- Project Gutenberg's The Princess and the Goblin, by George MacDonald
- 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.net
- Title: The Princess and the Goblin
- Author: George MacDonald
- Posting Date: September 27, 2008 [EBook #708]
- Release Date: November, 1996
- Language: English
- *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PRINCESS AND THE GOBLIN ***
- Produced by Jo Churcher. HTML version by Al Haines.
- THE PRINCESS AND THE GOBLIN
- by
- GEORGE MACDONALD
- CONTENTS
- 1. Why the Princess Has a Story About Her
- 2. The Princess Loses Herself
- 3. The Princess and--We Shall See Who
- 4. What the Nurse Thought of It
- 5. The Princess Lets Well Alone
- 6. The Little Miner
- 7. The Mines
- 8. The Goblins
- 9. The Hall of the Goblin Palace
- 10. The Princess's King-Papa
- 11. The Old Lady's Bedroom
- 12. A Short Chapter About Curdie
- 13. The Cobs' Creatures
- 14. That Night Week
- 15. Woven and then Spun
- 16. The Ring
- 17. Springtime
- 18. Curdie's Clue
- 19. Goblin Counsels
- 20. Irene's Clue
- 21. The Escape
- 22. The Old Lady and Curdie
- 23. Curdie and His Mother
- 24. Irene Behaves Like a Princess
- 25. Curdie Comes to Grief
- 26. The Goblin-Miners
- 27. The Goblins in the King's House
- 28. Curdie's Guide
- 29. Masonwork
- 30. The King and the Kiss
- 31. The Subterranean Waters
- 32. The Last Chapter
- CHAPTER 1
- Why the Princess Has a Story About Her
- There was once a little princess whose father was king over a great
- country full of mountains and valleys. His palace was built upon one
- of the mountains, and was very grand and beautiful. The princess,
- whose name was Irene, was born there, but she was sent soon after her
- birth, because her mother was not very strong, to be brought up by
- country people in a large house, half castle, half farmhouse, on the
- side of another mountain, about half-way between its base and its peak.
- The princess was a sweet little creature, and at the time my story
- begins was about eight years old, I think, but she got older very fast.
- Her face was fair and pretty, with eyes like two bits of night sky,
- each with a star dissolved in the blue. Those eyes you would have
- thought must have known they came from there, so often were they turned
- up in that direction. The ceiling of her nursery was blue, with stars
- in it, as like the sky as they could make it. But I doubt if ever she
- saw the real sky with the stars in it, for a reason which I had better
- mention at once.
- These mountains were full of hollow places underneath; huge caverns,
- and winding ways, some with water running through them, and some
- shining with all colours of the rainbow when a light was taken in.
- There would not have been much known about them, had there not been
- mines there, great deep pits, with long galleries and passages running
- off from them, which had been dug to get at the ore of which the
- mountains were full. In the course of digging, the miners came upon
- many of these natural caverns. A few of them had far-off openings out
- on the side of a mountain, or into a ravine.
- Now in these subterranean caverns lived a strange race of beings,
- called by some gnomes, by some kobolds, by some goblins. There was a
- legend current in the country that at one time they lived above ground,
- and were very like other people. But for some reason or other,
- concerning which there were different legendary theories, the king had
- laid what they thought too severe taxes upon them, or had required
- observances of them they did not like, or had begun to treat them with
- more severity, in some way or other, and impose stricter laws; and the
- consequence was that they had all disappeared from the face of the
- country. According to the legend, however, instead of going to some
- other country, they had all taken refuge in the subterranean caverns,
- whence they never came out but at night, and then seldom showed
- themselves in any numbers, and never to many people at once. It was
- only in the least frequented and most difficult parts of the mountains
- that they were said to gather even at night in the open air. Those who
- had caught sight of any of them said that they had greatly altered in
- the course of generations; and no wonder, seeing they lived away from
- the sun, in cold and wet and dark places. They were now, not
- ordinarily ugly, but either absolutely hideous, or ludicrously
- grotesque both in face and form. There was no invention, they said, of
- the most lawless imagination expressed by pen or pencil, that could
- surpass the extravagance of their appearance. But I suspect those who
- said so had mistaken some of their animal companions for the goblins
- themselves--of which more by and by. The goblins themselves were not
- so far removed from the human as such a description would imply. And
- as they grew misshapen in body they had grown in knowledge and
- cleverness, and now were able to do things no mortal could see the
- possibility of. But as they grew in cunning, they grew in mischief,
- and their great delight was in every way they could think of to annoy
- the people who lived in the open-air storey above them. They had
- enough of affection left for each other to preserve them from being
- absolutely cruel for cruelty's sake to those that came in their way;
- but still they so heartily cherished the ancestral grudge against those
- who occupied their former possessions and especially against the
- descendants of the king who had caused their expulsion, that they
- sought every opportunity of tormenting them in ways that were as odd as
- their inventors; and although dwarfed and misshapen, they had strength
- equal to their cunning. In the process of time they had got a king and
- a government of their own, whose chief business, beyond their own
- simple affairs, was to devise trouble for their neighbours. It will
- now be pretty evident why the little princess had never seen the sky at
- night. They were much too afraid of the goblins to let her out of the
- house then, even in company with ever so many attendants; and they had
- good reason, as we shall see by and by.
- CHAPTER 2
- The Princess Loses Herself
- I have said the Princess Irene was about eight years old when my story
- begins. And this is how it begins.
- One very wet day, when the mountain was covered with mist which was
- constantly gathering itself together into raindrops, and pouring down
- on the roofs of the great old house, whence it fell in a fringe of
- water from the eaves all round about it, the princess could not of
- course go out. She got very tired, so tired that even her toys could
- no longer amuse her. You would wonder at that if I had time to
- describe to you one half of the toys she had. But then, you wouldn't
- have the toys themselves, and that makes all the difference: you can't
- get tired of a thing before you have it. It was a picture, though,
- worth seeing--the princess sitting in the nursery with the sky ceiling
- over her head, at a great table covered with her toys. If the artist
- would like to draw this, I should advise him not to meddle with the
- toys. I am afraid of attempting to describe them, and I think he had
- better not try to draw them. He had better not. He can do a thousand
- things I can't, but I don't think he could draw those toys. No man
- could better make the princess herself than he could, though--leaning
- with her back bowed into the back of the chair, her head hanging down,
- and her hands in her lap, very miserable as she would say herself, not
- even knowing what she would like, except it were to go out and get
- thoroughly wet, and catch a particularly nice cold, and have to go to
- bed and take gruel. The next moment after you see her sitting there,
- her nurse goes out of the room.
- Even that is a change, and the princess wakes up a little, and looks
- about her. Then she tumbles off her chair and runs out of the door,
- not the same door the nurse went out of, but one which opened at the
- foot of a curious old stair of worm-eaten oak, which looked as if never
- anyone had set foot upon it. She had once before been up six steps,
- and that was sufficient reason, in such a day, for trying to find out
- what was at the top of it.
- Up and up she ran--such a long way it seemed to her!--until she came to
- the top of the third flight. There she found the landing was the end
- of a long passage. Into this she ran. It was full of doors on each
- side. There were so many that she did not care to open any, but ran on
- to the end, where she turned into another passage, also full of doors.
- When she had turned twice more, and still saw doors and only doors
- about her, she began to get frightened. It was so silent! And all
- those doors must hide rooms with nobody in them! That was dreadful.
- Also the rain made a great trampling noise on the roof. She turned and
- started at full speed, her little footsteps echoing through the sounds
- of the rain--back for the stairs and her safe nursery. So she thought,
- but she had lost herself long ago. It doesn't follow that she was
- lost, because she had lost herself, though.
- She ran for some distance, turned several times, and then began to be
- afraid. Very soon she was sure that she had lost the way back. Rooms
- everywhere, and no stair! Her little heart beat as fast as her little
- feet ran, and a lump of tears was growing in her throat. But she was
- too eager and perhaps too frightened to cry for some time. At last her
- hope failed her. Nothing but passages and doors everywhere! She threw
- herself on the floor, and burst into a wailing cry broken by sobs.
- She did not cry long, however, for she was as brave as could be
- expected of a princess of her age. After a good cry, she got up, and
- brushed the dust from her frock. Oh, what old dust it was! Then she
- wiped her eyes with her hands, for princesses don't always have their
- handkerchiefs in their pockets, any more than some other little girls I
- know of. Next, like a true princess, she resolved on going wisely to
- work to find her way back: she would walk through the passages, and
- look in every direction for the stair. This she did, but without
- success. She went over the same ground again an again without knowing
- it, for the passages and doors were all alike. At last, in a corner,
- through a half-open door, she did see a stair. But alas! it went the
- wrong way: instead of going down, it went up. Frightened as she was,
- however, she could not help wishing to see where yet further the stair
- could lead. It was very narrow, and so steep that she went on like a
- four-legged creature on her hands and feet.
- CHAPTER 3
- The Princess and--We Shall See Who
- When she came to the top, she found herself in a little square place,
- with three doors, two opposite each other, and one opposite the top of
- the stair. She stood for a moment, without an idea in her little head
- what to do next. But as she stood, she began to hear a curious humming
- sound. Could it be the rain? No. It was much more gentle, and even
- monotonous than the sound of the rain, which now she scarcely heard.
- The low sweet humming sound went on, sometimes stopping for a little
- while and then beginning again. It was more like the hum of a very
- happy bee that had found a rich well of honey in some globular flower,
- than anything else I can think of at this moment. Where could it come
- from? She laid her ear first to one of the doors to hearken if it was
- there--then to another. When she laid her ear against the third door,
- there could be no doubt where it came from: it must be from something
- in that room. What could it be? She was rather afraid, but her
- curiosity was stronger than her fear, and she opened the door very
- gently and peeped in. What do you think she saw? A very old lady who
- sat spinning.
- Perhaps you will wonder how the princess could tell that the old lady
- was an old lady, when I inform you that not only was she beautiful, but
- her skin was smooth and white. I will tell you more. Her hair was
- combed back from her forehead and face, and hung loose far down and all
- over her back. That is not much like an old lady--is it? Ah! but it
- was white almost as snow. And although her face was so smooth, her
- eyes looked so wise that you could not have helped seeing she must be
- old. The princess, though she could not have told you why, did think
- her very old indeed--quite fifty, she said to herself. But she was
- rather older than that, as you shall hear.
- While the princess stared bewildered, with her head just inside the
- door, the old lady lifted hers, and said, in a sweet, but old and
- rather shaky voice, which mingled very pleasantly with the continued
- hum of her wheel:
- 'Come in, my dear; come in. I am glad to see you.'
- That the princess was a real princess you might see now quite plainly;
- for she didn't hang on to the handle of the door, and stare without
- moving, as I have known some do who ought to have been princesses but
- were only rather vulgar little girls. She did as she was told, stepped
- inside the door at once, and shut it gently behind her.
- 'Come to me, my dear,' said the old lady.
- And again the princess did as she was told. She approached the old
- lady--rather slowly, I confess--but did not stop until she stood by her
- side, and looked up in her face with her blue eyes and the two melted
- stars in them.
- 'Why, what have you been doing with your eyes, child?' asked the old
- lady.
- 'Crying,' answered the princess.
- 'Why, child?'
- 'Because I couldn't find my way down again.'
- 'But you could find your way up.'
- 'Not at first--not for a long time.'
- 'But your face is streaked like the back of a zebra. Hadn't you a
- handkerchief to wipe your eyes with?'
- 'No.'
- 'Then why didn't you come to me to wipe them for you?'
- 'Please, I didn't know you were here. I will next time.'
- 'There's a good child!' said the old lady.
- Then she stopped her wheel, and rose, and, going out of the room,
- returned with a little silver basin and a soft white towel, with which
- she washed and wiped the bright little face. And the princess thought
- her hands were so smooth and nice!
- When she carried away the basin and towel, the little princess wondered
- to see how straight and tall she was, for, although she was so old, she
- didn't stoop a bit. She was dressed in black velvet with thick white
- heavy-looking lace about it; and on the black dress her hair shone like
- silver. There was hardly any more furniture in the room than there
- might have been in that of the poorest old woman who made her bread by
- her spinning. There was no carpet on the floor--no table
- anywhere--nothing but the spinning-wheel and the chair beside it. When
- she came back, she sat down and without a word began her spinning once
- more, while Irene, who had never seen a spinning-wheel, stood by her
- side and looked on. When the old lady had got her thread fairly going
- again, she said to the princess, but without looking at her:
- 'Do you know my name, child?'
- 'No, I don't know it,' answered the princess.
- 'My name is Irene.'
- 'That's my name!' cried the princess.
- 'I know that. I let you have mine. I haven't got your name. You've
- got mine.'
- 'How can that be?' asked the princess, bewildered. 'I've always had my
- name.'
- 'Your papa, the king, asked me if I had any objection to your having
- it; and, of course, I hadn't. I let you have it with pleasure.'
- 'It was very kind of you to give me your name--and such a pretty one,'
- said the princess.
- 'Oh, not so very kind!' said the old lady. 'A name is one of those
- things one can give away and keep all the same. I have a good many
- such things. Wouldn't you like to know who I am, child?'
- 'Yes, that I should--very much.'
- 'I'm your great-great-grandmother,' said the lady.
- 'What's that?' asked the princess.
- 'I'm your father's mother's father's mother.'
- 'Oh, dear! I can't understand that,' said the princess.
- 'I dare say not. I didn't expect you would. But that's no reason why
- I shouldn't say it.'
- 'Oh, no!' answered the princess.
- 'I will explain it all to you when you are older,' the lady went on.
- 'But you will be able to understand this much now: I came here to take
- care of you.'
- 'Is it long since you came? Was it yesterday? Or was it today,
- because it was so wet that I couldn't get out?'
- 'I've been here ever since you came yourself.'
- 'What a long time!' said the princess. 'I don't remember it at all.'
- 'No. I suppose not.'
- 'But I never saw you before.'
- 'No. But you shall see me again.'
- 'Do you live in this room always?'
- 'I don't sleep in it. I sleep on the opposite side of the landing. I
- sit here most of the day.'
- 'I shouldn't like it. My nursery is much prettier. You must be a
- queen too, if you are my great big grand-mother.'
- 'Yes, I am a queen.'
- 'Where is your crown, then?' 'In my bedroom.'
- 'I should like to see it.'
- 'You shall some day--not today.'
- 'I wonder why nursie never told me.'
- 'Nursie doesn't know. She never saw me.'
- 'But somebody knows that you are in the house?'
- 'No; nobody.'
- 'How do you get your dinner, then?'
- 'I keep poultry--of a sort.'
- 'Where do you keep them?'
- 'I will show you.'
- 'And who makes the chicken broth for you?'
- 'I never kill any of MY chickens.'
- 'Then I can't understand.'
- 'What did you have for breakfast this morning?' asked the lady.
- 'Oh! I had bread and milk, and an egg--I dare say you eat their eggs.'
- 'Yes, that's it. I eat their eggs.'
- 'Is that what makes your hair so white?'
- 'No, my dear. It's old age. I am very old.'
- 'I thought so. Are you fifty?'
- 'Yes--more than that.'
- 'Are you a hundred?'
- 'Yes--more than that. I am too old for you to guess. Come and see my
- chickens.'
- Again she stopped her spinning. She rose, took the princess by the
- hand, led her out of the room, and opened the door opposite the stair.
