his vast +strange army knocked upon the gates of the kingdom and demanded that +they open wide for Empress Yelva. A holiday that lasted seven days was +set, and there were games and sports and pleasures. The people sang and +danced upon the highways, and oxen were roasted whole upon great +bonfires. Sweep and all the Crossing Sweepers were praised and honored +throughout the length and breadth of Yelvaland, and all was merry as +could be. + +When this great holiday was passed, as holidays all do, the business of +the court began again. The Empress Yelva ordered that a cottage and a +piece of ground, as well as two bags filled with gold, be given to each +Crossing Sweeper in reward for their brave deeds. The Crossing Sweepers +were so delighted with their gifts that they never again returned to +their own land but dwelled in Yelvaland for all their days. The Red Caps +likewise were so pleased with lovely Empress Yelva and so admired her +kind heart and sense of gratitude that they decided from that day to +make their home among the forests of her realm. + +"And now, Sweep," said the Empress Yelva, when all this was done, "I +have not forgot the promise that I made thee." Accordingly she made him +prince. His title was Prince Sweepmore and his domain of Sweepmost was +twice as great and twice as rich as was the domain of haughty Princess +Cendre. Sweep now was dressed in crimson velvet. The Empress Yelva from +her treasure store gave him a golden sword all set with rubies that +flashed forth flame and fire in the sun. A hundred horses laden all with +bags of gold and pearls were also given him, as well as a like number of +servants to attend him. Then once again Sweep set forth to marry +Princess Cendre. + +"I grieve to see thee go, good Sweep," sighed Empress Yelva as they +parted, "but even so I do admire thy faithful heart that bids thee go." + +"And I likewise do grieve to go; and I thank thee for thy gifts," Sweep +answered. He bade young Master Jasper farewell too. Young Master Jasper +had fallen deep in love with a noble maiden of the Empress Yelva's court +and was about to marry her. + +A royal messenger had been sent before to tell these tidings to the +Princess Cendre. Now, strange to say, though the haughty Princess was +thus beautiful and wealthy, she was still unwed. To be sure, many +princes of small fortunes had sought her hand, but of these the haughty +creature would have none. However, her selfish ways had not pleased +princes whom she had desired to please, and so it was she sat alone +within her splendid castle by the sea. You may be sure that she +rejoiced when she learned that Sweep was now a prince with land and +riches in good store. + +"Ah!" she exclaimed, "his face is clean and shining too, I hear, which +is excellent. I could not tolerate him otherwise; but as it is, I shall +delight to wed him." And so the haughty princess sent for milliners and +jewelers and for bootmakers and dressmakers too. She bought such silken +hose and high-heeled shoes as must have cost a fortune, and had her +wedding dress sewn thick with diamonds. When word was brought that the +new prince was come, she donned this sparkling robe and received him +with great courtesy. + +"Ah, Sweep!" cried she, "although I know full well that Empress Yelva +hath given thee a fine new title, I love to call thee by the dear old +name I used to know. Tell me of thy life since last we parted. I have +heard the Empress Yelva desired to marry thee herself. The forward +creature! I blush for her that she should be so bold. She must be very +plain of face indeed if she must go a-seeking for a husband." + +To these sharp words Sweep made reply: "Indeed, the Empress Yelva is so +fair of face that neither tongue nor pen can well describe her beauty. +Moreover, she is so kind of heart and gentle of manner that though she +were as plain as plain, I still would think her lovely!" + +"Indeed!" returned the haughty Princess Cendre and gazed with +satisfaction in her mirror. "However, it is not to chat about this +forward creature that you have come hither; it is to wed me. Come, my +bishops are in readiness; my guests are waiting." + +Now, when Sweep at last beheld this haughty Princess after seven years +of longing, he found a curious change had come upon him. He became aware +that he no longer loved her, and that her haughty manner and her +spiteful speech distressed him. At last he saw her as she really was, an +ungrateful, cold-hearted creature who thought of no one but herself. +(Although Sweep knew it not, the waters of the well had wrought this +change in him. You may be sure that Red Cap was aware of it!) So though +his heart was grieved to give another pain, Sweep determined to speak +his mind quite plainly. + +"Ah, Princess Cendre," said he, "I fear me you must tell your guests +that you have changed your mind and bid your bishops go. For since my +black face has been changed as though by magic, it would seem my heart +and mind by magic were changed too. I know now that thou art too cold +and proud to be my princess; a princess should delight to make folk +happy, and that I fear me you would never do." + +The Princess Cendre was enraged at this talk. We well know that she had +a dreadful temper when it was aroused, and she chose to rouse it now. +She stormed and she scolded; she threatened Sweep and she denounced him; +but she could not move his resolution. + +"You have come hither to wed me. This is my wedding day, and you shall +not ride away!" cried she. + +"Nay, but I will," returned Sweep. "Once before I came hither to wed +thee on thy wedding day, and once before I rode away. And so farewell!" + +Away rode Sweep with all his train, and stopped nor stayed until he +reached the gates of Yelvaland. A herald told the news of his approach, +and Empress Yelva with her noble lords and ladies went forth to welcome +him. Sweep fell upon his knee and humbly begged the lovely maiden's hand +in marriage, and Empress Yelva smilingly consented. + +"Indeed, dear Sweep!" declared the Empress Yelva, "I had a notion all +the while that you would soon return, and had our wedding feast +prepared!" (Now could it have been that the Red Caps whispered of the +magic change the well of her own tears had caused?) + +Then straightway Sweep and Empress Yelva were married. Young Master +Jasper and the noble maiden were married too; it was a double wedding. +Another feast was held, so bounteous and so magnificent that all +previous feasts seemed poor and mean by comparison. Sports and games +were set, and prizes of great value were awarded. Each nobleman received +a bag of diamonds as a gift, each noble lady a rope of pearls. The +common people, one and all, were given each a bag of golden coins that +they too might make merry. The lords and dukes danced on the highways +with the dairymaids; the Empress Yelva and her ladies trod minuets with +shepherd lads and farmer boys, and all was merry as a marriage feast +should be. + +Sweep now was Emperor. He wore a robe of purple bordered deep with +ermine, and held a sceptre clustered thick with diamonds when he sat at +court. With Empress Yelva by his side, he now rode forth in a splendid +chariot of gold and royal enamels. But though he was thus raised to high +rank and great wealth, Sweep was as amiable and as kind of heart as he +had been when he swept down tall chimneys for his living and drove his +donkey cart all filled with brooms and brushes. To tell the truth, +however, Sweep had little opportunity to do kind deeds. There were no +poor folk to be found in Yelvaland. The Empress Yelva governed her realm +too well and wisely for that. Now it happened on one winter's day, when +all the ground was white, Sweep noticed that the frost hung thick and +glistened on the branches of the firs and cedars. + +"It seems to me, my dear," said Sweep to Empress Yelva, "that it would +be most suitable if we should build some houses for our little friends, +the Red Caps, who are dwelling in our forest. I fear me that they +suffer greatly from the cold." + +The Empress Yelva thought this plan most excellent, and soon the royal +carpenters and joiners were set to making tiny little houses. When these +were made, the royal painters colored them bright green with bright red +roofs, which was quite like the costume of the Red Caps, if you will +remark. The Empress Yelva and her noble lords and ladies then hung these +tiny houses in the branches of the firs and cedars, and they looked like +so many brightly colored bird-houses. When the Red Caps flew home that +night, they were delighted; they guessed at once for whom these tiny +houses were meant. They praised Sweep and complimented him on his kind +heart and his thoughtful ways. + +"We Red Caps do many kind things for mortals," they remarked most sagely +to each other, "but it is seldom mortals ever think to do kind things +for us. It is quite fitting that Sweep should be Emperor; he hath a +noble heart, as sovereigns all should have." + +It happened then upon another day, while still the snow lay thick upon +the ground, that Princess Cendre and her servants went a-riding through +this forest. The haughty princess marked the tiny brightly colored +houses, and asked what they might be. A forester near by made answer +thus: + +"Now if your royal highness please," said he, "Sweep, our good Emperor, +hath caused these to be made for our little friends, the Red Caps. They +suffered greatly with the cold, he thought." + +"Indeed!" exclaimed the Princess Cendre. "Then your little friends, the +Red Caps, must suffer from the cold again, I fear. I have taken a great +fancy to these pretty toys and mean to hang them in my own forests, that +my goldfinches and nightingales may dwell therein in winter, instead of +flying to the southland." She then desired her servants to cut down the +tiny, brightly colored houses and rode off, little thinking of the +mischief she had done. + +That night, when the Red Caps flew home, they were agitated and buzzed +about like so many angry little bees. They missed their tiny comfortable +houses and shivered with the cold. They knew, of course, who had done +this. They knew all things--these Red Caps of the olden days. + +"Now this haughty Princess Cendre is impossible!" they declared most +wrathfully. "She cares not though we freeze to death; although we have +done noble things for her, she has quite forgot them. She has been +princess long enough!" they cried. "Let her be Little Sweep again," and +they clapped their hands in anger. + +Then in that instant vanished the splendid castle by the sea, and +Princess Cendre's robes of satin fell from her. She found herself +dressed out in sweeper's rags, and once more, broom in hand, standing on +her corner. The old master, back within his comfortable kitchen again, +was disposed to treat her no better than he had before; and so, for all +her days, Little Sweep was forced to dwell within her cold, bare attic. +But there was no kind Sweep to toss her bread and buns each day nor buy +her bright red apples or plum cake. + +Sweep, on the other hand, lived long and happily as Emperor. He and the +lovely Empress Yelva, it is said, were blessed with twenty children, all +of whom inherited Sweep's noble nature and his kindly heart. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII + +KINGS AND QUEENS AND PEASANT FOLK + + +Once upon a time, in a splendid palace on the top of a high hill, there +dwelled a very old king and his wife, who was likewise a very old queen. +Now this royal old couple lived in great state and luxury. Their diamond +crowns glittered and sparkled like the sunbeams on a summer sea; and +their trailing velvet robes were so thickly embroidered with gold that +they stood alone. This very old king and his wife, the very old queen, +had a coach of gold and glass drawn by eight white horses in silver +harness. But with all this splendor and magnificence, this royal old +couple were not happy or contented. Indeed they were called Queen Grumpy +and King Crosspatch, which names were most suitable, for they were +discontented and disagreeable as the day was long. + +Queen Grumpy fretted because she had a hundred ladies-in-waiting. She +said they bothered her. King Crosspatch scolded and sulked because Lord +High Chancellor would not permit him to smoke a briarwood pipe. They +both declared their diamond crowns gave them a headache, and they were +tired of their trailing velvet robes. Queen Grumpy and King Crosspatch +refused to ride in their royal coach of gold and glass. The eight white +horses trotted too swiftly and shook their old bones about. So this very +old king and this very old queen went afoot; but even so, they +complained and scolded because all the roads about the palace led either +up a hill or down, and they puffed and panted for breath before their +walk was done. + +Now often and often at sunset, as they rested on their way up the high +hill, Queen Grumpy and King Crosspatch looked with longing on a certain +snug little cottage down in the valley. Within this snug little cottage +lived a very old man and his very old wife. They were peasants. There +were rows and rows of sunflowers and hollyhocks before this snug little +cottage and behind, while to the left and right stretched green pastures +thick with blackberry vines. + +"Ah, my dear!" King Crosspatch would sigh, as he watched the old man at +work. "How pleasant it must be to live in such a snug little cottage. +That old man goes every evening to fetch the cows. How I wish I were +that old man!" + +"Indeed, yes!" Queen Grumpy would reply with an answering sigh. "How I +wish I were that old woman. She goes about from morning until night, so +brisk and blithe. She can bake bread and churn butter herself; she is +not bothered with a hundred ladies-in-waiting as I am." + +Now most remarkable to tell, often as Queen Grumpy and King Crosspatch +gazed thus longingly at the little cottage so snug, and wished +themselves the old man and the old woman, the old man and the old woman +gazed just as longingly on the splendid palace and wished themselves +King Crosspatch and Queen Grumpy. For if you will believe me, this old +man and his old wife were a most discontented couple too! + +So it happened one evening, when Queen Grumpy and King Crosspatch were +walking down the hill, they met the old man and his old wife climbing +up. So while they sat to rest on a stone stile, these four discontented +old folk fell to talking. + +"Ah!" exclaimed King Crosspatch to the old man, "I have often watched +you fetch the cows home from pasture in the evening, and what fun it +seems, to be sure! Then you often go a-berrying too. You should be very +happy." + +"Indeed, Your Royal Highness, I am not!" replied the old man with bitter +feeling. "I am tired of fetching cows, and I would like to sit still all +day with folded hands. I often wish I were you. As for going a-berrying; +I go only because I am so fond of blackberry pie. There's one for my +supper to-night," he added, and smacked his lips with relish. And then, +oh, how King Crosspatch envied the old man! King Crosspatch had longed +to eat blackberry pie all his life, but the court physician would not +permit such ordinary food on the royal table. So the poor old king had +never had even a taste of a blackberry pie. + +"And you too," said Queen Grumpy to the old woman, "you should be very +happy. You loop your dress above your red flannel petticoat and trot +round all day, baking bread and churning butter. You have nothing ever +to vex or worry you." + +"Nothing to vex or worry me!" repeated the old woman in astonishment. +"Why, I am vexed that I must churn my butter, and at this very minute I +am worried lest the loaves I left baking in the oven may burn before I +am home again. And indeed, Your Royal Highness, I loop my dress above my +red flannel petticoat only because I must. A hundred times a day I wish +I were you and could wear trailing velvet robes sewn thick with gold!" + +Now as these four discontented old folk talked on, a curious plan popped +into their heads. They decided to change places. Accordingly, Queen +Grumpy took the old woman's dress and looped it above the red flannel +petticoat; the old woman buttoned herself into Queen Grumpy's trailing +velvet robes. King Crosspatch put on the old man's battered hat; the old +man set the sparkling diamond crown above his sunburned brow, and all +was done. Then singing and laughing, these four old folk went on their +separate ways. All four felt assured that they were really walking on +the road to happiness at last, and all were very pleased and jolly in +consequence. + + "Oh, there's no place like a palace, + A palace, a palace! + Oh, there's no place like a palace + Upon a hill so high!" + +sang the old man and his old wife as they climbed up the steep hill. + + "Oh, there's no place like a cottage, + A cottage, a cottage! + Oh, there's no place like a cottage + Down in a valley green!" + +sang King Crosspatch and Queen Grumpy, and they went trudging down. Then +when they reached the snug little cottage, how pleased they were to be +sure! Everything was so cozy and comfortable to behold. The kettle on +the hearth was boiling, and the loaves in the oven were browning; the +bird in the cage was singing, and the cat on the cushion was purring. +The table was laid with all manner of good things for tea. + +"The blackberry pie! The blackberry pie! My dear, let's have it at +once!" cried King Crosspatch, and went searching through cupboard and +larder to find it. + +"Wait just a moment until I have made the tea," answered Queen Grumpy, +busily bustling about the kitchen. She made the tea, and he found the +blackberry pie, and then they both sat down to supper. There were ever +and ever so many good things on the table. There were cold roast fowls +and quince preserves; there were strawberry tarts and plum as well; +there was fresh new butter, and there was thick sweet cream. Queen +Grumpy and King Crosspatch ate them all and then began to think about +dessert! + +"Now would you mind, my dear, if I should eat all the blackberry pie +myself?" asked King Crosspatch of Queen Grumpy. "You see, I have only +read about blackberry pie in books and have never tasted one in all my +life before." + +"Not at all, my dear!" replied Queen Grumpy most amiably. "I intend to +eat all this ginger cake which I have never seen or tasted before." And +so this royal old couple continued to eat until both larder and cupboard +were bare. + +"How fine this little cottage is and how very snug!" said Queen Grumpy, +seating herself in a rocker before the blazing logs. She began to knit +on a gray wool sock she found. "I think we shall be very happy here." + +"And I think so too," agreed King Crosspatch. "We have eaten a fine +supper in a very few minutes and without any fuss of footmen or +ladies-in-waiting either." He found a briarwood pipe and began to doze +peacefully in deep contentment. Queen Grumpy knitted busily until the +logs burned low, when she began to nod and doze also. Then they both +went to bed. + +But the beds in the snug little cottage were not of the excellent +quality of its cold roasted fowls and new butter and jam. The mattresses +were rough affairs. They were stuffed here with corn husks and there +with straw and yet again with goose feathers, which pricked Queen Grumpy +and King Crosspatch like so many pins. On these rough husky beds the +royal old couple tossed restlessly until morning. They vowed they did +not sleep a wink. (Perhaps they had eaten too much blackberry pie and +ginger cake; what do you think about it?) When it was daylight at last, +King Crosspatch clapped his hands to call his servants to attend. + +"Ah, my dear!" said Queen Grumpy, "have you forgotten that we are no +longer royal folk but simple cottagers instead?" + +"Indeed, I had quite forgotten all about it," replied King Crosspatch. +"Well, I am glad we are," and he began to dress. + +Together they set about making breakfast; but again the breakfast proved +a different matter from supper. You will remember that they had eaten +everything in the cupboard and larder the night before. There was no +milk, for they had forgotten to milk the cow, and neither were there +eggs. They had neglected to search the nests. Moreover, the wood box was +empty, and the fire was out. + +"Now do you go out and chop some wood for the fire, my dear," said Queen +Grumpy. "I shall milk the cow. I have always liked to look at pictures +of milkmaids." She took the pail on her arm and went in search of the +three-legged stool. Then she seated herself beside Bossy-Cow and began +to milk. But sad to tell, Bossy-Cow, who herself was rather +disagreeable, waited until the pail was nearly filled, and then she +gave a sudden kick. Such a vicious kick it was, too! It upset the +milk-pail, three-legged stool, Queen Grumpy and all, and frightened the +poor old queen half out of her wits. She began to scream so loudly that +she quite frightened King Crosspatch, and the hatchet slipped and +chopped a bit of his little finger. + +"Oh! Oh! Oh!" wailed King Crosspatch at the very top of his