- The princess expected to see a lot of hens and chickens, but instead of
- that, she saw the blue sky first, and then the roofs of the house, with
- a multitude of the loveliest pigeons, mostly white, but of all colours,
- walking about, making bows to each other, and talking a language she
- could not understand. She clapped her hands with delight, and up rose
- such a flapping of wings that she in her turn was startled.
- 'You've frightened my poultry,' said the old lady, smiling.
- 'And they've frightened me,' said the princess, smiling too. 'But what
- very nice poultry! Are the eggs nice?'
- 'Yes, very nice.' 'What a small egg-spoon you must have! Wouldn't it
- be better to keep hens, and get bigger eggs?'
- 'How should I feed them, though?'
- 'I see,' said the princess. 'The pigeons feed themselves. They've got
- wings.'
- 'Just so. If they couldn't fly, I couldn't eat their eggs.'
- 'But how do you get at the eggs? Where are their nests?'
- The lady took hold of a little loop of string in the wall at the side
- of the door and, lifting a shutter, showed a great many pigeon-holes
- with nests, some with young ones and some with eggs in them. The birds
- came in at the other side, and she took out the eggs on this side. She
- closed it again quickly, lest the young ones should be frightened.
- 'Oh, what a nice way!' cried the princess. 'Will you give me an egg to
- eat? I'm rather hungry.'
- 'I will some day, but now you must go back, or nursie will be miserable
- about you. I dare say she's looking for you everywhere.'
- 'Except here,' answered the princess. 'Oh, how surprised she will be
- when I tell her about my great big grand-grand-mother!'
- 'Yes, that she will!' said the old lady with a curious smile. 'Mind you
- tell her all about it exactly.'
- 'That I will. Please will you take me back to her?'
- 'I can't go all the way, but I will take you to the top of the stair,
- and then you must run down quite fast into your own room.'
- The little princess put her hand in the old lady's, who, looking this
- way and that, brought her to the top of the first stair, and thence to
- the bottom of the second, and did not leave her till she saw her
- half-way down the third. When she heard the cry of her nurse's
- pleasure at finding her, she turned and walked up the stairs again,
- very fast indeed for such a very great grandmother, and sat down to her
- spinning with another strange smile on her sweet old face.
- About this spinning of hers I will tell you more another time.
- Guess what she was spinning.
- CHAPTER 4
- What the Nurse Thought of It
- 'Why, where can you have been, princess?' asked the nurse, taking her
- in her arms. 'It's very unkind of you to hide away so long. I began to
- be afraid--' Here she checked herself.
- 'What were you afraid of, nursie?' asked the princess.
- 'Never mind,' she answered. 'Perhaps I will tell you another day. Now
- tell me where you have been.'
- 'I've been up a long way to see my very great, huge, old grandmother,'
- said the princess.
- 'What do you mean by that?' asked the nurse, who thought she was making
- fun.
- 'I mean that I've been a long way up and up to see My GREAT
- grandmother. Ah, nursie, you don't know what a beautiful mother of
- grandmothers I've got upstairs. She is such an old lady, with such
- lovely white hair--as white as my silver cup. Now, when I think of it,
- I think her hair must be silver.'
- 'What nonsense you are talking, princess!' said the nurse.
- 'I'm not talking nonsense,' returned Irene, rather offended. 'I will
- tell you all about her. She's much taller than you, and much prettier.'
- 'Oh, I dare say!' remarked the nurse.
- 'And she lives upon pigeons' eggs.'
- 'Most likely,' said the nurse.
- 'And she sits in an empty room, spin-spinning all day long.'
- 'Not a doubt of it,' said the nurse.
- 'And she keeps her crown in her bedroom.'
- 'Of course--quite the proper place to keep her crown in. She wears it
- in bed, I'll be bound.'
- 'She didn't say that. And I don't think she does. That wouldn't be
- comfortable--would it? I don't think my papa wears his crown for a
- night-cap. Does he, nursie?'
- 'I never asked him. I dare say he does.'
- 'And she's been there ever since I came here--ever so many years.'
- 'Anybody could have told you that,' said the nurse, who did not believe
- a word Irene was saying.
- 'Why didn't you tell me, then?'
- 'There was no necessity. You could make it all up for yourself.'
- 'You don't believe me, then!' exclaimed the princess, astonished and
- angry, as she well might be.
- 'Did you expect me to believe you, princess?' asked the nurse coldly.
- 'I know princesses are in the habit of telling make-believes, but you
- are the first I ever heard of who expected to have them believed,' she
- added, seeing that the child was strangely in earnest.
- The princess burst into tears.
- 'Well, I must say,' remarked the nurse, now thoroughly vexed with her
- for crying, 'it is not at all becoming in a princess to tell stories
- and expect to be believed just because she is a princess.'
- 'But it's quite true, I tell you.'
- 'You've dreamt it, then, child.'
- 'No, I didn't dream it. I went upstairs, and I lost myself, and if I
- hadn't found the beautiful lady, I should never have found myself.'
- 'Oh, I dare say!'
- 'Well, you just come up with me, and see if I'm not telling the truth.'
- 'Indeed I have other work to do. It's your dinnertime, and I won't
- have any more such nonsense.'
- The princess wiped her eyes, and her face grew so hot that they were
- soon quite dry. She sat down to her dinner, but ate next to nothing.
- Not to be believed does not at all agree with princesses: for a real
- princess cannot tell a lie. So all the afternoon she did not speak a
- word. Only when the nurse spoke to her, she answered her, for a real
- princess is never rude--even when she does well to be offended.
- Of course the nurse was not comfortable in her mind--not that she
- suspected the least truth in Irene's story, but that she loved her
- dearly, and was vexed with herself for having been cross to her. She
- thought her crossness was the cause of the princess's unhappiness, and
- had no idea that she was really and deeply hurt at not being believed.
- But, as it became more and more plain during the evening in her every
- motion and look, that, although she tried to amuse herself with her
- toys, her heart was too vexed and troubled to enjoy them, her nurse's
- discomfort grew and grew. When bedtime came, she undressed and laid
- her down, but the child, instead of holding up her little mouth to be
- kissed, turned away from her and lay still. Then nursie's heart gave
- way altogether, and she began to cry. At the sound of her first sob
- the princess turned again, and held her face to kiss her as usual. But
- the nurse had her handkerchief to her eyes, and did not see the
- movement.
- 'Nursie,' said the princess, 'why won't you believe me?'
- 'Because I can't believe you,' said the nurse, getting angry again.
- 'Ah! then, you can't help it,' said Irene, 'and I will not be vexed
- with you any more. I will give you a kiss and go to sleep.'
- 'You little angel!' cried the nurse, and caught her out of bed, and
- walked about the room with her in her arms, kissing and hugging her.
- 'You will let me take you to see my dear old great big grandmother,
- won't you?' said the princess, as she laid her down again.
- 'And you won't say I'm ugly, any more--will you, princess?' 'Nursie, I
- never said you were ugly. What can you mean?'
- 'Well, if you didn't say it, you meant it.'
- 'Indeed, I never did.'
- 'You said I wasn't so pretty as that--'
- 'As my beautiful grandmother--yes, I did say that; and I say it again,
- for it's quite true.'
- 'Then I do think you are unkind!' said the nurse, and put her
- handkerchief to her eyes again.
- 'Nursie, dear, everybody can't be as beautiful as every other body, you
- know. You are very nice-looking, but if you had been as beautiful as
- my grandmother--'
- 'Bother your grandmother!' said the nurse.
- 'Nurse, that's very rude. You are not fit to be spoken to till you can
- behave better.'
- The princess turned away once more, and again the nurse was ashamed of
- herself.
- 'I'm sure I beg your pardon, princess,' she said, though still in an
- offended tone. But the princess let the tone pass, and heeded only the
- words.
- 'You won't say it again, I am sure,' she answered, once more turning
- towards her nurse. 'I was only going to say that if you had been twice
- as nice-looking as you are, some king or other would have married you,
- and then what would have become of me?'
- 'You are an angel!' repeated the nurse, again embracing her. 'Now,'
- insisted Irene, 'you will come and see my grandmother--won't you?'
- 'I will go with you anywhere you like, my cherub,' she answered; and in
- two minutes the weary little princess was fast asleep.
- CHAPTER 5
- The Princess Lets Well Alone
- When she woke the next morning, the first thing she heard was the rain
- still falling. Indeed, this day was so like the last that it would
- have been difficult to tell where was the use of It. The first thing
- she thought of, however, was not the rain, but the lady in the tower;
- and the first question that occupied her thoughts was whether she
- should not ask the nurse to fulfil her promise this very morning, and
- go with her to find her grandmother as soon as she had had her
- breakfast. But she came to the conclusion that perhaps the lady would
- not be pleased if she took anyone to see her without first asking
- leave; especially as it was pretty evident, seeing she lived on
- pigeons' eggs, and cooked them herself, that she did not want the
- household to know she was there. So the princess resolved to take the
- first opportunity of running up alone and asking whether she might
- bring her nurse. She believed the fact that she could not otherwise
- convince her she was telling the truth would have much weight with her
- grandmother.
- The princess and her nurse were the best of friends all dressing-time,
- and the princess in consequence ate an enormous little breakfast.
- 'I wonder, Lootie'--that was her pet name for her nurse--'what pigeons'
- eggs taste like?' she said, as she was eating her egg--not quite a
- common one, for they always picked out the pinky ones for her.
- 'We'll get you a pigeon's egg, and you shall judge for yourself,' said
- the nurse.
- 'Oh, no, no!' returned Irene, suddenly reflecting they might disturb
- the old lady in getting it, and that even if they did not, she would
- have one less in consequence.
- 'What a strange creature you are,' said the nurse--'first to want a
- thing and then to refuse it!'
- But she did not say it crossly, and the princess never minded any
- remarks that were not unfriendly.
- 'Well, you see, Lootie, there are reasons,' she returned, and said no
- more, for she did not want to bring up the subject of their former
- strife, lest her nurse should offer to go before she had had her
- grandmother's permission to bring her. Of course she could refuse to
- take her, but then she would believe her less than ever.
- Now the nurse, as she said herself afterwards, could not be every
- moment in the room; and as never before yesterday had the princess
- given her the smallest reason for anxiety, it had not yet come into her
- head to watch her more closely. So she soon gave her a chance, and,
- the very first that offered, Irene was off and up the stairs again.
- This day's adventure, however, did not turn out like yesterday's,
- although it began like it; and indeed to-day is very seldom like
- yesterday, if people would note the differences--even when it rains.
- The princess ran through passage after passage, and could not find the
- stair of the tower. My own suspicion is that she had not gone up high
- enough, and was searching on the second instead of the third floor.
- When she turned to go back, she failed equally in her search after the
- stair. She was lost once more.
- Something made it even worse to bear this time, and it was no wonder
- that she cried again. Suddenly it occurred to her that it was after
- having cried before that she had found her grandmother's stair. She
- got up at once, wiped her eyes, and started upon a fresh quest.
- This time, although she did not find what she hoped, she found what was
- next best: she did not come on a stair that went up, but she came upon
- one that went down. It was evidently not the stair she had come up,
- yet it was a good deal better than none; so down she went, and was
- singing merrily before she reached the bottom. There, to her surprise,
- she found herself in the kitchen. Although she was not allowed to go
- there alone, her nurse had often taken her, and she was a great
- favourite with the servants. So there was a general rush at her the
- moment she appeared, for every one wanted to have her; and the report
- of where she was soon reached the nurse's ears. She came at once to
- fetch her; but she never suspected how she had got there, and the
- princess kept her own counsel.
- Her failure to find the old lady not only disappointed her, but made
- her very thoughtful. Sometimes she came almost to the nurse's opinion
- that she had dreamed all about her; but that fancy never lasted very
- long. She wondered much whether she should ever see her again, and
- thought it very sad not to have been able to find her when she
- particularly wanted her. She resolved to say nothing more to her nurse
- on the subject, seeing it was so little in her power to prove her words.
- CHAPTER 6
- The Little Miner
- The next day the great cloud still hung over the mountain, and the rain
- poured like water from a full sponge. The princess was very fond of
- being out of doors, and she nearly cried when she saw that the weather
- was no better. But the mist was not of such a dark dingy grey; there
- was light in it; and as the hours went on it grew brighter and
- brighter, until it was almost too brilliant to look at; and late in the
- afternoon the sun broke out so gloriously that Irene clapped her hands,
- crying:
- 'See, see, Lootie! The sun has had his face washed. Look how bright
- he is! Do get my hat, and let us go out for a walk. Oh, dear! oh,
- dear! how happy I am!'
- Lootie was very glad to please the princess. She got her hat and
- cloak, and they set out together for a walk up the mountain; for the
- road was so hard and steep that the water could not rest upon it, and
- it was always dry enough for walking a few minutes after the rain
- ceased. The clouds were rolling away in broken pieces, like great,
- overwoolly sheep, whose wool the sun had bleached till it was almost
- too white for the eyes to bear. Between them the sky shone with a
- deeper and purer blue, because of the rain. The trees on the roadside
- were hung all over with drops, which sparkled in the sun like jewels.
- The only things that were no brighter for the rain were the brooks that
- ran down the mountain; they had changed from the clearness of crystal
- to a muddy brown; but what they lost in colour they gained in sound--or
- at least in noise, for a brook when it is swollen is not so musical as
- before. But Irene was in raptures with the great brown streams
- tumbling down everywhere; and Lootie shared in her delight, for she too
- had been confined to the house for three days.
- At length she observed that the sun was getting low, and said it was
- time to be going back. She made the remark again and again, but, every
- time, the princess begged her to go on just a little farther and a
- little farther; reminding her that it was much easier to go downhill,
- and saying that when they did turn they would be at home in a moment.
- So on and on they did go, now to look at a group of ferns over whose
- tops a stream was pouring in a watery arch, now to pick a shining stone
- from a rock by the wayside, now to watch the flight of some bird.
- Suddenly the shadow of a great mountain peak came up from behind, and
- shot in front of them. When the nurse saw it, she started and shook,
- and catching hold of the princess's hand turned and began to run down
- the hill.
- 'What's all the haste, nursie?' asked Irene, running alongside of her.
- 'We must not be out a moment longer.'
- 'But we can't help being out a good many moments longer.'
- It was too true. The nurse almost cried. They were much too far from
- home. It was against express orders to be out with the princess one
- moment after the sun was down; and they were nearly a mile up the
- mountain! If His Majesty, Irene's papa, were to hear of it, Lootie
- would certainly be dismissed; and to leave the princess would break her
- heart. It was no wonder she ran. But Irene was not in the least
- frightened, not knowing anything to be frightened at. She kept on
- chattering as well as she could, but it was not easy.
- 'Lootie! Lootie! why do you run so fast? It shakes my teeth when I
- talk.'
- 'Then don't talk,' said Lootie.
- 'But the princess went on talking. She was always saying: 'Look, look,
- Lootie!' but Lootie paid no more heed to anything she said, only ran on.
- 'Look, look, Lootie! Don't you see that funny man peeping over the
- rock?'
- Lootie only ran the faster. They had to pass the rock, and when they
- came nearer, the princess saw it was only a lump of the rock itself
- that she had taken for a man.
- 'Look, look, Lootie! There's such a curious creature at the foot of
- that old tree. Look at it, Lootie! It's making faces at us, I do
- think.'
- Lootie gave a stifled cry, and ran faster still--so fast that Irene's
- little legs could not keep up with her, and she fell with a crash. It
- was a hard downhill road, and she had been running very fast--so it was
- no wonder she began to cry. This put the nurse nearly beside herself;
- but all she could do was to run on, the moment she got the princess on
- her feet again.
- 'Who's that laughing at me?' said the princess, trying to keep in her
- sobs, and running too fast for her grazed knees.
- 'Nobody, child,' said the nurse, almost angrily.
- But that instant there came a burst of coarse tittering from somewhere
- near, and a hoarse indistinct voice that seemed to say: 'Lies! lies!
- lies!'
- 'Oh!' cried the nurse with a sigh that was almost a scream, and ran on
- faster than ever.
- 'Nursie! Lootie! I can't run any more. Do let us walk a bit.'
- 'What am I to do?' said the nurse. 'Here, I will carry you.'
- She caught her up; but found her much too heavy to run with, and had to
- set her down again. Then she looked wildly about her, gave a great
- cry, and said:
- 'We've taken the wrong turning somewhere, and I don't know where we
- are. We are lost, lost!'
- The terror she was in had quite bewildered her. It was true enough
- they had lost the way. They had been running down into a little valley
- in which there was no house to be seen.
- Now Irene did not know what good reason there was for her nurse's
- terror, for the servants had all strict orders never to mention the
- goblins to her, but it was very discomposing to see her nurse in such a
- fright. Before, however, she had time to grow thoroughly alarmed like
- her, she heard the sound of whistling, and that revived her. Presently
- she saw a boy coming up the road from the valley to meet them. He was
- the whistler; but before they met his whistling changed to singing.
- And this is something like what he sang:
- 'Ring! dod! bang!
- Go the hammers' clang!
- Hit and turn and bore!
- Whizz and puff and roar!
- Thus we rive the rocks,
- Force the goblin locks.--
- See the shining ore!
- One, two, three--
- Bright as gold can be!
- Four, five, six--
- Shovels, mattocks, picks!
- Seven, eight, nine--
- Light your lamp at mine.
- Ten, eleven, twelve--
- Loosely hold the helve.
- We're the merry miner-boys,
- Make the goblins hold their noise.'
- 'I wish YOU would hold your noise,' said the nurse rudely, for the very
- word GOBLIN at such a time and in such a place made her tremble. It
- would bring the goblins upon them to a certainty, she thought, to defy
- them in that way. But whether the boy heard her or not, he did not
- stop his singing.
- 'Thirteen, fourteen, fifteen--
- This is worth the siftin';
- Sixteen, seventeen, eighteen--
- There's the match, and lay't in.
- Nineteen, twenty--
- Goblins in a plenty.'
- 'Do be quiet,' cried the nurse, in a whispered shriek. But the boy,
- who was now close at hand, still went on.
- 'Hush! scush! scurry!
- There you go in a hurry!
- Gobble! gobble! goblin!
- There you go a wobblin';
- Hobble, hobble, hobblin'--
- Cobble! cobble! cobblin'!
- Hob-bob-goblin!--
- Huuuuuh!'
- 'There!' said the boy, as he stood still opposite them. 'There!
- that'll do for them. They can't bear singing, and they can't stand
- that song. They can't sing themselves, for they have no more voice
- than a crow; and they don't like other people to sing.'
- The boy was dressed in a miner's dress, with a curious cap on his head.
- He was a very nice-looking boy, with eyes as dark as the mines in which
- he worked and as sparkling as the crystals in their rocks. He was
- about twelve years old. His face was almost too pale for beauty, which
- came of his being so little in the open air and the sunlight--for even
- vegetables grown in the dark are white; but he looked happy, merry
- indeed--perhaps at the thought of having routed the goblins; and his
- bearing as he stood before them had nothing clownish or rude about it.
- 'I saw them,' he went on, 'as I came up; and I'm very glad I did. I
- knew they were after somebody, but I couldn't see who it was. They
- won't touch you so long as I'm with you.'
- 'Why, who are you?' asked the nurse, offended at the freedom with which
- he spoke to them.
- 'I'm Peter's son.'
- 'Who's Peter?'
- 'Peter the miner.'
- 'I don't know him.' 'I'm his son, though.'
- 'And why should the goblins mind you, pray?'
- 'Because I don't mind them. I'm used to them.'
- 'What difference does that make?'
- 'If you're not afraid of them, they're afraid of you. I'm not afraid
- of them. That's all. But it's all that's wanted--up here, that is.
- It's a different thing down there. They won't always mind that song
- even, down there. And if anyone sings it, they stand grinning at him
- awfully; and if he gets frightened, and misses a word, or says a wrong
- one, they--oh! don't they give it him!'
- 'What do they do to him?' asked Irene, with a trembling voice.
- 'Don't go frightening the princess,' said the nurse.
- 'The princess!' repeated the little miner, taking off his curious cap.
- 'I beg your pardon; but you oughtn't to be out so late. Everybody knows
- that's against the law.'
- 'Yes, indeed it is!' said the nurse, beginning to cry again. 'And I
- shall have to suffer for it.'
- 'What does that matter?' said the boy. 'It must be your fault. It is
- the princess who will suffer for it. I hope they didn't hear you call
- her the princess. If they did, they're sure to know her again: they're
- awfully sharp.'
- 'Lootie! Lootie!' cried the princess. 'Take me home.'
- 'Don't go on like that,' said the nurse to the boy, almost fiercely.
- 'How could I help it? I lost my way.'
- 'You shouldn't have been out so late. You wouldn't have lost your way
- if you hadn't been frightened,' said the boy. 'Come along. I'll soon
- set you right again. Shall I carry your little Highness?'
- 'Impertinence!' murmured the nurse, but she did not say it aloud, for
- she thought if she made him angry he might take his revenge by telling
- someone belonging to the house, and then it would be sure to come to
- the king's ears. 'No, thank you,' said Irene. 'I can walk very well,
- though I can't run so fast as nursie. If you will give me one hand,
- Lootie will give me another, and then I shall get on famously.'
- They soon had her between them, holding a hand of each.
- 'Now let's run,' said the nurse.
- 'No, no!' said the little miner. 'That's the worst thing you can do.
- If you hadn't run before, you would not have lost your way. And if you
- run now, they will be after you in a moment.'
- 'I don't want to run,' said Irene.
- 'You don't think of me,' said the nurse.
- 'Yes, I do, Lootie. The boy says they won't touch us if we don't run.'
- 'Yes, but if they know at the house that I've kept you out so late I
- shall be turned away, and that would break my heart.'
- 'Turned away, Lootie! Who would turn you away?'
- 'Your papa, child.'
- 'But I'll tell him it was all my fault. And you know it was, Lootie.'
- 'He won't mind that. I'm sure he won't.'
- 'Then I'll cry, and go down on my knees to him, and beg him not to take
- away my own dear Lootie.'
- The nurse was comforted at hearing this, and said no more. They went
- on, walking pretty fast, but taking care not to run a step.
- 'I want to talk to you,' said Irene to the little miner; 'but it's so
- awkward! I don't know your name.'
- 'My name's Curdie, little princess.'
- 'What a funny name! Curdie! What more?'
- 'Curdie Peterson. What's your name, please?'
- 'Irene.'
- 'What more?'
- 'I don't know what more. What more is my name, Lootie?'
- 'Princesses haven't got more than one name. They don't want it.'
- 'Oh, then, Curdie, you must call me just Irene and no more.'
- 'No, indeed,' said the nurse indignantly. 'He shall do no such thing.'
- 'What shall he call me, then, Lootie?'
- 'Your Royal Highness.' 'My Royal Highness! What's that? No, no,
- Lootie. I won't be called names. I don't like them. You told me once
- yourself it's only rude children that call names; and I'm sure Curdie
- wouldn't be rude. Curdie, my name's Irene.'
- 'Well, Irene,' said Curdie, with a glance at the nurse which showed he
- enjoyed teasing her; 'it is very kind of you to let me call you
- anything. I like your name very much.'
- He expected the nurse to interfere again; but he soon saw that she was
- too frightened to speak. She was staring at something a few yards
- before them in the middle of the path, where it narrowed between rocks
- so that only one could pass at a time.
- 'It is very much kinder of you to go out of your way to take us home,'
- said Irene.
- 'I'm not going out of my way yet,' said Curdie. 'It's on the other
- side of those rocks the path turns off to my father's.'
- 'You wouldn't think of leaving us till we're safe home, I'm sure,'
- gasped the nurse.
- 'Of course not,' said Curdie.
- 'You dear, good, kind Curdie! I'll give you a kiss when we get home,'
- said the princess.
- The nurse gave her a great pull by the hand she held. But at that
- instant the something in the middle of the way, which had looked like a
- great lump of earth brought down by the rain, began to move. One after
- another it shot out four long things, like two arms and two legs, but
- it was now too dark to tell what they were. The nurse began to tremble
- from head to foot. Irene clasped Curdie's hand yet faster, and Curdie
- began to sing again:
- 'One, two--
- Hit and hew!
- Three, four--
- Blast and bore!
- Five, six--
- There's a fix!
- Seven, eight--
- Hold it straight!
- Nine, ten--
- Hit again!
- Hurry! scurry!
- Bother! smother!
- There's a toad
- In the road!
- Smash it!
- Squash it!
- Fry it!
- Dry it!
- You're another!
- Up and off!
- There's enough!--
- Huuuuuh!'
- As he uttered the last words, Curdie let go his hold of his companion,
- and rushed at the thing in the road as if he would trample it under his
- feet. It gave a great spring, and ran straight up one of the rocks
- like a huge spider. Curdie turned back laughing, and took Irene's hand
- again. She grasped his very tight, but said nothing till they had
- passed the rocks. A few yards more and she found herself on a part of
- the road she knew, and was able to speak again.
- 'Do you know, Curdie, I don't quite like your song: it sounds to me
- rather rude,' she said.
- 'Well, perhaps it is,' answered Curdie. 'I never thought of that; it's
- a way we have. We do it because they don't like it.'
- 'Who don't like it?'
- 'The cobs, as we call them.'
- 'Don't!' said the nurse.
- 'Why not?' said Curdie.
- 'I beg you won't. Please don't.'
- 'Oh! if you ask me that way, of course, I won't; though I don't a bit
- know why. Look! there are the lights of your great house down below.
- You'll be at home in five minutes now.'
- Nothing more happened. They reached home in safety. Nobody had missed
- them, or even known they had gone out; and they arrived at the door
- belonging to their part of the house without anyone seeing them. The
- nurse was rushing in with a hurried and not over-gracious good night to
- Curdie; but the princess pulled her hand from hers, and was just
- throwing her arms round Curdie's neck, when she caught her again and
- dragged her away.
- 'Lootie! Lootie! I promised a kiss,' cried Irene.
- 'A princess mustn't give kisses. It's not at all proper,' said Lootie.
- 'But I promised,' said the princess.
- 'There's no occasion; he's only a miner-boy.'
- 'He's a good boy, and a brave boy, and he has been very kind to us.
- Lootie! Lootie! I promised.'
- 'Then you shouldn't have promised.'
- 'Lootie, I promised him a kiss.'
- 'Your Royal Highness,' said Lootie, suddenly grown very respectful,
- 'must come in directly.'
- 'Nurse, a princess must not break her word,' said Irene, drawing
- herself up and standing stock-still.
- Lootie did not know which the king might count the worst--to let the
- princess be out after sunset, or to let her kiss a miner-boy. She did
- not know that, being a gentleman, as many kings have been, he would
- have counted neither of them the worse. However much he might have
- disliked his daughter to kiss the miner-boy, he would not have had her
- break her word for all the goblins in creation. But, as I say, the
- nurse was not lady enough to understand this, and so she was in a great
- difficulty, for, if she insisted, someone might hear the princess cry
- and run to see, and then all would come out. But here Curdie came
- again to the rescue.
- 'Never mind, Princess Irene,' he said. 'You mustn't kiss me tonight.
- But you shan't break your word. I will come another time. You may be
- sure I will.'
- 'Oh, thank you, Curdie!' said the princess, and stopped crying.
- 'Good night, Irene; good night, Lootie,' said Curdie, and turned and
- was out of sight in a moment.
- 'I should like to see him!' muttered the nurse, as she carried the
- princess to the nursery.
- 'You will see him,' said Irene. 'You may be sure Curdie will keep his
- word. He's sure to come again.'
- 'I should like to see him!' repeated the nurse, and said no more. She
- did not want to open a new cause of strife with the princess by saying
- more plainly what she meant. Glad enough that she had succeeded both
- in getting home unseen, and in keeping the princess from kissing the
- miner's boy, she resolved to watch her far better in future. Her
- carelessness had already doubled the danger she was in. Formerly the
- goblins were her only fear; now she had to protect her charge from
- Curdie as well.
- CHAPTER 7
- The Mines
- Curdie went home whistling. He resolved to say nothing about the
- princess for fear of getting the nurse into trouble, for while he
- enjoyed teasing her because of her absurdity, he was careful not to do
- her any harm. He saw no more of the goblins, and was soon fast asleep
- in his bed.
- He woke in the middle of the night, and thought he heard curious noises
- outside. He sat up and listened; then got up, and, opening the door
- very quietly, went out. When he peeped round the corner, he saw, under
- his own window, a group of stumpy creatures, whom he at once recognized
- by their shape. Hardly, however, had he begun his 'One, two, three!'
- when they broke asunder, scurried away, and were out of sight. He
- returned laughing, got into bed again, and was fast asleep in a moment.
- Reflecting a little over the matter in the morning, he came to the
- conclusion that, as nothing of the kind had ever happened before, they
- must be annoyed with him for interfering to protect the princess. By
- the time he was dressed, however, he was thinking of something quite
- different, for he did not value the enmity of the goblins in the least.
- As soon as they had had breakfast, he set off with his father for the
- mine.
- They entered the hill by a natural opening under a huge rock, where a
- little stream rushed out. They followed its course for a few yards,
- when the passage took a turn, and sloped steeply into the heart of the
- hill. With many angles and windings and branchings-off, and sometimes
- with steps where it came upon a natural gulf, it led them deep into the
- hill before they arrived at the place where they were at present
- digging out the precious ore. This was of various kinds, for the
- mountain was very rich in the better sorts of metals. With flint and
- steel, and tinder-box, they lighted their lamps, then fixed them on
- their heads, and were soon hard at work with their pickaxes and shovels
- and hammers. Father and son were at work near each other, but not in
- the same gang--the passages out of which the ore was dug, they called
- gangs--for when the lode, or vein of ore, was small, one miner would
- have to dig away alone in a passage no bigger than gave him just room
- to work--sometimes in uncomfortable cramped positions. If they stopped
- for a moment they could hear everywhere around them, some nearer, some
- farther off, the sounds of their companions burrowing away in all
- directions in the inside of the great mountain--some boring holes in
- the rock in order to blow it up with gunpowder, others shovelling the
- broken ore into baskets to be carried to the mouth of the mine, others
- hitting away with their pickaxes. Sometimes, if the miner was in a very
- lonely part, he would hear only a tap-tapping, no louder than that of a
- woodpecker, for the sound would come from a great distance off through
- the solid mountain rock.
- The work was hard at best, for it is very warm underground; but it was
- not particularly unpleasant, and some of the miners, when they wanted
- to earn a little more money for a particular purpose, would stop behind
- the rest and work all night. But you could not tell night from day
- down there, except from feeling tired and sleepy; for no light of the
- sun ever came into those gloomy regions. Some who had thus remained
- behind during the night, although certain there were none of their
- companions at work, would declare the next morning that they heard,
- every time they halted for a moment to take breath, a tap-tapping all
- about them, as if the mountain were then more full of miners than ever
- it was during the day; and some in consequence would never stay
- overnight, for all knew those were the sounds of the goblins. They
- worked only at night, for the miners' night was the goblins' day.