voice. "I +think this hatchet is bewitched! Oh! Oh! Oh!" he wept, holding up his +little finger. (It was not much of a cut; just a little scratch; but he +was a great crosspatch, you know.) "Oh, what shall I do? What shall I +do?" he wailed. "With this terrible cut on my little finger, I can't do +anything at all!" + +"There now, there now," petted Queen Grumpy soothingly. "Don't chop any +more wood. There are still a few drops of milk left in my pail, and we +shall drink that and eat bread for our breakfast." She led her weeping +husband within the snug little cottage, but when she looked in the oven +she found another disappointment. Queen Grumpy had forgotten to take +the loaves out of the oven the night before, and they were burned to a +crisp. + +"Oh, this plagued cottage!" exclaimed Queen Grumpy, thoroughly vexed. +"Everything goes wrong here. I wish I were back in my own palace once +more! I would never sigh again to leave it." + +"Neither would I," agreed King Crosspatch, drying his tears suddenly. +"Let's go back!" + +They made up their minds in an instant, and slamming the door of the +snug little cottage, they began to climb the steep hill to their +splendid palace. Every step of the way they were in a perfect torment of +fear lest the old man and the old woman would refuse to change places +again. + +"That old woman will never want to give me my trailing velvet robes," +said Queen Grumpy, as they sat to rest on the stone stile. + +"And I have been thinking that the old man will fight to keep my diamond +crown," said King Crosspatch anxiously. But at that very minute they +heard voices, and behold! around the turn in the road came the old man +and old woman, hurrying as though an army were after them. The old man +was thumping his stick, and the old woman was making angry gestures with +her hands; and both the old man and the old woman looked very cross and +ill-humored. + +"Ah, here you are!" exclaimed the old man, stopping short before the +stone stile. "Now give me my hat and take back your hateful crown +without any further nonsense! I could not sleep a wink last night, +because it was so heavy on my head. Such a hateful palace too! I never +saw the like! I could not smoke my briarwood pipe which I brought along +for company, and this morning two villains were like to drown me in a +pool before I was fully awake." + +"They did not try to drown you," replied King Crosspatch haughtily. +"That pool was a bath. Here is your hat; give me my crown." + +"You may call it a bath or not, just as you choose," declared the old +man warmly, "but let those two villains drown you instead of me, is what +I say! I was never so disappointed in all my life as I was with your +palace. The royal throne was hard as stone; the royal beds were soft as +dough; everything was wrong." + +Meanwhile Queen Grumpy and the old woman were having a time of it. + +"Your cow has no manners," complained Queen Grumpy. "She kicked me, and +she spilled the milk. I should behead her if she were mine." + +"Would you, indeed?" asked the old woman scornfully, "and drink water +and eat bread without butter all the rest of your life, I suppose? Let +me tell you, Your Royal Highness, that your servants are lazy and +good-for-nothing! I saw dust on the tops of all the doors and windows, +and the silver flagon was not polished as brightly as my old pewter +pots. Your royal cooks make griddlecakes heavy as lead; you had best +behead them instead of my good Bossy-Cow." Then she added, "Did you feed +my bird and give him water?" + +"I could hardly feed myself in that awkward cottage of yours!" retorted +Queen Grumpy. + +"Oh, my poor bird!" exclaimed the old woman. "Here, hurry and give me +back my own dress that I may loop it above my red flannel petticoat and +be comfortable once more. I suppose you took the bread out of the oven +in time--did you?" + +"I forgot it, and it burned," sulkily replied Queen Grumpy, buttoning +herself into her trailing velvet robes. + +"Oh, what stupid folk are kings and queens!" cried the old woman in a +passion. "Come along, husband," she called, and down the hill they went. + +"And what stupid folk are cottagers!" called King Crosspatch after them. +"Come along, wife," said he, and up the hill they went. + +And so these four old folk again went on their separate ways. All four +were sure that they were walking on the road to happiness at last, and +so all were very jolly and smiling in consequence. + + "Oh, there's no place like home! + Oh, there's no place like home!" + +sang the old man and his old wife, as they went trudging down to the +little cottage so snug. + + "Oh, there's no place like home! + Oh, there's no place like home!" + +sang Queen Grumpy and King Crosspatch, as they went climbing to their +splendid palace on the top of a high hill; and there we will bid them +all adieu! + + + + +CHAPTER IX + +THE GOOSE GIRL AND THE BLUE GANDER + + +Once upon a time there was a goose girl who tended her flock in a green +meadow. The meadow was dotted with forget-me-nots and yellow buttercups, +and the sun shone down on it; her geese were fine blue geese and +uncommonly knowing. She should have been the happiest goose girl in all +the world, but she was not. She thought not of the beautiful meadow nor +of her geese that were a pleasure to tend, for they were so wise and +always did her bidding; but instead this goose girl wept every day +because she longed to marry a certain lord who lived in a gray stone +castle at the top of a high hill. All day long she sat looking at this +castle, and her eyes could see nothing else for admiration of it. She +dreamed dreams a hundred times a day, in which she married the lord, +and was cross with her geese because she had to tend them. + +Now when the lord of the castle went riding by the green meadow, this +silly goose girl would run after the carriage, shouting his name and +throwing bouquets of wild flowers to him. But alas! The carriage always +whirled by so quickly that the lord heard her not, and the bouquets of +wild flowers fell in the dust by the roadside. Each time the goose girl +wept and threw sticks at her geese because she had been disappointed, +until they fled to shelter. + +"It is the stupid coachman's fault," said the goose girl to herself one +day, after she had chased the carriage for a long distance. "My lord is +within, of course, and cannot hear me, for the windows of glass shut out +all sound." She knew that maidens often wrote letters when they were +unable to obtain speech with those whom they fancied, and she resolved +to write to the lord of the gray stone castle. + +She spent her year's earnings on some pink paper with red hearts +lovingly entwined on the border, and that her letter might be colorful +and splendid, she bought also some purple ink. Then the goose girl sat +before a flat rock and strove to compose such a letter to the lord that +he would stop his carriage the next time he rode by the meadow. + +"The first day he will ask me to ride with him, and the second day he +will ask me to wed him," thought the goose girl, as she sat gazing at +the gray stone castle. "The third day I shall ride with him a bride to +yonder castle, where I shall dwell forevermore and have naught to do +with geese but to eat them roasted!" + +Her geese, thinking perhaps she had spread on the rock something fine to +eat, crowded about her, but she drove them off. They bothered her, and +she wished to give her mind to the letter. One large blue gander +remained near, in spite of her angry motions and cross words. The goose +girl was about to begin her letter when she remembered that she had +brought no pen. + +"Ah me! What shall I do?" she cried. "I shall have no more earnings for +another year, and by that time my lord may be wed to some fair maiden, +and I will surely die of a broken heart!" She covered her face and wept +aloud at her misfortune. Suddenly she began to laugh instead. + +"Oh, that I should be so foolish!" she exclaimed. "Here waiting my hand +I have a hundred pens." She seized the large blue gander and plucked a +fine quill from under his wing, but no sooner had she done so than the +bird began to speak. + +"That is not right," declared the gander. "You have taken what belongs +not to you but to me. Put back my quill, or I shall be vexed." + +"And who is there to care?" replied the goose girl rudely. "When I have +written a letter to my lord of the gray stone castle, you shall have +your quill and not before." + +She began to speak her thoughts aloud, as goose girls often do, and +started once more to compose the letter. "To my dearest lord of the gray +stone castle, whom I love with all my heart, but who whirls past me as I +sit tending geese in the meadow," she planned to write, and dipped the +quill in the purple ink. To her dismay the pen wrote not at all as she +planned, but seemed possessed of a spirit to go of itself. It wrote +with a remarkable flourish: + +"Dear gander!" + +But the goose girl pulled it from the paper before it could write more. + +"What manner of pen is this?" she cried in vexation. + +"It is not your quill," said the blue gander. "I am its master, and it +will write letters to none but me." + +"Well, upon my word!" declared the goose girl. "You are the most forward +creature I have yet seen, and this is what you will get." She took a +long branch and beat the gander until he hid from sight in the bushes. +Then again she strove to write her letter, but again the pen was +possessed of a spirit of mischief. + +"Oh! Oh!" wept the goose girl, "I have spent all my earnings on splendid +pink paper with red hearts lovingly entwined on the border, and purple +ink I bought also that my letter might be fine as a valentine. But, +alas! I am bothered with a stubborn quill that will not write as I +think. If I write not my letter to my lord, he will never know of me. +Then he will never marry me, and I shall dwell forever in my wretched +hut instead of the gray stone castle, as I have desired." + +"You weep because you cannot marry the lord who lives in yonder gray +stone castle," said the blue gander, poking his long neck from the +bushes where he had fled. "Let me give you some advice. A wretched hut +is not a pleasant place, 'tis true, but your manners suit it better than +the castle of your dreams." + +"Hold your tongue, forward bird!" screamed the goose girl in anger. She +seized a clod of earth and hurled it with such force that had it struck +the gander, he would have fallen flat in his tracks; but luck was with +him, and he dodged. + +The next day and the next day after that the goose girl sat down to +write before the flat rock in the meadow; but the quill was stubborn as +ever. She spoiled all but one sheet of the precious pink paper. Then +once more the blue gander spoke to the goose girl. + +"You have spoiled many sheets of your precious pink paper," said the +gander, nodding his head and cocking his eye in the wisest sort of way. +"Why will you not let the quill write a letter to me,--if only to see +what will happen?" + + [Illustration: So at last, after much thought, the goose girl did as + the blue gander bade.