- Indeed, the greater number of the miners were afraid of the goblins;
- for there were strange stories well known amongst them of the treatment
- some had received whom the goblins had surprised at their work during
- the night. The more courageous of them, however, amongst them Peter
- Peterson and Curdie, who in this took after his father, had stayed in
- the mine all night again and again, and although they had several times
- encountered a few stray goblins, had never yet failed in driving them
- away. As I have indicated already, the chief defence against them was
- verse, for they hated verse of every kind, and some kinds they could
- not endure at all. I suspect they could not make any themselves, and
- that was why they disliked it so much. At all events, those who were
- most afraid of them were those who could neither make verses themselves
- nor remember the verses that other people made for them; while those
- who were never afraid were those who could make verses for themselves;
- for although there were certain old rhymes which were very effectual,
- yet it was well known that a new rhyme, if of the right sort, was even
- more distasteful to them, and therefore more effectual in putting them
- to flight.
- Perhaps my readers may be wondering what the goblins could be about,
- working all night long, seeing they never carried up the ore and sold
- it; but when I have informed them concerning what Curdie learned the
- very next night, they will be able to understand.
- For Curdie had determined, if his father would permit him, to remain
- there alone this night--and that for two reasons: first, he wanted to
- get extra wages that he might buy a very warm red petticoat for his
- mother, who had begun to complain of the cold of the mountain air
- sooner than usual this autumn; and second, he had just a faint hope of
- finding out what the goblins were about under his window the night
- before.
- When he told his father, he made no objection, for he had great
- confidence in his boy's courage and resources.
- 'I'm sorry I can't stay with you,' said Peter; 'but I want to go and
- pay the parson a visit this evening, and besides I've had a bit of a
- headache all day.'
- 'I'm sorry for that, father,' said Curdie.
- 'Oh, it's not much. You'll be sure to take care of yourself, won't
- you?'
- 'Yes, father; I will. I'll keep a sharp look-out, I promise you.'
- Curdie was the only one who remained in the mine. About six o'clock
- the rest went away, everyone bidding him good night, and telling him to
- take care of himself; for he was a great favourite with them all.
- 'Don't forget your rhymes,' said one.
- 'No, no,'answered Curdie.
- 'It's no matter if he does,' said another, 'for he'll only have to make
- a new one.'
- 'Yes: but he mightn't be able to make it fast enough,' said another;
- 'and while it was cooking in his head, they might take a mean advantage
- and set upon him.'
- 'I'll do my best,' said Curdie. 'I'm not afraid.' 'We all know that,'
- they returned, and left him.
- CHAPTER 8
- The Goblins
- For some time Curdie worked away briskly, throwing all the ore he had
- disengaged on one side behind him, to be ready for carrying out in the
- morning. He heard a good deal of goblin-tapping, but it all sounded
- far away in the hill, and he paid it little heed. Towards midnight he
- began to feel rather hungry; so he dropped his pickaxe, got out a lump
- of bread which in the morning he had laid in a damp hole in the rock,
- sat down on a heap of ore, and ate his supper. Then he leaned back for
- five minutes' rest before beginning his work again, and laid his head
- against the rock. He had not kept the position for one minute before
- he heard something which made him sharpen his ears. It sounded like a
- voice inside the rock. After a while he heard it again. It was a
- goblin voice--there could be no doubt about that--and this time he
- could make out the words.
- 'Hadn't we better be moving?'it said.
- A rougher and deeper voice replied:
- 'There's no hurry. That wretched little mole won't be through tonight,
- if he work ever so hard. He's not by any means at the thinnest place.'
- 'But you still think the lode does come through into our house?' said
- the first voice.
- 'Yes, but a good bit farther on than he has got to yet. If he had
- struck a stroke more to the side just here,' said the goblin, tapping
- the very stone, as it seemed to Curdie, against which his head lay, 'he
- would have been through; but he's a couple of yards past it now, and if
- he follow the lode it will be a week before it leads him in. You see
- it back there--a long way. Still, perhaps, in case of accident it
- would be as well to be getting out of this. Helfer, you'll take the
- great chest. That's your business, you know.'
- 'Yes, dad,' said a third voice. 'But you must help me to get it on my
- back. It's awfully heavy, you know.'
- 'Well, it isn't just a bag of smoke, I admit. But you're as strong as
- a mountain, Helfer.'
- 'You say so, dad. I think myself I'm all right. But I could carry ten
- times as much if it wasn't for my feet.'
- 'That is your weak point, I confess, my boy.' 'Ain't it yours too,
- father?'
- 'Well, to be honest, it's a goblin weakness. Why they come so soft, I
- declare I haven't an idea.'
- 'Specially when your head's so hard, you know, father.'
- 'Yes my boy. The goblin's glory is his head. To think how the fellows
- up above there have to put on helmets and things when they go fighting!
- Ha! ha!'
- 'But why don't we wear shoes like them, father? I should like
- it--especially when I've got a chest like that on my head.'
- 'Well, you see, it's not the fashion. The king never wears shoes.'
- 'The queen does.'
- 'Yes; but that's for distinction. The first queen, you see--I mean the
- king's first wife--wore shoes, of course, because she came from
- upstairs; and so, when she died, the next queen would not be inferior
- to her as she called it, and would wear shoes too. It was all pride.
- She is the hardest in forbidding them to the rest of the women.'
- 'I'm sure I wouldn't wear them--no, not for--that I wouldn't!' said the
- first voice, which was evidently that of the mother of the family. 'I
- can't think why either of them should.'
- 'Didn't I tell you the first was from upstairs?' said the other. 'That
- was the only silly thing I ever knew His Majesty guilty of. Why should
- he marry an outlandish woman like that-one of our natural enemies too?'
- 'I suppose he fell in love with her.' 'Pooh! pooh! He's just as happy
- now with one of his own people.'
- 'Did she die very soon? They didn't tease her to death, did they?'
- 'Oh, dear, no! The king worshipped her very footmarks.'
- 'What made her die, then? Didn't the air agree with her?'
- 'She died when the young prince was born.'
- 'How silly of her! We never do that. It must have been because she
- wore shoes.'
- 'I don't know that.'
- 'Why do they wear shoes up there?'
- 'Ah, now that's a sensible question, and I will answer it. But in
- order to do so, I must first tell you a secret. I once saw the queen's
- feet.'
- 'Without her shoes?'
- 'Yes--without her shoes.'
- 'No! Did you? How was it?'
- 'Never you mind how it was. She didn't know I saw them. And what do
- you think!--they had toes!'
- 'Toes! What's that?'
- 'You may well ask! I should never have known if I had not seen the
- queen's feet. Just imagine! the ends of her feet were split up into
- five or six thin pieces!'
- 'Oh, horrid! How could the king have fallen in love with her?'
- 'You forget that she wore shoes. That is just why she wore them. That
- is why all the men, and women too, upstairs wear shoes. They can't
- bear the sight of their own feet without them.'
- 'Ah! now I understand. If ever you wish for shoes again, Helfer, I'll
- hit your feet--I will.'
- 'No, no, mother; pray don't.'
- 'Then don't you.'
- 'But with such a big box on my head--'
- A horrid scream followed, which Curdie interpreted as in reply to a
- blow from his mother upon the feet of her eldest goblin.
- 'Well, I never knew so much before!' remarked a fourth voice.
- 'Your knowledge is not universal quite yet,' said the father. 'You
- were only fifty last month. Mind you see to the bed and bedding. As
- soon as we've finished our supper, we'll be up and going. Ha! ha! ha!'
- 'What are you laughing at, husband?'
- 'I'm laughing to think what a mess the miners will find themselves
- in--somewhere before this day ten years.'
- 'Why, what do you mean?'
- 'Oh, nothing.'
- 'Oh, yes, you do mean something. You always do mean something.'
- 'It's more than you do, then, wife.' 'That may be; but it's not more
- than I find out, you know.'
- 'Ha! ha! You're a sharp one. What a mother you've got, Helfer!'
- 'Yes, father.'
- 'Well, I suppose I must tell you. They're all at the palace consulting
- about it tonight; and as soon as we've got away from this thin place
- I'm going there to hear what night they fix upon. I should like to see
- that young ruffian there on the other side, struggling in the agonies
- of--'
- He dropped his voice so low that Curdie could hear only a growl. The
- growl went on in the low bass for a good while, as inarticulate as if
- the goblin's tongue had been a sausage; and it was not until his wife
- spoke again that it rose to its former pitch.
- 'But what shall we do when you are at the palace?' she asked.
- 'I will see you safe in the new house I've been digging for you for the
- last two months. Podge, you mind the table and chairs. I commit them
- to your care. The table has seven legs--each chair three. I shall
- require them all at your hands.'
- After this arose a confused conversation about the various household
- goods and their transport; and Curdie heard nothing more that was of
- any importance.
- He now knew at least one of the reasons for the constant sound of the
- goblin hammers and pickaxes at night. They were making new houses for
- themselves, to which they might retreat when the miners should threaten
- to break into their dwellings. But he had learned two things of far
- greater importance. The first was, that some grievous calamity was
- preparing, and almost ready to fall upon the heads of the miners; the
- second was--the one weak point of a goblin's body; he had not known
- that their feet were so tender as he had now reason to suspect. He had
- heard it said that they had no toes: he had never had opportunity of
- inspecting them closely enough, in the dusk in which they always
- appeared, to satisfy himself whether it was a correct report. Indeed,
- he had not been able even to satisfy himself as to whether they had no
- fingers, although that also was commonly said to be the fact. One of
- the miners, indeed, who had had more schooling than the rest, was wont
- to argue that such must have been the primordial condition of humanity,
- and that education and handicraft had developed both toes and
- fingers--with which proposition Curdie had once heard his father
- sarcastically agree, alleging in support of it the probability that
- babies' gloves were a traditional remnant of the old state of things;
- while the stockings of all ages, no regard being paid in them to the
- toes, pointed in the same direction. But what was of importance was
- the fact concerning the softness of the goblin feet, which he foresaw
- might be useful to all miners. What he had to do in the meantime,
- however, was to discover, if possible, the special evil design the
- goblins had now in their heads.
- Although he knew all the gangs and all the natural galleries with which
- they communicated in the mined part of the mountain, he had not the
- least idea where the palace of the king of the gnomes was; otherwise he
- would have set out at once on the enterprise of discovering what the
- said design was. He judged, and rightly, that it must lie in a farther
- part of the mountain, between which and the mine there was as yet no
- communication. There must be one nearly completed, however; for it
- could be but a thin partition which now separated them. If only he
- could get through in time to follow the goblins as they retreated! A
- few blows would doubtless be sufficient--just where his ear now lay;
- but if he attempted to strike there with his pickaxe, he would only
- hasten the departure of the family, put them on their guard, and
- perhaps lose their involuntary guidance. He therefore began to feel
- the wall With his hands, and soon found that some of the stones were
- loose enough to be drawn out with little noise.
- Laying hold of a large one with both his hands, he drew it gently out,
- and let it down softly.
- 'What was that noise?' said the goblin father.
- Curdie blew out his light, lest it should shine through.
- 'It must be that one miner that stayed behind the rest,' said the
- mother.
- 'No; he's been gone a good while. I haven't heard a blow for an hour.
- Besides, it wasn't like that.'
- 'Then I suppose it must have been a stone carried down the brook
- inside.'
- 'Perhaps. It will have more room by and by.'
- Curdie kept quite still. After a little while, hearing nothing but the
- sounds of their preparations for departure, mingled with an occasional
- word of direction, and anxious to know whether the removal of the stone
- had made an opening into the goblins' house, he put in his hand to
- feel. It went in a good way, and then came in contact with something
- soft. He had but a moment to feel it over, it was so quickly
- withdrawn: it was one of the toeless goblin feet. The owner of it gave
- a cry of fright.
- 'What's the matter, Helfer?' asked his mother.
- 'A beast came out of the wall and licked my foot.'
- 'Nonsense! There are no wild beasts in our country,' said his father.
- 'But it was, father. I felt it.'
- 'Nonsense, I say. Will you malign your native realms and reduce them
- to a level with the country upstairs? That is swarming with wild
- beasts of every description.'
- 'But I did feel it, father.'
- 'I tell you to hold your tongue. You are no patriot.'
- Curdie suppressed his laughter, and lay still as a mouse--but no
- stiller, for every moment he kept nibbling away with his fingers at the
- edges of the hole. He was slowly making it bigger, for here the rock
- had been very much shattered with the blasting.
- There seemed to be a good many in the family, to judge from the mass of
- confused talk which now and then came through the hole; but when all
- were speaking together, and just as if they had bottle-brushes--each at
- least one--in their throats, it was not easy to make out much that was
- said. At length he heard once more what the father goblin was saying.
- 'Now, then,' he said, 'get your bundles on your backs. Here, Helfer,
- I'll help you up with your chest.'
- 'I wish it was my chest, father.'
- 'Your turn will come in good time enough! Make haste. I must go to
- the meeting at the palace tonight. When that's over, we can come back
- and clear out the last of the things before our enemies return in the
- morning. Now light your torches, and come along. What a distinction it
- is, to provide our own light, instead of being dependent on a thing
- hung up in the air--a most disagreeable contrivance--intended no doubt
- to blind us when we venture out under its baleful influence! Quite
- glaring and vulgar, I call it, though no doubt useful to poor creatures
- who haven't the wit to make light for themselves.'
- Curdie could hardly keep himself from calling through to know whether
- they made the fire to light their torches by. But a moment's
- reflection showed him that they would have said they did, inasmuch as
- they struck two stones together, and the fire came.
- CHAPTER 9
- The Hall of the Goblin Palace
- A sound of many soft feet followed, but soon ceased. Then Curdie flew
- at the hole like a tiger, and tore and pulled. The sides gave way, and
- it was soon large enough for him to crawl through. He would not betray
- himself by rekindling his lamp, but the torches of the retreating
- company, which he found departing in a straight line up a long avenue
- from the door of their cave, threw back light enough to afford him a
- glance round the deserted home of the goblins. To his surprise, he
- could discover nothing to distinguish it from an ordinary natural cave
- in the rock, upon many of which he had come with the rest of the miners
- in the progress of their excavations. The goblins had talked of coming
- back for the rest of their household gear: he saw nothing that would
- have made him suspect a family had taken shelter there for a single
- night. The floor was rough and stony; the walls full of projecting
- corners; the roof in one place twenty feet high, in another endangering
- his forehead; while on one side a stream, no thicker than a needle, it
- is true, but still sufficient to spread a wide dampness over the wall,
- flowed down the face of the rock. But the troop in front of him was
- toiling under heavy burdens. He could distinguish Helfer now and then,
- in the flickering light and shade, with his heavy chest on his bending
- shoulders; while the second brother was almost buried in what looked
- like a great feather bed. 'Where do they get the feathers?' thought
- Curdie; but in a moment the troop disappeared at a turn of the way, and
- it was now both safe and necessary for Curdie to follow them, lest they
- should be round the next turning before he saw them again, for so he
- might lose them altogether. He darted after them like a greyhound.
- When he reached the corner and looked cautiously round, he saw them
- again at some distance down another long passage. None of the
- galleries he saw that night bore signs of the work of man--or of goblin
- either. Stalactites, far older than the mines, hung from their roofs;
- and their floors were rough with boulders and large round stones,
- showing that there water must have once run. He waited again at this
- corner till they had disappeared round the next, and so followed them a
- long way through one passage after another. The passages grew more and
- more lofty, and were more and more covered in the roof with shining
- stalactites.
- It was a strange enough procession which he followed. But the
- strangest part of it was the household animals which crowded amongst
- the feet of the goblins. It was true they had no wild animals down
- there--at least they did not know of any; but they had a wonderful
- number of tame ones. I must, however, reserve any contributions
- towards the natural history of these for a later position in my story.
- At length, turning a corner too abruptly, he had almost rushed into the
- middle of the goblin family; for there they had already set down all
- their burdens on the floor of a cave considerably larger than that
- which they had left. They were as yet too breathless to speak, else he
- would have had warning of their arrest. He started back, however,
- before anyone saw him, and retreating a good way, stood watching till
- the father should come out to go to the palace.
- Before very long, both he and his son Helfer appeared and kept on in
- the same direction as before, while Curdie followed them again with
- renewed precaution. For a long time he heard no sound except something
- like the rush of a river inside the rock; but at length what seemed the
- far-off noise of a great shouting reached his ears, which, however,
- presently ceased. After advancing a good way farther, he thought he
- heard a single voice. It sounded clearer and clearer as he went on,
- until at last he could almost distinguish the words. In a moment or
- two, keeping after the goblins round another corner, he once more
- started back--this time in amazement.
- He was at the entrance of a magnificent cavern, of an oval shape, once
- probably a huge natural reservoir of water, now the great palace hall
- of the goblins. It rose to a tremendous height, but the roof was
- composed of such shining materials, and the multitude of torches
- carried by the goblins who crowded the floor lighted up the place so
- brilliantly, that Curdie could see to the top quite well. But he had
- no idea how immense the place was until his eyes had got accustomed to
- it, which was not for a good many minutes. The rough projections on the
- walls, and the shadows thrown upwards from them by the torches, made
- the sides of the chamber look as if they were crowded with statues upon
- brackets and pedestals, reaching in irregular tiers from floor to roof.
- The walls themselves were, in many parts, of gloriously shining
- substances, some of them gorgeously coloured besides, which powerfully
- contrasted with the shadows. Curdie could not help wondering whether
- his rhymes would be of any use against such a multitude of goblins as
- filled the floor of the hall, and indeed felt considerably tempted to
- begin his shout of 'One, two, three!', but as there was no reason for
- routing them and much for endeavouring to discover their designs, he
- kept himself perfectly quiet, and peering round the edge of the
- doorway, listened with both his sharp ears.
- At the other end of the hall, high above the heads of the multitude,
- was a terrace-like ledge of considerable height, caused by the receding
- of the upper part of the cavern-wall. Upon this sat the king and his
- court: the king on a throne hollowed out of a huge block of green
- copper ore, and his court upon lower seats around it. The king had
- been making them a speech, and the applause which followed it was what
- Curdie had heard. One of the court was now addressing the multitude.
- What he heard him say was to the following effect: 'Hence it appears
- that two plans have been for some time together working in the strong
- head of His Majesty for the deliverance of his people. Regardless of
- the fact that we were the first possessors of the regions they now
- inhabit; regardless equally of the fact that we abandoned that region
- from the loftiest motives; regardless also of the self-evident fact
- that we excel them so far in mental ability as they excel us in
- stature, they look upon us as a degraded race and make a mockery of all
- our finer feelings. But, the time has almost arrived when--thanks to
- His Majesty's inventive genius--it will be in our power to take a
- thorough revenge upon them once for all, in respect of their unfriendly
- behaviour.'
- 'May it please Your Majesty--' cried a voice close by the door, which
- Curdie recognized as that of the goblin he had followed.
- 'Who is he that interrupts the Chancellor?' cried another from near the
- throne.
- 'Glump,' answered several voices.
- 'He is our trusty subject,' said the king himself, in a slow and
- stately voice: 'let him come forward and speak.'
- A lane was parted through the crowd, and Glump, having ascended the
- platform and bowed to the king, spoke as follows:
- 'Sire, I would have held my peace, had I not known that I only knew how
- near was the moment, to which the Chancellor had just referred.
- In all probability, before another day is past, the enemy will have
- broken through into my house--the partition between being even now not
- more than a foot in thickness.'
- 'Not quite so much,' thought Curdie to himself.
- 'This very evening I have had to remove my household effects; therefore
- the sooner we are ready to carry out the plan, for the execution of
- which His Majesty has been making such magnificent preparations, the
- better. I may just add, that within the last few days I have perceived
- a small outbreak in my dining-room, which, combined with observations
- upon the course of the river escaping where the evil men enter, has
- convinced me that close to the spot must be a deep gulf in its channel.
- This discovery will, I trust, add considerably to the otherwise immense
- forces at His Majesty's disposal.'
- He ceased, and the king graciously acknowledged his speech with a bend
- of his head; whereupon Glump, after a bow to His Majesty, slid down
- amongst the rest of the undistinguished multitude. Then the Chancellor
- rose and resumed.
- 'The information which the worthy Glump has given us,' he said, 'might
- have been of considerable import at the present moment, but for that
- other design already referred to, which naturally takes precedence.
- His Majesty, unwilling to proceed to extremities, and well aware that
- such measures sooner or later result in violent reactions, has
- excogitated a more fundamental and comprehensive measure, of which I
- need say no more. Should His Majesty be successful--as who dares to
- doubt?--then a peace, all to the advantage of the goblin kingdom, will
- be established for a generation at least, rendered absolutely secure by
- the pledge which His Royal Highness the prince will have and hold for
- the good behaviour of her relatives. Should His Majesty fail--which
- who shall dare even to imagine in his most secret thoughts?--then will
- be the time for carrying out with rigour the design to which Glump
- referred, and for which our preparations are even now all but
- completed. The failure of the former will render the latter
- imperative.'
- Curdie, perceiving that the assembly was drawing to a close and that
- there was little chance of either plan being more fully discovered, now
- thought it prudent to make his escape before the goblins began to
- disperse, and slipped quietly away.
- There was not much danger of meeting any goblins, for all the men at
- least were left behind him in the palace; but there was considerable
- danger of his taking a wrong turning, for he had now no light, and had
- therefore to depend upon his memory and his hands. After he had left
- behind him the glow that issued from the door of Glump's new abode, he
- was utterly without guide, so far as his eyes were concerned.
- He was most anxious to get back through the hole before the goblins
- should return to fetch the remains of their furniture. It was not that
- he was in the least afraid of them, but, as it was of the utmost
- importance that he should thoroughly discover what the plans they were
- cherishing were, he must not occasion the slightest suspicion that they
- were watched by a miner.
- He hurried on, feeling his way along the walls of rock. Had he not
- been very courageous, he must have been very anxious, for he could not
- but know that if he lost his way it would be the most difficult thing
- in the world to find it again. Morning would bring no light into these
- regions; and towards him least of all, who was known as a special
- rhymester and persecutor, could goblins be expected to exercise
- courtesy. Well might he wish that he had brought his lamp and
- tinder-box with him, of which he had not thought when he crept so
- eagerly after the goblins! He wished it all the more when, after a
- while, he found his way blocked up, and could get no farther. It was
- of no use to turn back, for he had not the least idea where he had
- begun to go wrong. Mechanically, however, he kept feeling about the
- walls that hemmed him in. His hand came upon a place where a tiny
- stream of water was running down the face of the rock. 'What a stupid
- I am!' he said to himself. 'I am actually at the end of my journey!
- And there are the goblins coming back to fetch their things!' he added,
- as the red glimmer of their torches appeared at the end of the long
- avenue that led up to the cave. In a moment he had thrown himself on
- the floor, and wriggled backwards through the hole. The floor on the
- other side was several feet lower, which made it easier to get back.
- It was all he could do to lift the largest stone he had taken out of
- the hole, but he did manage to shove it in again. He sat down on the
- ore-heap and thought.
- He was pretty sure that the latter plan of the goblins was to inundate
- the mine by breaking outlets for the water accumulated in the natural
- reservoirs of the mountain, as well as running through portions of it.
- While the part hollowed by the miners remained shut off from that
- inhabited by the goblins, they had had no opportunity of injuring them
- thus; but now that a passage was broken through, and the goblins' part
- proved the higher in the mountain, it was clear to Curdie that the mine
- could be destroyed in an hour. Water was always the chief danger to
- which the miners were exposed. They met with a little choke-damp
- sometimes, but never with the explosive firedamp so common in
- coal-mines. Hence they were careful as soon as they saw any appearance
- of water. As the result of his reflections while the goblins were busy
- in their old home, it seemed to Curdie that it would be best to build
- up the whole of this gang, filling it with stone, and clay or lie, so
- that there should be no smallest channel for the water to get into.
- There was not, however, any immediate danger, for the execution of the
- goblins' plan was contingent upon the failure of that unknown design
- which was to take precedence of it; and he was most anxious to keep the
- door of communication open, that he might if possible discover what the
- former plan was. At the same time they could not resume their
- intermitted labours for the inundation without his finding it out; when
- by putting all hands to the work, the one existing outlet might in a
- single night be rendered impenetrable to any weight of water; for by
- filling the gang entirely up, their embankment would be buttressed by
- the sides of the mountain itself.
- As soon as he found that the goblins had again retired, he lighted his
- lamp, and proceeded to fill the hole he had made with such stones as he
- could withdraw when he pleased. He then thought it better, as he might
- have occasion to be up a good many nights after this, to go home and
- have some sleep.
- How pleasant the night air felt upon the outside of the mountain after
- what he had gone through in the inside of it! He hurried up the hill
- without meeting a single goblin on the way, and called and tapped at
- the window until he woke his father, who soon rose and let him in. He
- told him the whole story; and, just as he had expected, his father
- thought it best to work that lode no farther, but at the same time to
- pretend occasionally to be at work there still in order that the
- goblins might have no suspicions. Both father and son then went to bed
- and slept soundly until the morning.
- CHAPTER 10
- The Princess's King-Papa
- The weather continued fine for weeks, and the little princess went out
- every day. So long a period of fine weather had indeed never been
- known upon that mountain. The only uncomfortable thing was that her
- nurse was so nervous and particular about being in before the sun was
- down that often she would take to her heels when nothing worse than a
- fleecy cloud crossing the sun threw a shadow on the hillside; and many
- an evening they were home a full hour before the sunlight had left the
- weather-cock on the stables. If it had not been for such odd behaviour
- Irene would by this time have almost forgotten the goblins. She never
- forgot Curdie, but him she remembered for his own sake, and indeed
- would have remembered him if only because a princess never forgets her
- debts until they are paid.
- One splendid sunshiny day, about an hour after noon, Irene, who was
- playing on a lawn in the garden, heard the distant blast of a bugle.
- She jumped up with a cry of joy, for she knew by that particular blast
- that her father was on his way to see her. This part of the garden lay
- on the slope of the hill and allowed a full view of the country below.
- So she shaded her eyes with her hand and looked far away to catch the
- first glimpse of shining armour. In a few moments a little troop came
- glittering round the shoulder of a hill. Spears and helmets were
- sparkling and gleaming, banners were flying, horses prancing, and again
- came the bugle-blast which was to her like the voice of her father
- calling across the distance: 'Irene, I'm coming.'
- On and on they came until she could clearly distinguish the king. He
- rode a white horse and was taller than any of the men with him. He wore
- a narrow circle of gold set with jewels around his helmet, and as he
- came still nearer Irene could discern the flashing of the stones in the
- sun. It was a long time since he had been to see her, and her little
- heart beat faster and faster as the shining troop approached, for she
- loved her king-papa very dearly and was nowhere so happy as in his
- arms. When they reached a certain point, after which she could see
- them no more from the garden, she ran to the gate, and there stood till
- up they came, clanging and stamping, with one more bright bugle-blast
- which said: 'Irene, I am come.'
- By this time the people of the house were all gathered at the gate, but
- Irene stood alone in front of them. When the horsemen pulled up she
- ran to the side of the white horse and held up her arms. The king
- stopped and took her hands. In an instant she was on the saddle and
- clasped in his great strong arms.
- I wish I could describe the king so that you could see him in your
- mind. He had gentle, blue eyes, but a nose that made him look like an
- eagle. A long dark beard, streaked with silvery lines, flowed from his
- mouth almost to his waist, and as Irene sat on the saddle and hid her
- glad face upon his bosom it mingled with the golden hair which her
- mother had given her, and the two together were like a cloud with
- streaks of the sun woven through it. After he had held her to his
- heart for a minute he spoke to his white horse, and the great beautiful
- creature, which had been prancing so proudly a little while before,
- walked as gently as a lady--for he knew he had a little lady on his
- back--through the gate and up to the door of the house. Then the king
- set her on the ground and, dismounting, took her hand and walked with
- her into the great hall, which was hardly ever entered except when he
- came to see his little princess. There he sat down, with two of his
- counsellors who had accompanied him, to have some refreshment, and
- Irene sat on his right hand and drank her milk out of a wooden bowl
- curiously carved.
- After the king had eaten and drunk he turned to the princess and said,
- stroking her hair:
- 'Now, my child, what shall we do next?'
- This was the question he almost always put to her first after their
- meal together; and Irene had been waiting for it with some impatience,
- for now, she thought, she should be able to settle a question which
- constantly perplexed her.
- 'I should like you to take me to see my great old grandmother.'
- The king looked grave And said:
- 'What does my little daughter mean?'
- 'I mean the Queen Irene that lives up in the tower--the very old lady,
- you know, with the long hair of silver.'
- The king only gazed at his little princess with a look which she could
- not understand.
- 'She's got her crown in her bedroom,' she went on; 'but I've not been
- in there yet. You know she's there, don't you?'
- 'No,' said the king, very quietly.
- 'Then it must all be a dream,' said Irene. 'I half thought it was; but
- I couldn't be sure. Now I am sure of it. Besides, I couldn't find her
- the next time I went up.'
- At that moment a snow-white pigeon flew in at an open window and
- settled upon Irene's head. She broke into a merry laugh, cowered a
- little, and put up her hands to her head, saying:
- 'Dear dovey, don't peck me. You'll pull out my hair with your long
- claws if you don't mind.'
- The king stretched out his hand to take the pigeon, but it spread its
- wings and flew again through the open window, when its Whiteness made
- one flash in the sun and vanished. The king laid his hand on his
- princess's head, held it back a little, gazed in her face, smiled half
- a smile, and sighed half a sigh.
- 'Come, my child; we'll have a walk in the garden together,' he said.
- 'You won't come up and see my huge, great, beautiful grandmother, then,
- king-papa?' said the princess.
- 'Not this time,' said the king very gently. 'She has not invited me,
- you know, and great old ladies like her do not choose to be visited
- without leave asked and given.'
- The garden was a very lovely place. Being upon a Mountainside there
- were parts in it where the rocks came through in great masses, and all
- immediately about them remained quite wild. Tufts of heather grew upon
- them, and other hardy mountain plants and flowers, while near them
- would be lovely roses and lilies and all pleasant garden flowers. This
- mingling of the wild mountain with the civilized garden was very
- quaint, and it was impossible for any number of gardeners to make such
- a garden look formal and stiff.
- Against one of these rocks was a garden seat, shadowed from the
- afternoon sun by the overhanging of the rock itself. There was a
- little winding path up to the top of the rock, and on top another seat;
- but they sat on the seat at its foot because the sun was hot; and there
- they talked together of many things. At length the king said:
- 'You were out late one evening, Irene.'
- 'Yes, papa. It was my fault; and Lootie was very sorry.'