--_Page 237._] + +"But then I shall have no more paper on which to write to my lord, and I +shall dwell forever in my wretched hut instead of the castle of my +dreams," answered the goose girl. + +"Mayhap there might be a betwixt and between," remarked the gander +sagely. "Write the letter and hand it to me with a bow." + +So at last, after much thought, the goose girl did as the blue gander +bade. She dipped the quill in the purple ink, and immediately it touched +the paper it began to write such a marvelous letter as never before was +seen or read! It called the blue gander all manner of tender names and +vowed he was handsome and knowing. At the end, this remarkable quill +wrote the goose girl's name with a flourish so fine that she was pleased +in spite of herself. She folded the letter and handed it to the gander +with a bow. + +No sooner had she done this than the blue gander spread his wings and +flew away in the clouds, and in his place stood a handsome shepherd lad +dressed in blue corduroys. He had a hundred sheep in the fold that +followed him, and in his hand a bag of silver. + +"Dearest Goose Girl, wilt be mine?" asked he. "Yonder is my cottage, +where I am sure we shall be very happy." + +The goose girl was amazed at the change. But so handsome was this young +shepherd lad, and so winning of speech and manner, that all thoughts of +the gray stone castle and the lord tumbled out of her head. She gazed +with delight at the little cottage to which the shepherd lad pointed. +Blue smoke was curling from its chimney, and a bluebird was singing in a +cage beside the kitchen door. + +"We shall be married at once, shepherd lad of my heart," she answered +him sweetly, "and I shall make you griddlecakes for your supper." + +So the goose girl and the shepherd were married and went to live in the +little cottage. Indeed, for all that I know, there they may be living to +this day, for I have met no one who has ever told me of the death of +either. + + + + +CHAPTER X + +THE LITTLE BROWN MAN + + +Once upon a time, there lived at the top of a very tall tree a little +magic sprite. Now this magic sprite was called the Little Brown Man, and +the tree was called the Tall Pine Tree. The Little Brown Man was so very +small that had you ever seen him skipping and hopping about in his tree, +you would have thought him some lively little brown squirrel. The Little +Brown Man was always busy as a bee and twice as cheerful. He spent his +days sweeping away the withered pine needles so that fresh new green +needles might grow. With his cunning hands and powers of magic he mended +broken places in the bark with healing herbs. At night the Little Brown +Man rested from his labors. He curled himself up in the topmost boughs +of the Tall Pine Tree, and the tree would rock him gently and sing him +songs about the sea. + +Thus the Little Brown Man, scarce bigger than my hand, and the Tall Pine +Tree so high lived on in peace and happiness until an evil time befell +them. It happened on a black winter's night, when the Storm Wind in a +rage went crashing through the forest. Lashing the heavy branches of the +tallest trees, he tore them loose and flung them to the ground as though +they had been but so many twigs. Uprooting tiny trees and saplings by +the score, the Storm Wind tore his way along until he reached the Tall +Pine Tree. There he saw the Little Brown Man asleep in its topmost +boughs. + +"Ha, Little Brown Man!" laughed the Storm Wind wickedly. "At last I've +caught you unaware, and I will do you mischief!" So saying, he blew a +furious blast and flung the Little Brown Man to the ground beneath. +Then, in a wailing voice, the Storm Wind wove a spell of deep +enchantment round the Little Brown Man, singing thus: + + "Flaming eye and hand like claw, + You'll dwell at your tree top no more; + No child at your approach will stay, + Your face will scare them all away. + But 'til some child bids you good-day, + You'll dwell down on the ground so low, + And to the Tall Pine cannot go!" + +And then the Storm Wind blew away. + +For a long time, the Little Brown Man lay still as one dead, for the +fall had hurt him cruelly. The Tall Pine Tree wept bitterly at the +little sprite's misfortune, and by and by its tears, falling like rain, +wakened the Little Brown Man. But alas! The Storm Wind's wicked spell +had changed him, and the Little Brown Man with flaming eye and clawlike +hand was very fierce and terrible to look upon. + +"Oh, tell me, my Pine Tree!" cried the Little Brown Man in dismay, "how +am I changed thus? My hands are hands no longer, but claws like those of +wild beasts; my eye flames redder than the wicked wolf's! I cannot hop +or skip; indeed, I scarce can hobble, so bent and twisted have I grown." + +"Alas, my Little Brown Man!" the Tall Pine Tree replied. "While you did +sleep, the Storm Wind tore you from my topmost bough, and wove this +wicked spell around you. Until some child will speak to you a kindly +word, you must remain thus bound by this evil spell." + +In spite of his twisted back, the Little Brown Man tried again and again +to climb into the Tall Pine Tree, but all his efforts were in vain. +Wearied and tired out at last, he made himself a nest among the withered +pine needles and began to wait for the magic word to break the Storm +Wind's evil spell. + +At last the winter passed. The snow began to melt; the brook, freed of +its coat of ice, began to sing and chatter as it splashed along; the +birds built nests; the sun shone down; the pussy willows, gray and +brown, began to bud and bloom. Then boys and girls came out to play +beneath the trees and gather buttercups and bluebells. The Little Brown +Man's heart rejoiced, for he was sure the evil spell that bound him soon +would end. Whenever happy children played beside the Tall Pine Tree, he +would hobble toward them, saying: + +"Good day to you! Good day to you, my children!" + +But alas! The boys and girls were frightened of his clawlike hands and +flaming eye, and so they screamed and ran away. Thus springtime went, +and summer followed after; the maple leaves flamed red and gold in +autumn, and winter came again to wrap the forest in its cloak of snowy +white. Still the magic words to break the Storm Wind's spell remained +unspoken. Thus years and years rolled on. In winter now the Storm Wind +tore the branches of the Tall Pine Tree and flung them to the ground. +The Little Brown Man, with his cunning hands and powers of magic, could +no longer bind them fast. The Tall Pine Tree, once so green, grew old +and rusty looking, because the Little Brown Man could no longer sweep +the withered needles from its boughs. The Little Brown Man, down upon +the ground, was in despair. It seemed the wicked spell would never be +broken. No children ever lingered near the Tall Pine Tree. Indeed, when +once they passed that way, they never came again. They thought the +Little Brown Man was a wicked pixie who would do them harm. + +Then at last the Little Brown Man peered from his nest one bright +morning and saw a little girl walking slowly toward the Tall Pine Tree. +Little Nannie always walked very slowly, because she was quite lame, and +leaned upon a crutch. Sometimes she paused to watch a bee or butterfly; +sometimes she leaned against a tree to rest, and all the while the +Little Brown Man watched her eagerly. At last she reached the Tall Pine +Tree, and then he hobbled forward, saying: + +"Good day to you! Good day to you, my child!" + +His flaming eye and clawlike hand so startled Little Nannie that she +dropped her crutch; but when she saw that the Little Brown Man was also +very lame, she was sorry for him, and so she answered bravely: + +"Good day to you, good sir! I hope your health is fine," and so the +magic words were spoken. + +The Little Brown Man could scarcely believe his ears and began to caper +about and prance with glee. Then presto! In a twinkling vanished all his +ugly features, his back grew straight, and he was once more kindly-eyed. + +"Oh, Tall Pine Tree! Oh, Tall Pine Tree!" he cried in joy. "Behold now +I am free to climb up to your topmost boughs once more!" But in his joy +the Little Brown Man did not forget Little Nannie, who stood staring, +wide-eyed, at the wonders she had seen. + +"And now, my child!" cried he, "what can I do to serve you?" + +"Oh, please, sir," answered Little Nannie timidly, "if you would give me +my crutch, I would be most grateful. I am so lame that I cannot stoop to +pick it up myself." + +"Your crutch!" screamed the Little Brown Man in a passion of rage. "It +is a wicked stick that holds you back when you would run and play, and +so I treat it thus!" He seized the crutch and flung it in the brook, and +there it floated swiftly in the current. + +"Oh, Little Brown Man, what have you done!" wept Little Nannie. "Now I +can never wander in the forest any more, but must sit always in my +chair. I cannot walk without my crutch, and my mother is too poor to buy +me another." She leaned against the Tall Pine Tree and sobbed aloud. + +"Stop, stop, Little Nannie!" cried the Little Brown Man, "I meant you +no harm, as you will see. Now tell me this: Is it your wish to walk +always with a crutch? If so, say but a word, and I will bring it back +again, for now my powers of magic are returned." + +"Oh, Little Brown Man!" answered Little Nannie through her tears, "I do +not wish to walk always with a crutch; indeed, I often weep because I +wish to run and play like other boys and girls." + +"Then try and see if your wish come true, Little Nannie," commanded the +Little Brown Man. + +Little Nannie took a step forward, and then another and another, and +found her feet like wings. So, singing and laughing, she danced home +through the forest, the happiest child in all the world. When she +reached her gate, she cried out: + +"Oh, Mother! Mother! Come quickly and see! I can run and play like other +boys and girls! The Little Brown Man has granted my wish to me!" + +"My child!" cried her mother in amazement, "this is