- 'I must talk to Lootie about it,' said the king.
- 'Don't speak loud to her, please, papa,' said Irene. 'She's been so
- afraid of being late ever since! Indeed she has not been naughty. It
- was only a mistake for once.'
- 'Once might be too often,' murmured the king to himself, as he stroked
- his child's head.
- I can't tell you how he had come to know. I am sure Curdie had not
- told him. Someone about the palace must have seen them, after all.
- He sat for a good while thinking. There was no sound to be heard
- except that of a little stream which ran merrily out of an opening in
- the rock by where they sat, and sped away down the hill through the
- garden. Then he rose and, leaving Irene where she was, went into the
- house and sent for Lootie, with whom he had a talk that made her cry.
- When in the evening he rode away upon his great white horse, he left
- six of his attendants behind him, with orders that three of them should
- watch outside the house every night, walking round and round it from
- sunset to sunrise. It was clear he was not quite comfortable about the
- princess.
- CHAPTER 11
- The Old Lady's Bedroom
- Nothing more happened worth telling for some time. The autumn came and
- went by. There were no more flowers in the garden. The wind blew
- strong, and howled among the rocks. The rain fell, and drenched the
- few yellow and red leaves that could not get off the bare branches.
- Again and again there would be a glorious morning followed by a pouring
- afternoon, and sometimes, for a week together, there would be rain,
- nothing but rain, all day, and then the most lovely cloudless night,
- with the sky all out in full-blown stars--not one missing. But the
- princess could not see much of them, for she went to bed early. The
- winter drew on, and she found things growing dreary. When it was too
- stormy to go out, and she had got tired of her toys, Lootie would take
- her about the house, sometimes to the housekeeper's room, where the
- housekeeper, who was a good, kind old woman, made much of
- her--sometimes to the servants' hall or the kitchen, where she was not
- princess merely, but absolute queen, and ran a great risk of being
- spoiled. Sometimes she would run off herself to the room where the
- men-at-arms whom the king had left sat, and they showed her their arms
- and accoutrements and did what they could to amuse her. Still at times
- she found it very dreary, and often and often wished that her huge
- great grandmother had not been a dream.
- One morning the nurse left her with the housekeeper for a while. To
- amuse her she turned out the contents of an old cabinet upon the table.
- The little princess found her treasures, queer ancient ornaments, and
- many things the use of which she could not imagine, far more
- interesting than her own toys, and sat playing with them for two hours
- or more. But, at length, in handling a curious old-fashioned brooch,
- she ran the pin of it into her thumb, and gave a little scream with the
- sharpness of the pain, but would have thought little more of it had not
- the pain increased and her thumb begun to swell. This alarmed the
- housekeeper greatly. The nurse was fetched; the doctor was sent for;
- her hand was poulticed, and long before her usual time she was put to
- bed. The pain still continued, and although she fell asleep and
- dreamed a good many dreams, there was the pain always in every dream.
- At last it woke her UP.
- The moon was shining brightly into the room. The poultice had fallen
- off her hand and it was burning hot. She fancied if she could hold it
- into the moonlight that would cool it. So she got out of bed, without
- waking the nurse who lay at the other end of the room, and went to the
- window. When she looked out she saw one of the men-at-arms walking in
- the garden with the moonlight glancing on his armour. She was just
- going to tap on the window and call him, for she wanted to tell him all
- about it, when she bethought herself that that might wake Lootie, and
- she would put her into her bed again. So she resolved to go to the
- window of another room, and call him from there. It was so much nicer
- to have somebody to talk to than to lie awake in bed with the burning
- pain in her hand. She opened the door very gently and went through the
- nursery, which did not look into the garden, to go to the other window.
- But when she came to the foot of the old staircase there was the moon
- shining down from some window high up, and making the worm-eaten oak
- look very strange and delicate and lovely. In a moment she was putting
- her little feet one after the other in the silvery path up the stair,
- looking behind as she went, to see the shadow they made in the middle
- of the silver. Some little girls would have been afraid to find
- themselves thus alone in the middle of the night, but Irene was a
- princess.
- As she went slowly up the stair, not quite sure that she was not
- dreaming, suddenly a great longing woke up in her heart to try once
- more whether she could not find the old lady with the silvery hair. 'If
- she is a dream,' she said to herself, 'then I am the likelier to find
- her, if I am dreaming.'
- So up and up she went, stair after stair, until she Came to the many
- rooms--all just as she had seen them before. Through passage after
- passage she softly sped, comforting herself that if she should lose her
- way it would not matter much, because when she woke she would find
- herself in her own bed with Lootie not far off. But, as if she had
- known every step of the way, she walked straight to the door at the
- foot of the narrow stair that led to the tower.
- 'What if I should realreality-really find my beautiful old grandmother
- up there!' she said to herself as she crept up the steep steps.
- When she reached the top she stood a moment listening in the dark, for
- there was no moon there. Yes! it was! it was the hum of the
- spinning-wheel! What a diligent grandmother to work both day and
- night! She tapped gently at the door.
- 'Come in, Irene,'said the sweet voice.
- The princess opened the door and entered. There was the moonlight
- streaming in at the window, and in the middle of the moonlight sat the
- old lady in her black dress with the white lace, and her silvery hair
- mingling with the moonlight, so that you could not have told which was
- which. 'Come in, Irene,' she said again. 'Can you tell me what I am
- spinning?'
- 'She speaks,' thought Irene, 'just as if she had seen me five minutes
- ago, or yesterday at the farthest. --No,' she answered; 'I don't know
- what you are spinning. Please, I thought you were a dream. Why
- couldn't I find you before, great-great-grandmother?'
- 'That you are hardly old enough to understand. But you would have
- found me sooner if you hadn't come to think I was a dream. I will give
- you one reason though why you couldn't find me. I didn't want you to
- find me.'
- 'Why, please?'
- 'Because I did not want Lootie to know I was here.'
- 'But you told me to tell Lootie.'
- 'Yes. But I knew Lootie would not believe you. If she were to see me
- sitting spinning here, she wouldn't believe me, either.'
- 'Why?'
- 'Because she couldn't. She would rub her eyes, and go away and say she
- felt queer, and forget half of it and more, and then say it had been
- all a dream.'
- 'Just like me,' said Irene, feeling very much ashamed of herself.
- 'Yes, a good deal like you, but not just like you; for you've come
- again; and Lootie wouldn't have come again. She would have said, No,
- no--she had had enough of such nonsense.'
- 'Is it naughty of Lootie, then?'
- 'It would be naughty of you. I've never done anything for Lootie.'
- 'And you did wash my face and hands for me,' said Irene, beginning to
- cry.
- The old lady smiled a sweet smile and said:
- 'I'm not vexed with you, my child--nor with Lootie either. But I don't
- want you to say anything more to Lootie about me. If she should ask
- you, you must just be silent. But I do not think she will ask you.'
- All the time they talked the old lady kept on spinning.
- 'You haven't told me yet what I am spinning,' she said.
- 'Because I don't know. It's very pretty stuff.'
- It was indeed very pretty stuff. There was a good bunch of it on the
- distaff attached to the spinning-wheel, and in the moonlight it shone
- like--what shall I say it was like? It was not white enough for
- silver--yes, it was like silver, but shone grey rather than white, and
- glittered only a little. And the thread the old lady drew out from it
- was so fine that Irene could hardly see it. 'I am spinning this for
- you, my child.'
- 'For me! What am I to do with it, please?'
- 'I will tell you by and by. But first I will tell you what it is. It
- is spider-web--of a particular kind. My pigeons bring it me from over
- the great sea. There is only one forest where the spiders live who
- make this particular kind--the finest and strongest of any. I have
- nearly finished my present job. What is on the rock now will be
- enough. I have a week's work there yet, though,' she added, looking at
- the bunch.
- 'Do you work all day and all night, too,
- great-great-great-great-grandmother?' said the princess, thinking to be
- very polite with so many greats.
- 'I am not quite so great as all that,' she answered, smiling almost
- merrily. 'If you call me grandmother, that will do. No, I don't work
- every night--only moonlit nights, and then no longer than the moon
- shines upon my wheel. I shan't work much longer tonight.'
- 'And what will you do next, grandmother?' 'Go to bed. Would you like
- to see my bedroom?'
- 'Yes, that I should.'
- 'Then I think I won't work any longer tonight. I shall be in good
- time.'
- The old lady rose, and left her wheel standing just as it was. You see
- there was no good in putting it away, for where there was not any
- furniture there was no danger of being untidy.
- Then she took Irene by the hand, but it was her bad hand and Irene gave
- a little cry of pain. 'My child!' said her grandmother, 'what is the
- matter?'
- Irene held her hand into the moonlight, that the old lady might see it,
- and told her all about it, at which she looked grave. But she only
- said: 'Give me your other hand'; and, having led her out upon the
- little dark landing, opened the door on the opposite side of it. What
- was Irene's surprise to see the loveliest room she had ever seen in her
- life! It was large and lofty, and dome-shaped. From the centre hung a
- lamp as round as a ball, shining as if with the brightest moonlight,
- which made everything visible in the room, though not so clearly that
- the princess could tell what many of the things were. A large oval bed
- stood in the middle, with a coverlid of rose colour, and velvet
- curtains all round it of a lovely pale blue. The walls were also
- blue--spangled all over with what looked like stars of silver.
- The old lady left her and, going to a strange-looking cabinet, opened
- it and took out a curious silver casket. Then she sat down on a low
- chair and, calling Irene, made her kneel before her while she looked at
- her hand. Having examined it, she opened the casket, and took from it
- a little ointment. The sweetest odour filled the room--like that of
- roses and lilies--as she rubbed the ointment gently all over the hot
- swollen hand. Her touch was so pleasant and cool that it seemed to
- drive away the pain and heat wherever it came.
- 'Oh, grandmother! it is so nice!' said Irene. 'Thank you; thank you.'
- Then the old lady went to a chest of drawers, and took out a large
- handkerchief of gossamer-like cambric, which she tied round her hand.
- 'I don't think I can let you go away tonight,' she said. 'Would you
- like to sleep with me?'
- 'Oh, yes, yes, dear grandmother,' said Irene, and would have clapped
- her hands, forgetting that she could not.
- 'You won't be afraid, then, to go to bed with such an old woman?'
- 'No. You are so beautiful, grandmother.'
- 'But I am very old.'
- 'And I suppose I am very young. You won't mind sleeping with such a
- very young woman, grandmother?'
- 'You sweet little pertness!' said the old lady, and drew her towards
- her, and kissed her on the forehead and the cheek and the mouth. Then
- she got a large silver basin, and having poured some water into it made
- Irene sit on the chair, and washed her feet. This done, she was ready
- for bed. And oh, what a delicious bed it was into which her
- grandmother laid her! She hardly could have told she was lying upon
- anything: she felt nothing but the softness.
- The old lady having undressed herself lay down beside her.
- 'Why don't you put out your moon?' asked the princess.
- 'That never goes out, night or day,' she answered. 'In the darkest
- night, if any of my pigeons are out on a message, they always see my
- moon and know where to fly to.'
- 'But if somebody besides the pigeons were to see it--somebody about the
- house, I mean--they would come to look what it was and find you.'
- 'The better for them, then,' said the old lady. 'But it does not
- happen above five times in a hundred years that anyone does see it.
- The greater part of those who do take it for a meteor, wink their eyes,
- and forget it again. Besides, nobody could find the room except I
- pleased. Besides, again--I will tell you a secret--if that light were
- to go out you would fancy yourself lying in a bare garret, on a heap of
- old straw, and would not see one of the pleasant things round about you
- all the time.'
- 'I hope it will never go out,' said the princess.
- 'I hope not. But it is time we both went to sleep. Shall I take you
- in my arms?'
- The little princess nestled close up to the old lady, who took her in
- both her arms and held her close to her bosom.
- 'Oh, dear! this is so nice!' said the princess. 'I didn't know
- anything in the world could be so comfortable. I should like to lie
- here for ever.'
- 'You may if you will,' said the old lady. 'But I must put you to one
- trial-not a very hard one, I hope. This night week you must come back
- to me. If you don't, I do not know when you may find me again, and you
- will soon want me very much.'
- 'Oh! please, don't let me forget.'
- 'You shall not forget. The only question is whether you will believe I
- am anywhere--whether you will believe I am anything but a dream. You
- may be sure I will do all I can to help you to come. But it will rest
- with yourself, after all. On the night of next Friday, you must come
- to me. Mind now.'
- 'I will try,' said the princess.
- 'Then good night,' said the old lady, and kissed the forehead which lay
- in her bosom.
- In a moment more the little princess was dreaming in the midst of the
- loveliest dreams--of summer seas and moonlight and mossy springs and
- great murmuring trees, and beds of wild flowers with such odours as she
- had never smelled before. But, after all, no dream could be more
- lovely than what she had left behind when she fell asleep.
- In the morning she found herself in her own bed. There was no
- handkerchief or anything else on her hand, only a sweet odour lingered
- about it. The swelling had all gone down; the prick of the brooch had
- vanished--in fact, her hand was perfectly well.
- CHAPTER 12
- A Short Chapter About Curdie
- Curdie spent many nights in the mine. His father and he had taken Mrs.
- Peterson into the secret, for they knew mother could hold her tongue,
- which was more than could be said of all the miners' wives.
- But Curdie did not tell her that every night he spent in the mine, part
- of it went in earning a new red petticoat for her.
- Mrs. Peterson was such a nice good mother! All mothers are nice and
- good more or less, but Mrs. Peterson was nice and good all more and no
- less. She made and kept a little heaven in that poor cottage on the
- high hillside for her husband and son to go home to out of the low and
- rather dreary earth in which they worked. I doubt if the princess was
- very much happier even in the arms of her huge great-grandmother than
- Peter and Curdie were in the arms of Mrs. Peterson. True, her hands
- were hard and chapped and large, but it was with work for them; and
- therefore, in the sight of the angels, her hands were so much the more
- beautiful. And if Curdie worked hard to get her a petticoat, she
- worked hard every day to get him comforts which he would have missed
- much more than she would a new petticoat even in winter. Not that she
- and Curdie ever thought of how much they worked for each other: that
- would have spoiled everything.
- When left alone in the mine Curdie always worked on for an hour or two
- at first, following the lode which, according to Glump, would lead at
- last into the deserted habitation. After that, he would set out on a
- reconnoitring expedition. In order to manage this, or rather the
- return from it, better than the first time, he had bought a huge ball
- of fine string, having learned the trick from Hop-o'-my-Thumb, whose
- history his mother had often told him. Not that Hop-o'-my-Thumb had
- ever used a ball of string--I should be sorry to be supposed so far out
- in my classics--but the principle was the same as that of the pebbles.
- The end of this string he fastened to his pickaxe, which figured no bad
- anchor, and then, with the ball in his hand, unrolling it as he went,
- set out in the dark through the natural gangs of the goblins'
- territory. The first night or two he came upon nothing worth
- remembering; saw only a little of the home-life of the cobs in the
- various caves they called houses; failed in coming upon anything to
- cast light upon the foregoing design which kept the inundation for the
- present in the background. But at length, I think on the third or
- fourth night, he found, partly guided by the noise of their implements,
- a company of evidently the best sappers and miners amongst them, hard
- at work. What were they about? It could not well be the inundation,
- seeing that had in the meantime been postponed to something else. Then
- what was it? He lurked and watched, every now and then in the greatest
- risk of being detected, but without success. He had again and again to
- retreat in haste, a proceeding rendered the more difficult that he had
- to gather up his string as he returned upon its course. It was not
- that he was afraid of the goblins, but that he was afraid of their
- finding out that they were watched, which might have prevented the
- discovery at which he aimed. Sometimes his haste had to be such that,
- when he reached home towards morning, his string, for lack of time to
- wind it up as he 'dodged the cobs', would be in what seemed most
- hopeless entanglement; but after a good sleep, though a short one, he
- always found his mother had got it right again. There it was, wound in
- a most respectable ball, ready for use the moment he should want it!