the work of a good +fairy without doubt! And what did you say to thank the Little Brown +Man?" + +"Oh, mother, I was so happy I forgot," replied Little Nannie, hanging +her head. + +"Then let us go in search of him at once," said her mother. + +So hand in hand they sought the Little Brown Man, but though they called +loud and long at the foot of the Tall Pine Tree, they could not find the +Little Brown Man. For at the magic of a kindly word, he had flown to the +topmost boughs, and there he dwelled for evermore. + + + + +CHAPTER XI + +A TALE FOR HALLOWEEN + + +Babette and Antone were the children of a very poor woodcutter. They +lived in a little cottage on the side of a steep mountain, and the +mountain looked upon a great forest. Now though their father toiled in +this forest from dawn until dark, he could earn but little. Wood in that +region was plentiful, and woodcutters were numerous. Their mother made +fine laces which Antone carried to the market to sell; but in spite of +all their efforts, the poor parents seldom could give their children +more than bread and broth to eat. Often indeed the broth was lacking if +the woodcutter found no hare in the traps he set. Babette and Antone, +however, were happy little children and never thought of their poverty. +But it worried the woodcutter that Antone was ten years old and had not +yet gone to school. Antone's mother taught him to read and write, that +the other boys and girls would not be too far beyond him, and Antone +studied his lessons diligently. Often as he sat doing his sums on the +hearthstone, with a bit of charcoal for a pencil, his mother would sigh +sadly. Antone did not like his mother to be sad, and so he always +laughed to cheer her. + +"Never fear, Mother," he would say. "Soon I shall send myself to school. +My vegetable patch does finely. Then, when I am a great scholar, you +shall be poor no longer. My father shall have a team of oxen and you a +fine satin gown; Babette shall have a dozen real dollies instead of the +turnip dollies she now rocks in her dolly cradle." + +"Ah, Antone, my son," his mother would answer with a sigh, "unless you +make your fortune as a maker of toys, I fear you will have no fortune at +all. Your fingers are as clever as a wizard's even now; and though you +are past ten, we cannot spare you to go to school." + +It was true, as she said. Antone made boats from bits of cedar wood, and +when he had fitted them with sails you could not tell them from any +that had come out of a shop. He carved a doll's cradle from a pine knot, +and for a dolly painted the white face of a turnip until one would think +it was the face of some fair maiden,--so blue were this turnip dolly's +eyes and so pink her cheeks, her hair of golden corn silk fell in such +waves and her robe of young cabbage leaves was so green and beautiful. +Then as often as this turnip dolly faded and began to shrivel, Antone +made another, which Babette declared was always more beautiful than the +one before. Babette had never been to the village and therefore knew +nothing of real dollies. She loved her turnip babies tenderly indeed; +she always carried them in her arm when she went with Antone to meet +their father and sang them little songs as she rocked them to sleep. + +Now it happened one night in the season of Halloween that Antone sat +carving jack-o'-lanterns to sell in the village. Babette, who was +rocking her dolly to sleep, sat watching him. Being but six, she knew +nothing about the fun which comes with Halloween, and so she listened +round-eyed with wonder to Antone, who knew all things about +jack-o'-lanterns. When she heard that boys and girls dressed like +goblins and witches frolicked in the village streets, Babette made up +her mind to frolic too. + +"How fine it must be!" she cried, clapping her hands. "Halloween must be +quite like Christmas!" + +"Not quite so fine as Christmas, Babette," answered Antone, as he carved +the teeth in the last jack-o'-lantern, "but Halloween is very fine +nevertheless. It is comical to see the jack-o'-lanterns bobbing up and +down with their faces grinning in the candle light. And on Halloween the +boys and girls play pranks on their elders that they would be well +switched for at any other time; but every one laughs and is gay on that +night." Antone finished the jack-o'-lantern and piled it with a dozen +more in his little cart. He would sell them all in the village when he +took his vegetables to market the next day; no one else could carve such +splendid pumpkin faces as Antone. + +"Then let us go and play pranks in the village too, Antone," cried +Babette. "Mother will make us goblin dresses, and there is still one +great pumpkin in your garden for a jack-o'-lantern. Oh, what a frolic we +shall have!" + +"Babette!" exclaimed Antone in astonishment. "Wherever did you get such +a notion? The frolic in the village is not for us. Mother has no time to +make us goblin dresses, and if she did, she has no goods; besides, how +should we find our way home through the forest?" + +"You know the way through the forest, Antone," insisted Babette, "and if +Mother cannot make us goblin dresses, we can go without. It will be dark +and our jack-o'-lantern will be as fine as any. Do come," she begged, "I +have never been to a Halloween frolic." + +"Now, Babette, I tell you we cannot go to the village to-morrow night," +answered Antone. "I could not find my way home through the forest after +dark, and we would both be lost. Be a good girl and do not tease any +more." + +Antone spoke sternly, and Babette burst into tears. She was very fond of +her own way, and when she could not have it, sometimes she was a very +naughty little girl. She sobbed and wept so piteously that Antone found +it hard to refuse her. However, he dared not go to the village at +night, as he feared to lose his way in the forest. So Antone trotted +Babette on his knee and whispered that he would buy her chocolate; but +she only wept the harder. + +"Now, Babette!" cried Antone at last, when Babette showed no signs of +stopping, "I cannot take you to the village; but if you are a good girl +and stop crying at once, I will make a little Halloween frolic just for +you and me. Now promise me you will not cry any more." + +Babette dried her eyes and promised. She wished a Halloween frolic, but +whether she frolicked at home or in the village mattered not at all. + +"Will we wear goblin dresses or ghost dresses, Antone?" she asked. + +Antone puzzled a moment before he answered. "Oh, ghost dresses, I +think," said he. + +The next day Babette was very good. She helped Antone gather his +vegetables for market, and when he returned sat beside him quietly while +he carved the last pumpkin from his garden. When the jack-o'-lantern was +finished, Antone lighted the candle just for one second so that she +might see it grinning in the light. Babette clapped her hands; but he +held up a warning finger. The Halloween frolic was to be a secret. After +supper the children went to bed as usual, but instead of undressing, +they pulled their white nightdresses over their heavy coats. + +"They will do for ghost dresses," whispered Antone when all was still, +and they crept softly out. In the moonlight the jack-o'-lantern was +grinning broadly to greet them. + +"Pumpkin is smiling at us," laughed Babette. She was very happy, for her +frolic was about to begin. + +Antone struck a match to light the candle, but there was no candle in +the jack-o'-lantern. + +"I put the candle in; I know I did," said he in surprise. He searched in +the dark, and Babette stopped her laughing. Antone looked about, and +there beneath the bench lay the remainder of his precious candle. It was +chewed to bits, and the wick was in shreds. + +"Oh, Babette!" cried he. "A wicked rat has stolen our candle, and I paid +a whole penny for it too!" + +"Oh, the bad rats!" cried Babette, bursting into tears. She stamped her +foot and sent the jack-o'-lantern rolling off the bench. It struck the +earth with a bump and dented its nose a trifle. + +"Now, Babette, what a baby you are! See what you have done!" cried +Antone. He stooped to pick up the pumpkin, but the pumpkin was too quick +for him. + +"Oh, no, you don't," laughed Pumpkin in a thick throaty sort of voice. +"Babette smashed my nose a little, but that's no matter on a Halloween +night. Good-by, boys and girls," he called airily and rolled swiftly +down the hill. + +"You come back here; you're my pumpkin," cried Antone and started after +the runaway. Babette followed, weeping and crying aloud. + +"Oh, my Halloween frolic! Oh, my Halloween frolic!" she mourned. "Now we +have no jack-o'-lantern and no candle either." + +"But just you wait until he rolls down into the vegetable garden," +shouted Antone, as he chased the swiftly rolling pumpkin. "He'll have to +stop at the hedge." He took his little sister's hand that she might run +faster. Pumpkin rolled along just in front of them but always just out +of their reach. When he reached the hedge, he gave a great leap and +landed directly in the vegetable patch. + +"Come on, you Turnips! Come on, you Carrots!" called Pumpkin, as he +rolled along. At his words the Carrots and Turnips tore themselves from +their beds and followed after him, shouting. + +"Come on! Come on!" called Pumpkin, and Parsnips and Beets followed the +Carrots and Turnips. + +"Look at Antone following us," yelled Pumpkin, and all his vegetable +followers turned and laughed in derision. + +"Ordinary nights you may be master, Antone," cried they, "but not on +Halloween. This is our night." + +"Well, you wait until I catch you and then see how hard you'll laugh," +called Antone angrily. To see his vegetable patch laid waste made him +furious. + +"But you'll wait until you catch us before you punish us, won't you, +Antone?" they answered mockingly. + +"Oh, it's Halloween! It's Halloween!" sang Pumpkin, turning handsprings +as he rolled along, and the rest of the vegetables did cartwheels as +they went careering after him. They looked like a dozen market stalls +upset on the hillside, and poor Antone nearly wept when he thought of +his loss. He followed them with determination. Antone was not a lad to +give up easily. + +"Follow me! Follow me!" sang Pumpkin, as he led the way to a tiny door +that opened beneath the forest. Turnips and Carrots squeezed through, +and Antone, fearing to be left behind, caught up Babette and ran faster. +Just as he reached the little door, a rough Potato tried to slam it in +his face. But Antone was too quick for him. He ran through and climbed +down