- 'I can't think how you do it, mother,' he would say.
- 'I follow the thread,' she would answer--'just as you do in the mine.'
- She never had more to say about it; but the less clever she was with
- her words, the more clever she was with her hands; and the less his
- mother said, the more Curdie believed she had to say. But still he had
- made no discovery as to what the goblin miners were about.
- CHAPTER 13
- The Cobs' Creatures
- About this time the gentlemen whom the king had left behind him to
- watch over the princess had each occasion to doubt the testimony of his
- own eyes, for more than strange were the objects to which they would
- bear witness. They were of one sort--creatures--but so grotesque and
- misshapen as to be more like a child's drawings upon his slate than
- anything natural. They saw them only at night, while on guard about
- the house. The testimony of the man who first reported having seen one
- of them was that, as he was walking slowly round the house, while yet
- in the shadow, he caught sight of a creature standing on its hind legs
- in the moonlight, with its forefeet upon a window-ledge, staring in at
- the window. Its body might have been that of a dog or wolf, he
- thought, but he declared on his honour that its head was twice the size
- it ought to have been for the size of its body, and as round as a ball,
- while the face, which it turned upon him as it fled, was more like one
- carved by a boy upon the turnip inside which he is going to put a
- candle than anything else he could think of. It rushed into the
- garden. He sent an arrow after it, and thought he must have struck it;
- for it gave an unearthly howl, and he could not find his arrow any more
- than the beast, although he searched all about the place where it
- vanished. They laughed at him until he was driven to hold his tongue,
- and said he must have taken too long a pull at the ale-jug.
- But before two nights were over he had one to side with him, for he,
- too, had seen something strange, only quite different from that
- reported by the other. The description the second man gave of the
- creature he had seen was yet more grotesque and unlikely. They were
- both laughed at by the rest; but night after night another came over to
- their side, until at last there was only one left to laugh at all his
- companions. Two nights more passed, and he saw nothing; but on the
- third he came rushing from the garden to the other two before the
- house, in such an agitation that they declared--for it was their turn
- now--that the band of his helmet was cracking under his chin with the
- rising of his hair inside it. Running with him into that part of the
- garden which I have already described, they saw a score of creatures,
- to not one of which they could give a name, and not one of which was
- like another, hideous and ludicrous at once, gambolling on the lawn in
- the moonlight. The supernatural or rather subnatural ugliness of their
- faces, the length of legs and necks in some, the apparent absence of
- both or either in others, made the spectators, although in one consent
- as to what they saw, yet doubtful, as I have said, of the evidence of
- their own eyes--and ears as well; for the noises they made, although
- not loud, were as uncouth and varied as their forms, and could be
- described neither as grunts nor squeaks nor roars nor howls nor barks
- nor yells nor screams nor croaks nor hisses nor mews nor shrieks, but
- only as something like all of them mingled in one horrible dissonance.
- Keeping in the shade, the watchers had a few moments to recover
- themselves before the hideous assembly suspected their presence; but
- all at once, as if by common consent, they scampered off in the
- direction of a great rock, and vanished before the men had come to
- themselves sufficiently to think of following them.
- My readers will suspect what these were; but I will now give them full
- information concerning them. They were, of course, household animals
- belonging to the goblins, whose ancestors had taken their ancestors
- many centuries before from the upper regions of light into the lower
- regions of darkness. The original stocks of these horrible creatures
- were very much the same as the animals now seen about farms and homes
- in the country, with the exception of a few of them, which had been
- wild creatures, such as foxes, and indeed wolves and small bears, which
- the goblins, from their proclivity towards the animal creation, had
- caught when cubs and tamed. But in the course of time all had
- undergone even greater changes than had passed upon their owners. They
- had altered--that is, their descendants had altered--into such
- creatures as I have not attempted to describe except in the vaguest
- manner--the various parts of their bodies assuming, in an apparently
- arbitrary and self-willed manner, the most abnormal developments.
- Indeed, so little did any distinct type predominate in some of the
- bewildering results, that you could only have guessed at any known
- animal as the original, and even then, what likeness remained would be
- more one of general expression than of definable conformation. But
- what increased the gruesomeness tenfold was that, from constant
- domestic, or indeed rather family association with the goblins, their
- countenances had grown in grotesque resemblance to the human.
- No one understands animals who does not see that every one of them,
- even amongst the fishes, it may be with a dimness and vagueness
- infinitely remote, yet shadows the human: in the case of these the
- human resemblance had greatly increased: while their owners had sunk
- towards them, they had risen towards their owners. But the conditions
- of subterranean life being equally unnatural for both, while the
- goblins were worse, the creatures had not improved by the
- approximation, and its result would have appeared far more ludicrous
- than consoling to the warmest lover of animal nature. I shall now
- explain how it was that just then these animals began to show
- themselves about the king's country house.
- The goblins, as Curdie had discovered, were mining on--at work both day
- and night, in divisions, urging the scheme after which he lay in wait.
- In the course of their tunnelling they had broken into the channel of a
- small stream, but the break being in the top of it, no water had
- escaped to interfere with their work. Some of the creatures, hovering
- as they often did about their masters, had found the hole, and had,
- with the curiosity which had grown to a passion from the restraints of
- their unnatural circumstances, proceeded to explore the channel. The
- stream was the same which ran out by the seat on which Irene and her
- king-papa had sat as I have told, and the goblin creatures found it
- jolly fun to get out for a romp on a smooth lawn such as they had never
- seen in all their poor miserable lives. But although they had partaken
- enough of the nature of their owners to delight in annoying and
- alarming any of the people whom they met on the mountain, they were, of
- course, incapable of designs of their own, or of intentionally
- furthering those of their masters.
- For several nights after the men-at-arms were at length of one mind as
- to the fact of the visits of some horrible creatures, whether bodily or
- spectral they could not yet say, they watched with special attention
- that part of the garden where they had last seen them. Perhaps indeed
- they gave in consequence too little attention to the house. But the
- creatures were too cunning to be easily caught; nor were the watchers
- quick-eyed enough to descry the head, or the keen eyes in it, which,
- from the opening whence the stream issued, would watch them in turn,
- ready, the moment they should leave the lawn, to report the place clear.
- CHAPTER 14
- That Night Week
- During the whole of the week Irene had been thinking every other moment
- of her promise to the old lady, although even now she could not feel
- quite sure that she had not been dreaming. Could it really be that an
- old lady lived up in the top of the house, with pigeons and a
- spinning-wheel, and a lamp that never went out? She was, however, none
- the less determined, on the coming Friday, to ascend the three stairs,
- walk through the passages with the many doors, and try to find the
- tower in which she had either seen or dreamed her grandmother.
- Her nurse could not help wondering what had come to the child--she
- would sit so thoughtfully silent, and even in the midst of a game with
- her would so suddenly fall into a dreamy mood. But Irene took care to
- betray nothing, whatever efforts Lootie might make to get at her
- thoughts. And Lootie had to say to herself: 'What an odd child she
- is!' and give it up.
- At length the longed-for Friday arrived, and lest Lootie should be
- moved to watch her, Irene endeavoured to keep herself as quiet as
- possible. In the afternoon she asked for her doll's house, and went on
- arranging and rearranging the various rooms and their inhabitants for a
- whole hour. Then she gave a sigh and threw herself back in her chair.
- One of the dolls would not sit, and another would not stand, and they
- were all very tiresome. Indeed, there was one would not even lie down,
- which was too bad. But it was now getting dark, and the darker it got
- the more excited Irene became, and the more she felt it necessary to be
- composed.
- 'I see you want your tea, princess,' said the nurse: 'I will go and get
- it. The room feels close: I will open the window a little. The evening
- is mild: it won't hurt you.'
- 'There's no fear of that, Lootie,' said Irene, wishing she had put off
- going for the tea till it was darker, when she might have made her
- attempt with every advantage.
- I fancy Lootie was longer in returning than she had intended; for when
- Irene, who had been lost in thought, looked up, she saw it was nearly
- dark, and at the same moment caught sight of a pair of eyes, bright
- with a green light, glowering at her through the open window. The next
- instant something leaped into the room. It was like a cat, with legs
- as long as a horse's, Irene said, but its body no bigger and its legs
- no thicker than those of a cat. She was too frightened to cry out, but
- not too frightened to jump from her chair and run from the room.
- It is plain enough to every one of my readers what she ought to have
- done--and indeed, Irene thought of it herself; but when she came to the
- foot of the old stair, just outside the nursery door, she imagined the
- creature running up those long ascents after her, and pursuing her
- through the dark passages--which, after all, might lead to no tower!
- That thought was too much. Her heart failed her, and, turning from the
- stair, she rushed along to the hall, whence, finding the front door
- open, she darted into the court pursued--at least she thought so--by
- the creature. No one happening to see her, on she ran, unable to think
- for fear, and ready to run anywhere to elude the awful creature with
- the stilt-legs. Not daring to look behind her, she rushed straight out
- of the gate and up the mountain. It was foolish indeed--thus to run
- farther and farther from all who could help her, as if she had been
- seeking a fit spot for the goblin creature to eat her in his leisure;
- but that is the way fear serves us: it always sides with the thing we
- are afraid of.
- The princess was soon out of breath with running uphill; but she ran
- on, for she fancied the horrible creature just behind her, forgetting
- that, had it been after her such long legs as those must have overtaken
- her long ago. At last she could run no longer, and fell, unable even
- to scream, by the roadside, where she lay for some time half dead with
- terror. But finding nothing lay hold of her, and her breath beginning
- to come back, she ventured at length to get half up and peer anxiously
- about her. It was now so dark she could see nothing. Not a single
- star was out. She could not even tell in what direction the house lay,
- and between her and home she fancied the dreadful creature lying ready
- to pounce upon her. She saw now that she ought to have run up the
- stairs at once. It was well she did not scream; for, although very few
- of the goblins had come out for weeks, a stray idler or two might have
- heard her. She sat down upon a stone, and nobody but one who had done
- something wrong could have been more miserable. She had quite
- forgotten her promise to visit her grandmother. A raindrop fell on her
- face. She looked up, and for a moment her terror was lost in
- astonishment. At first she thought the rising moon had left her place,
- and drawn nigh to see what could be the matter with the little girl,
- sitting alone, without hat or cloak, on the dark bare mountain; but she
- soon saw she was mistaken, for there was no light on the ground at her
- feet, and no shadow anywhere. But a great silver globe was hanging in
- the air; and as she gazed at the lovely thing, her courage revived. If
- she were but indoors again, she would fear nothing, not even the
- terrible creature with the long legs! But how was she to find her way
- back? What could that light be? Could it be--? No, it couldn't. But
- what if it should be--yes--it must be--her great-great-grandmother's
- lamp, which guided her pigeons home through the darkest night! She
- jumped up: she had but to keep that light in view and she must find the
- house. Her heart grew strong. Speedily, yet softly, she walked down
- the hill, hoping to pass the watching creature unseen. Dark as it was,
- there was little danger now of choosing the wrong road. And--which was
- most strange--the light that filled her eyes from the lamp, instead of
- blinding them for a moment to the object upon which they next fell,
- enabled her for a moment to see it, despite the darkness. By looking
- at the lamp and then dropping her eyes, she could see the road for a
- yard or two in front of her, and this saved her from several falls, for
- the road was very rough. But all at once, to her dismay, it vanished,
- and the terror of the beast, which had left her the moment she began to
- return, again laid hold of her heart. The same instant, however, she
- caught the light of the windows, and knew exactly where she was. It
- was too dark to run, but she made what haste she could, and reached the
- gate in safety. She found the house door still open, ran through the
- hall, and, without even looking into the nursery, bounded straight up
- the stair, and the next, and the next; then turning to the right, ran
- through the long avenue of silent rooms, and found her way at once to
- the door at the foot of the tower stair.
- When first the nurse missed her, she fancied she was playing her a
- trick, and for some time took no trouble about her; but at last,
- getting frightened, she had begun to search; and when the princess
- entered, the whole household was hither and thither over the house,
- hunting for her. A few seconds after she reached the stair of the
- tower they had even begun to search the neglected rooms, in which they
- would never have thought of looking had they not already searched every
- other place they could think of in vain. But by this time she was
- knocking at the old lady's door.
- CHAPTER 15
- Woven and Then Spun
- 'Come in, Irene,' said the silvery voice of her grandmother.
- The princess opened the door and peeped in. But the room was quite
- dark and there was no sound of the spinning-wheel. She grew frightened
- once more, thinking that, although the room was there, the old lady
- might be a dream after all. Every little girl knows how dreadful it is
- to find a room empty where she thought somebody was; but Irene had to
- fancy for a moment that the person she came to find was nowhere at all.
- She remembered, however, that at night she spun only in the moonlight,
- and concluded that must be why there was no sweet, bee-like humming:
- the old lady might be somewhere in the darkness. Before she had time
- to think another thought, she heard her voice again, saying as before:
- 'Come in, Irene.' From the sound, she understood at once that she was
- not in the room beside her. Perhaps she was in her bedroom. She
- turned across the passage, feeling her way to the other door. When her
- hand fell on the lock, again the old lady spoke:
- 'Shut the other door behind you, Irene. I always close the door of my
- workroom when I go to my chamber.'
- Irene wondered to hear her voice so plainly through the door: having
- shut the other, she opened it and went in. Oh, what a lovely haven to
- reach from the darkness and fear through which she had come! The soft
- light made her feel as if she were going into the heart of the milkiest
- pearl; while the blue walls and their silver stars for a moment
- perplexed her with the fancy that they were in reality the sky which
- she had left outside a minute ago covered with rainclouds.
- 'I've lighted a fire for you, Irene: you're cold and wet,' said her
- grandmother.
- Then Irene looked again, and saw that what she had taken for a huge
- bouquet of red roses on a low stand against the wall was in fact a fire
- which burned in the shapes of the loveliest and reddest roses, glowing
- gorgeously between the heads and wings of two cherubs of shining
- silver. And when she came nearer, she found that the smell of roses
- with which the room was filled came from the fire-roses on the hearth.
- Her grandmother was dressed in the loveliest pale blue velvet, over
- which her hair, no longer white, but of a rich golden colour, streamed
- like a cataract, here falling in dull gathered heaps, there rushing
- away in smooth shining falls. And ever as she looked, the hair seemed
- pouring down from her head and vanishing in a golden mist ere it
- reached the floor. It flowed from under the edge of a circle of
- shining silver, set with alternated pearls and opals. On her dress was
- no ornament whatever, neither was there a ring on her hand, or a
- necklace or carcanet about her neck. But her slippers glimmered with
- the light of the Milky Way, for they were covered with seed-pearls and
- opals in one mass. Her face was that of a woman of three-and-twenty.
- The princess was so bewildered with astonishment and admiration that
- she could hardly thank her, and drew nigh with timidity, feeling dirty
- and uncomfortable. The lady was seated on a low chair by the side of
- the fire, with hands outstretched to take her, but the princess hung
- back with a troubled smile.