the hole into the underground forest. There he continued the chase, +but the ground here was springy and elastic, and with each step Antone +began to gain on the vegetables. Babette's fatigue left her, and she +shook herself free of Antone's hand. + +"We'll catch up to them," declared Antone as they ran along. Even as he +spoke, Potato stubbed his toe, and Babette caught him. She held him +firmly, although he squirmed and tried his best to get free. + +"Help! Help!" bawled Potato, when he saw he was a prisoner. "Oh, +Pumpkin, wait for me!" he cried. The tears streamed from every one of +his eyes, and he looked truly sad. At his cries Pumpkin turned around, +and all the vegetables followed their leader. + +"Come now, Antone," began Pumpkin in a persuasive voice. "You might let +us have one night off, you know. Halloween is our night." Somewhere on +his run, Pumpkin had picked up two twigs, and on these he now balanced +himself rather unsteadily and thrust his leaves in the place where his +pockets would have been if he had had pockets. He looked so very jolly +and his grin was so very broad that Antone was inclined to give up the +prisoner; but just then he thought of the ruined vegetable garden and +grew angry again. + +"It is all very well for you to be polite, Pumpkin, and try to beg off +your friend," said Antone, "but this is the very fellow that tried to +slam the door in my face not two seconds ago." + +"Oh, Antone," cried Potato, "that's wrong. It was three seconds ago as +true as I live. I looked at my watch just as I was trying to pinch your +nose in the underground door, and it's quite three seconds ago; maybe +it's four." + +"Oh, hush up!" cried Pumpkin. "That's no way to talk when you are trying +to beg off. Let him off for my sake, Antone," he continued in a most +winning voice. "You'd get everlastingly tired of being in bed yourself; +you know you would. See if you wouldn't take the first chance to kick up +your heels if you could get it." + +"But, Pumpkin," replied Antone, "think of my vegetable garden; it is +ruined. I was saving all my vegetable money to go to school, and now I +cannot go for ever and ever so long. Besides, how could I know you got +tired of being in a bed? You never spoke to me before." + +"Well, I speak to you now," replied Pumpkin, "and as for your vegetable +patch, we'll all make that up to you, won't we, boys?" + +"We will! We will!" called the vegetables in chorus, and the Potato in +Babette's little fist yelled the loudest of all. + +"There, now, you see we mean no harm," declared Pumpkin, "so let Potato +go. Then you can both join us in our Halloween frolic." + +At the magic words "Halloween frolic," Babette put Potato down at once. +She was bound to have her fun, and, after all, the vegetables seemed to +be a jolly lot. So peace was made, and the children followed the bobbing +Turnips and Onions. Then shouts were heard, and Pumpkin ordered a halt. +Presently they were joined by a dozen or more Cabbages. + +"You're nice ones!" panted the Cabbages. "There we sat in the storeroom +waiting for you to call us, and the first thing we knew we saw you +pelting off down the hill like mad things." + +"My gracious!" said a very stout Cabbage, who was terribly out of +breath, "I'll have to take off my outer leaves before I go another step. +I feel as though I were boiled." + +Antone recognized the Cabbages at once. "You are Father Minette's +cabbages, are you not?" he inquired politely as they marched along. + +"Why, if it isn't little Antone, the woodcutter's son!" exclaimed the +very stout Cabbage. "Yes, we come from Minette's farm. Mother Minette +saved us for pickle, but we fooled her and slipped out of the storeroom +when she was not looking. Oh, we Cabbages are not so green as we look!" +The Cabbages all laughed, and Antone was surprised to find that he +laughed too. + +As they went marching on, Pumpkin sang and danced in the lead, and +Onions and Carrots echoed his hearty songs. Presently great black cats +with shining yellow eyes stepped from behind the trees, and each cat was +soon joined by its mistress, who was no other than a real witch in tall +peaked hat and carrying a broomstick. The Cabbages, who were a friendly +lot, introduced Antone and Babette to these witches, and the witches +seemed pleased to meet the children. + +"They do not seem to be wicked witches, do they, Antone?" whispered +Babette. + +"Oh, my dear," replied a witch who overheard, "we are not a bit wicked +on Halloween, you know. Any other night, I would probably do you a +mischief. It is my nature, you know." She reached in her bag and handed +Babette a peppermint. Babette, who was very fond of peppermint, ate it +up with all haste. + +"You shouldn't do that, my dear," reproved the witch. "It is seldom +witches give peppermints, and when they do the peppermints should be +treasured. Here is another to keep for your pocket, and then you will +never be without a peppermint when you want one." And she handed Babette +another. Babette curtseyed so prettily that the witch was charmed and +took her to ride on her broomstick. + +It was the gayest company one ever could imagine, as they marched along. +Every vegetable was singing a different Halloween song in a different +key, and they all had voices that sang out of tune by nature. Babette, +her little white nightdress flying in the breeze, was riding on the +witch's broomstick and singing loudly as the rest. When they reached the +dancing-floor it was lighted with millions and millions of glowworms, +and an orchestra of ten thousand frogs hummed lively tunes in their +throats. Pumpkin seized a handful of glowworms and put them in his head. +Then with his features all aglow he cried out: + +"Ready for the dance!" + + [Illustration: It was the gayest company one ever could imagine, + as they marched along.--_Page 262._] + +Instead of taking partners, the vegetables just plunged on to the floor +and began to jump about like mad. If they fell down they did not jump up +at once but rolled around the floor most good-naturedly. They looked so +like vegetables boiling about in a great soup kettle that Antone thought +he should die of laughing. The witches took their brooms and began a +sort of "ladies-change" figure while they chased their cats around the +edge of the circle. Babette danced hardest of all. She knew no more of +dancing than any Carrot or Parsnip, but she capered wildly, singing at +the top of her voice. + +"Come and dance too, Antone," called Babette, as she went jumping past +her brother, but he shook his head and laughed. + +"I am too big for such nonsense," said he. "I am ten, you know." + +"What nonsense!" cried a witch who was chasing her cat close by. "Ten is +exactly the right age to have fun." She raised her broom playfully, and +before he knew it, she swept Antone into the middle of the dance. +Pumpkin, his grinning features all aglow, went flying past and made +Antone feel proud. Pumpkin was certainly the handsomest vegetable of the +lot. As the night grew later, the frogs hummed faster, but hum as fast +as they would, they could not keep up with the frisky vegetables. Beets +and Cauliflowers continued to bob up and down like mad; Cabbages from +Minette's farm lost leaf after leaf; Carrots and Onions grew battered +from much tumbling about, and the merry din of song and laughter grew +louder and louder. + +"Let's play Blind Man's Buff," called Antone. "I'll be 'it' and show you +how to play." He tied the handkerchief over his eyes, and the witches +and their black cats went darting hither and thither. The vegetables +were so pleased with this new game that they would play nothing else. +They might have been playing it yet had not a cock crowed suddenly. + +"Good gracious me!" cried a witch. "The glowworms are all gone out. It's +nearly morning. All who are going back to the vegetable patch had best +be on their way." + +"Not I!" cried Pumpkin. "I've done with vegetable patches forevermore." + +"Not we," exclaimed the Cabbages. "We're going to turn savage and be +wild cabbages for the rest of our days! We shan't go back to Mother +Minette's pickle jars." Straightway every vegetable began to raise its +voice and declare it would not go back to Antone's patch. + +"Oh, hush, all of you!" cried the witch. "Stay in the woods for the rest +of your life if you like. It is nothing to me; but what of Antone and +Babette? Who is to take them home?" + +"Well, ma'am," replied Pumpkin with a low bow, "we thought that you +might be good enough to give them a ride home on your broomstick." + +"But Pumpkin!" cried Antone in dismay, "you promised to make it up to me +if I let Potato go, and I think you should all return with me. I shall +not have any vegetables if you all remain in the woods." + +"Never worry about that, Antone," replied Pumpkin with a lordly air. +"Here is a purse for each of you, and if you take good care never to +lose them, you will have plenty of gold forever. Isn't that true, boys?" + +"True as we're not going back to the farm," cried the Cabbages. "You had +best hurry and plant yourself before it grows daylight, Pumpkin," they +warned and began to dig holes in the earth. Before Antone and Babette +had mounted the witch's broomstick, all the Carrots and Turnips and even +Pumpkin were all tucked up in their sandy beds. They called a faint +good-by as the children sailed off with the witch. + +"Oh, what a beautiful Halloween frolic," sighed Babette as she leaned +her head on Antone's shoulder and fell fast asleep. + +The broomstick flew with the swiftness of an eagle, and the witch warned +Antone to hold Babette with a firm grasp. One by one the stars went out +as they sped across the sky. The black cat steered and seemed to know +the exact way to the woodcutter's cottage, for just as the dawn was +breaking the broomstick glided down to Babette's window. The witch shook +hands with Antone, and the black cat politely jumped off to help Antone +with his little sister. Before the good creature could mount again, the +broomstick was off like whirlwind, and it was left behind. + +"This broomstick is so wild I cannot stop it," called the witch from +the clouds. "Keep good care of my cat until next Halloween." + +Antone put Babette in her little crib and made the black cat a +comfortable bed in the kitchen. Then he lay down to sleep and dreamed of +the Halloween frolic until he was wakened by his mother. + +"Come, Antone!" she cried. "I have good news for you. Only look from the +window and see the great black cat without a single white hair that sits +washing his face in the sun. Such a cat coming to us on Halloween will +surely bring us good luck! But come, my child, get up, for the sun is +high, and it is time for you to dig your vegetables for market." + +"My vegetables have gone wild in the forest," muttered Antone, "but it +is no matter, for here is a bag of gold which they gave me. The cat is +the black cat of the witch who brought us home on her broomstick; so let +me sleep, Mother, for I am weary with dancing at the Halloween frolic." +He closed his eyes and slept again, while his mother examined the +leather bag. + +"Antone, my son!" she screamed. "Here is gold yellow as a pumpkin! Where +have you been to gather such wealth?" She shook him and gave him no +peace until he waked fully and told the story. Even then his mother did +not believe it, but threw up her hands and wept that her son should thus +rave with fever. + +The woodcutter and Babette came running to see what had happened, and at +the sight of the second bag of gold the poor woman grew calmer. Babette +showed the peppermint which the witch had given her, and the mother +doubted no more. + +"To receive a peppermint from a witch is surely a mark of great favor," +said she, and began to laugh through her tears. "I thought I was +dreaming or that Antone raved of fever, for never in my life had I seen +so much gold." + +"It is like the fairies to bless the children of the poor," said the +woodcutter. "Now Antone will go to school, and Mother will have a +handsome dress and shawl." + +"And is it not as I said?" cried his wife. "A black cat coming on +Halloween would bring us good luck, and here is the luck already!" + +It would have been hard to find a happier family than the woodcutter's +as they set out for the village that day. When it was told that the +woodcutter was looking for a pair of oxen, some folk laughed outright. +The woodcutter was too poor to feed a pair of canaries, they declared; +but when it became known that the woodcutter's wife had bought a new +dress and a golden ring, they began to wonder who had died and left the +woodcutter a fortune. Antone told the tale of their wealth to those who +questioned him, and straightway the village children ran to throw their +jack-o'-lanterns from the roofs and high places. But their pumpkins +broke or stayed on the ground below where they had fallen (it was no +longer Halloween, remember). At noon, when the woodcutter and his family +sat down to dinner in the village inn, the landlord threatened to charge +a penny from all who stood gazing through the windows. Some folk scoffed +openly and declared it was a tale to tell children and dullards; but +there were the two leather bags filled with gold. The greatest marvel of +all was, that no matter how much the woodcutter or his wife spent from +these, the bags always remained brimful of gold! + +Antone chose a pair of steel skates in the village shop and bought an +armful of books for which he had longed. Babette, however, with her +usual perverse ways, would have none of the dollies in the village toy +shop. They were ugly, she declared, and their cheeks were not pink and +beautiful as were the turnip dollies Antone made for her. + +And ever after that the woodcutter and his wife were no longer poor +folk. They had white bread and even butter every day of their lives, and +on Sundays and holidays they had roasted fowl for their dinner. Antone +went to school, and Babette had an embroidered frock which was the envy +of every child in the village. Their mother no longer sighed as she went +about her household tasks, and neither did she strain her eyes making +fine laces for market. Instead she rode proudly on the seat of her +husband's ox cart when he delivered wood in the village; sometimes she +even drank tea with the mayor's wife! Visitors from far and near went to +see the famous spot where Antone's vegetables all ran away one Halloween +night; and to this day there lives not a man who can make grow on that +land cabbages or turnips or any other vegetable, although in a spot in +the forest, not far off, cabbages and pumpkins and all such vegetables +grow wild. + +Each year, as regularly as Halloween came to mark the harvest time, +Antone and Babette mounted the broomstick with the witch and rode off to +the Halloween frolic. There they always found Pumpkin grown rounder and +jollier than the year before, and they always rode home across the sky +just as the dawn was breaking. The black cat became so fond of Babette +that it never again rejoined its rightful mistress, but remained with +the woodcutter and his family and brought them good luck for the rest of +their days. + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's The Green Forest Fairy Book, by Loretta Ellen Brady + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GREEN FOREST FAIRY BOOK *** + +***** This file should be named 35458.txt or 35458.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/3/5/4/5/35458/ + +Produced by David Edwards and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was +produced from images generously made available by The +Internet Archive) + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, +set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to +copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to +protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project +Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you +charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you +do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the +rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose +such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and +research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do +practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is +subject to the trademark license, especially commercial +redistribution. + + + +*** START: FULL LICENSE *** + +THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE +PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK + +To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free +distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work +(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project +Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project +Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at +http://gutenberg.org/license). + + +Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm +electronic works + +1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm +electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to +and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property +(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all +the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy +all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession. +If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the +terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or +entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8. + +1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be +used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who +agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few +things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works +even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See +paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement +and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic +works. See paragraph 1.E below. + +1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation" +or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the +collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an +individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are +located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from +copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative +works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg +are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project +Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by +freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of +this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with +the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by +keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project +Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others. + +1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern +what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in +a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check +the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement +before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or +creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project +Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning +the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United +States. + +1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg: + +1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate +access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently +whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the +phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project +Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed, +copied or distributed: + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + +1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived +from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is +posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied +and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees +or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work +with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the +work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 +through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the +Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or +1.E.9. + +1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted +with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution +must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional +terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked +to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the +permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work. + +1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm +License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this +work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm. + +1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this +electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without +prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with +active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project +Gutenberg-tm License. + +1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary, +compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any +word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or +distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than +"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version +posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org), +you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a +copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon +request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other +form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm +License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1. + +1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying, +performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works +unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9. + +1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing +access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided +that + +- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from + the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method + you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is + owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he + has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the + Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments + must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you + prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax + returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and + sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the + address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to + the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation." + +- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies + you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he + does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm + License. You must require such a user to return or + destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium + and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of + Project Gutenberg-tm works. + +- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any + money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the + electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days + of receipt of the work. + +- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free + distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works. + +1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm +electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set +forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from +both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael +Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the +Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below. + +1.F. + +1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable +effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread +public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm +collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic +works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain +"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or +corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual +property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a +computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by +your equipment. + +1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right +of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project +Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project +Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all +liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal +fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT +LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE +PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE +TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE +LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR +INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH +DAMAGE. + +1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a +defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can +receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a +written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you +received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with +your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with +the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a +refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity +providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to +receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy +is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further +opportunities to fix the problem. + +1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth +in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER +WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO +WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE. + +1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied +warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages. +If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the +law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be +interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by +the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any +provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions. + +1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the +trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone +providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance +with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production, +promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works, +harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees, +that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do +or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm +work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any +Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause. + + +Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm + +Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of +electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers +including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists +because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from +people in all walks of life. + +Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the +assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's +goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will +remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project +Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure +and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations. +To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation +and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4 +and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org. + + +Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive +Foundation + +The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit +501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the +state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal +Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification +number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at +http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg +Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent +permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws. + +The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S. +Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered +throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at +809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email +business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact +information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official +page at http://pglaf.org + +For additional contact information: + Dr. Gregory B. Newby + Chief Executive and Director + gbnewby@pglaf.org + + +Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg +Literary Archive Foundation + +Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide +spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of +increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be +freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest +array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations +($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt +status with the IRS. + +The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating +charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United +States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a +considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up +with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations +where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To +SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any +particular state visit http://pglaf.org + +While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we +have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition +against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who +approach us with offers to donate. + +International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make +any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from +outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff. + +Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation +methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other +ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. +To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate + + +Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic +works. + +Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm +concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared +with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project +Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support. + + +Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed +editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S. +unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily +keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition. + + +Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility: + + http://www.gutenberg.org + +This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm, +including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary +Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to +subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks. |