- 'Why, what's the matter?' asked her grandmother. 'You haven't been
- doing anything wrong--I know that by your face, though it is rather
- miserable. What's the matter, my dear?'
- And she still held out her arms.
- 'Dear grandmother,' said Irene, 'I'm not so sure that I haven't done
- something wrong. I ought to have run up to you at once when the
- long-legged cat came in at the window, instead of running out on the
- mountain and making myself such a fright.'
- 'You were taken by surprise, my child, and you are not so likely to do
- it again. It is when people do wrong things wilfully that they are the
- more likely to do them again. Come.'
- And still she held out her arms.
- 'But, grandmother, you're so beautiful and grand with your crown on;
- and I am so dirty with mud and rain! I should quite spoil your
- beautiful blue dress.'
- With a merry little laugh the lady sprung from her chair, more lightly
- far than Irene herself could, caught the child to her bosom, and,
- kissing the tear-stained face over and over, sat down with her in her
- lap.
- 'Oh, grandmother! You'll make yourself such a mess!' cried Irene,
- clinging to her.
- 'You darling! do you think I care more for my dress than for my little
- girl? Besides--look here.'
- As she spoke she set her down, and Irene saw to her dismay that the
- lovely dress was covered with the mud of her fall on the mountain road.
- But the lady stooped to the fire, and taking from it, by the stalk in
- her fingers, one of the burning roses, passed it once and again and a
- third time over the front of her dress; and when Irene looked, not a
- single stain was to be discovered.
- 'There!' said her grandmother, 'you won't mind coming to me now?'
- But Irene again hung back, eying the flaming rose which the lady held
- in her hand.
- 'You're not afraid of the rose--are you?' she said, about to throw it
- on the hearth again.
- 'Oh! don't, please!' cried Irene. 'Won't you hold it to my frock and
- my hands and my face? And I'm afraid my feet and my knees want it too.'
- 'No, answered her grandmother, smiling a little sadly, as she threw the
- rose from her; 'it is too hot for you yet. It would set your frock in
- a flame. Besides, I don't want to make you clean tonight.
- I want your nurse and the rest of the people to see you as you are, for
- you will have to tell them how you ran away for fear of the long-legged
- cat. I should like to wash you, but they would not believe you then.
- Do you see that bath behind you?'
- The princess looked, and saw a large oval tub of silver, shining
- brilliantly in the light of the wonderful lamp.
- 'Go and look into it,' said the lady.
- Irene went, and came back very silent with her eyes shining.
- 'What did you see?' asked her grandmother.
- 'The sky, and the moon and the stars,' she answered. 'It looked as if
- there was no bottom to it.'
- The lady smiled a pleased satisfied smile, and was silent also for a
- few moments. Then she said:
- 'Any time you want a bath, come to me. I know YOU have a bath every
- morning, but sometimes you want one at night, too.'
- 'Thank you, grandmother; I will--I will indeed,' answered Irene, and
- was again silent for some moments thinking. Then she said: 'How was
- it, grandmother, that I saw your beautiful lamp--not the light of it
- only--but the great round silvery lamp itself, hanging alone in the
- great open air, high up? It was your lamp I saw--wasn't it?'
- 'Yes, my child--it was my lamp.'
- 'Then how was it? I don't see a window all round.'
- 'When I please I can make the lamp shine through the walls--shine so
- strong that it melts them away from before the sight, and shows itself
- as you saw it. But, as I told you, it is not everybody can see it.'
- 'How is it that I can, then? I'm sure I don't know.'
- 'It is a gift born with you. And one day I hope everybody will have
- it.'
- 'But how do you make it shine through the walls?'
- 'Ah! that you would not understand if I were to try ever so much to
- make you--not yet--not yet. But,' added the lady, rising, 'you must
- sit in my chair while I get you the present I have been preparing for
- you. I told you my spinning was for you. It is finished now, and I am
- going to fetch it. I have been keeping it warm under one of my
- brooding pigeons.'
- Irene sat down in the low chair, and her grandmother left her, shutting
- the door behind her. The child sat gazing, now at the rose fire, now
- at the starry walls, now at the silver light; and a great quietness
- grew in her heart. If all the long-legged cats in the world had come
- rushing at her then she would not have been afraid of them for a
- moment. How this was she could not tell--she only knew there was no
- fear in her, and everything was so right and safe that it could not get
- in.
- She had been gazing at the lovely lamp for some minutes fixedly:
- turning her eyes, she found the wall had vanished, for she was looking
- out on the dark cloudy night. But though she heard the wind blowing,
- none of it blew upon her. In a moment more the clouds themselves
- parted, or rather vanished like the wall, and she looked straight into
- the starry herds, flashing gloriously in the dark blue. It was but for
- a moment. The clouds gathered again and shut out the stars; the wall
- gathered again and shut out the clouds; and there stood the lady beside
- her with the loveliest smile on her face, and a shimmering ball in her
- hand, about the size of a pigeon's egg.
- 'There, Irene; there is my work for you!' she said, holding out the
- ball to the princess.
- She took it in her hand, and looked at it all over. It sparkled a
- little, and shone here and there, but not much. It was of a sort of
- grey-whiteness, something like spun glass.
- 'Is this all your spinning, grandmother?' she asked.
- 'All since you came to the house. There is more there than you think.'
- 'How pretty it is! What am I to do with it, please?'
- 'That I will now explain to you,' answered the lady, turning from her
- and going to her cabinet. She came back with a small ring in her hand.
- Then she took the ball from Irene's, and did something with the
- ring--Irene could not tell what.
- 'Give me your hand,' she said. Irene held up her right hand.
- 'Yes, that is the hand I want,' said the lady, and put the ring on the
- forefinger of it.
- 'What a beautiful ring!' said Irene. 'What is the stone called?'
- 'It is a fire-opal.' 'Please, am I to keep it?'
- 'Always.' 'Oh, thank you, grandmother! It's prettier than anything I
- ever saw, except those--of all colours-in your--Please, is that your
- crown?'
- 'Yes, it is my crown. The stone in your ring is of the same sort--only
- not so good. It has only red, but mine have all colours, you see.'
- 'Yes, grandmother. I will take such care of it! But--' she added,
- hesitating.
- 'But what?' asked her grandmother.
- 'What am I to say when Lootie asks me where I got it?'
- 'You will ask her where you got it,' answered the lady smiling.
- 'I don't see how I can do that.'
- 'You will, though.'
- 'Of course I will, if you say so. But, you know, I can't pretend not
- to know.'
- 'Of course not. But don't trouble yourself about it. You will see
- when the time comes.'
- So saying, the lady turned, and threw the little ball into the rose
- fire.
- 'Oh, grandmother!' exclaimed Irene; 'I thought you had spun it for me.'
- 'So I did, my child. And you've got it.'
- 'No; it's burnt in the fire!'
- The lady put her hand in the fire, brought out the ball, glimmering as
- before, and held it towards her. Irene stretched out her hand to take
- it, but the lady turned and, going to her cabinet, opened a drawer, and
- laid the ball in it.
- 'Have I done anything to vex you, grandmother?' said Irene pitifully.
- 'No, my darling. But you must understand that no one ever gives
- anything to another properly and really without keeping it. That ball
- is yours.'
- 'Oh! I'm not to take it with me! You are going to keep it for me!'
- 'You are to take it with you. I've fastened the end of it to the ring
- on your finger.'
- Irene looked at the ring.
- 'I can't see it there, grandmother,' she said.
- 'Feel--a little way from the ring--towards the cabinet,' said the lady.
- 'Oh! I do feel it!' exclaimed the princess. 'But I can't see it,' she
- added, looking close to her outstretched hand.
- 'No. The thread is too fine for you to see it. You can only feel it.
- Now you can fancy how much spinning that took, although it does seem
- such a little ball.'
- 'But what use can I make of it, if it lies in your cabinet?'
- 'That is what I will explain to you. It would be of no use to you--it
- wouldn't be yours at all if it did not lie in my cabinet. Now listen.
- If ever you find yourself in any danger--such, for example, as you were
- in this same evening--you must take off your ring and put it under the
- pillow of your bed. Then you must lay your finger, the same that wore
- the ring, upon the thread, and follow the thread wherever it leads you.'
- 'Oh, how delightful! It will lead me to you, grandmother, I know!'
- 'Yes. But, remember, it may seem to you a very roundabout way indeed,
- and you must not doubt the thread. Of one thing you may be sure, that
- while you hold it, I hold it too.'
- 'It is very wonderful!' said Irene thoughtfully. Then suddenly
- becoming aware, she jumped up, crying:
- 'Oh, grandmother! here have I been sitting all this time in your chair,
- and you standing! I beg your pardon.'
- The lady laid her hand on her shoulder, and said:
- 'Sit down again, Irene. Nothing pleases me better than to see anyone
- sit in my chair. I am only too glad to stand so long as anyone will
- sit in it.'
- 'How kind of you!' said the princess, and sat down again.
- 'It makes me happy,' said the lady.
- 'But,' said Irene, still puzzled, 'won't the thread get in somebody's
- way and be broken, if the one end is fast to my ring, and the other
- laid in your cabinet?'
- 'You will find all that arrange itself. I am afraid it is time for you
- to go.'
- 'Mightn't I stay and sleep with you tonight, grandmother?' 'No, not
- tonight. If I had meant you to stay tonight, I should have given you a
- bath; but you know everybody in the house is miserable about you, and
- it would be cruel to keep them so all night. You must go downstairs.'
- 'I'm so glad, grandmother, you didn't say "Go home," for this is my
- home. Mayn't I call this my home?'
- 'You may, my child. And I trust you will always think it your home.
- Now come. I must take you back without anyone seeing you.'
- 'Please, I want to ask you one question more,' said Irene. 'Is it
- because you have your crown on that you look so young?'
- 'No, child,' answered her grandmother; 'it is because I felt so young
- this evening that I put my crown on. And I thought you would like to
- see your old grandmother in her best.'
- 'Why do you call yourself old? You're not old, grandmother.'
- 'I am very old indeed. It is so silly of people--I don't mean you, for
- you are such a tiny, and couldn't know better--but it is so silly of
- people to fancy that old age means crookedness and witheredness and
- feebleness and sticks and spectacles and rheumatism and forgetfulness!
- It is so silly! Old age has nothing whatever to do with all that. The
- right old age means strength and beauty and mirth and courage and clear
- eyes and strong painless limbs. I am older than you are able to think,
- and--'
- 'And look at you, grandmother!' cried Irene, jumping up and flinging
- her arms about her neck. 'I won't be so silly again, I promise you.
- At least--I'm rather afraid to promise--but if I am, I promise to be
- sorry for it--I do. I wish I were as old as you, grandmother. I don't
- think you are ever afraid of anything.'
- 'Not for long, at least, my child. Perhaps by the time I am two
- thousand years of age, I shall, indeed, never be afraid of anything.
- But I confess I have sometimes been afraid about my children--sometimes
- about you, Irene.'
- 'Oh, I'm so sorry, grandmother! Tonight, I suppose, you mean.'
- 'Yes--a little tonight; but a good deal when you had all but made up
- your mind that I was a dream, and no real great-great-grandmother. You
- must not suppose I am blaming you for that. I dare say you could not
- help it.'
- 'I don't know, grandmother,' said the princess, beginning to cry. 'I
- can't always do myself as I should like. And I don't always try. I'm
- very sorry anyhow.'
- The lady stooped, lifted her in her arms, and sat down with her in her
- chair, holding her close to her bosom. In a few minutes the princess
- had sobbed herself to sleep. How long she slept I do not know. When
- she came to herself she was sitting in her own high chair at the
- nursery table, with her doll's house before her.
- CHAPTER 16
- The Ring
- The same moment her nurse came into the room, sobbing. When she saw
- her sitting there she started back with a loud cry of amazement and
- joy. Then running to her, she caught her in her arms and covered her
- with kisses.
- 'My precious darling princess! where have you been? What has happened
- to you? We've all been crying our eyes out, and searching the house
- from top to bottom for you.'
- 'Not quite from the top,' thought Irene to herself; and she might have
- added, 'not quite to the bottom', perhaps, if she had known all. But
- the one she would not, and the other she could not say. 'Oh, Lootie!
- I've had such a dreadful adventure!' she replied, and told her all
- about the cat with the long legs, and how she ran out upon the
- mountain, and came back again. But she said nothing of her grandmother
- or her lamp.
- 'And there we've been searching for you all over the house for more
- than an hour and a half!' exclaimed the nurse. 'But that's no matter,
- now we've got you! Only, princess, I must say,' she added, her mood
- changing, 'what you ought to have done was to call for your own Lootie
- to come and help you, instead of running out of the house, and up the
- mountain, in that wild, I must say, foolish fashion.'
- 'Well, Lootie,' said Irene quietly, 'perhaps if you had a big cat, all
- legs, running at you, you might not exactly know what was the wisest
- thing to do at the moment.'
- 'I wouldn't run up the mountain, anyhow,' returned Lootie.
- 'Not if you had time to think about it. But when those creatures came
- at you that night on the mountain, you were so frightened yourself that
- you lost your way home.'
- This put a stop to Lootie's reproaches. She had been on the point of
- saying that the long-legged cat must have been a twilight fancy of the
- princess's, but the memory of the horrors of that night, and of the
- talking-to which the king had given her in consequence, prevented her
- from saying what after all she did not half believe--having a strong
- suspicion that the cat was a goblin; for she knew nothing of the
- difference between the goblins and their creatures: she counted them
- all just goblins.
- Without another word she went and got some fresh tea and bread and
- butter for the princess. Before she returned, the whole household,
- headed by the housekeeper, burst into the nursery to exult over their
- darling. The gentlemen-at-arms followed, and were ready enough to
- believe all she told them about the long-legged cat. Indeed, though
- wise enough to say nothing about it, they remembered, with no little
- horror, just such a creature amongst those they had surprised at their
- gambols upon the princess's lawn.
- In their own hearts they blamed themselves for not having kept better
- watch. And their captain gave orders that from this night the front
- door and all the windows on the ground floor should be locked
- immediately the sun set, and opened after upon no pretence whatever.
- The men-at-arms redoubled their vigilance, and for some time there was
- no further cause of alarm.
- When the princess woke the next morning, her nurse was bending over
- her. 'How your ring does glow this morning, princess!--just like a
- fiery rose!' she said.
- 'Does it, Lootie?' returned Irene. 'Who gave me the ring, Lootie? I
- know I've had it a long time, but where did I get it? I don't
- remember.'
- 'I think it must have been your mother gave it you, princess; but
- really, for as long as you have worn it, I don't remember that ever I
- heard,' answered her nurse.
- 'I will ask my king-papa the next time he comes,' said Irene.
- CHAPTER 17
- Springtime
- The spring so dear to all creatures, young and old, came at last, and
- before the first few days of it had gone, the king rode through its
- budding valleys to see his little daughter. He had been in a distant
- part of his dominions all the winter, for he was not in the habit of
- stopping in one great city, or of visiting only his favourite country
- houses, but he moved from place to place, that all his people might
- know him. Wherever he journeyed, he kept a constant look-out for the
- ablest and best men to put into office; and wherever he found himself
- mistaken, and those he had appointed incapable or unjust, he removed
- them at once. Hence you see it was his care of the people that kept
- him from seeing his princess so often as he would have liked. You may
- wonder why he did not take her about with him; but there were several
- reasons against his doing so, and I suspect her great-great-grandmother
- had had a principal hand in preventing it. Once more Irene heard the
- bugle-blast, and once more she was at the gate to meet her father as he
- rode up on his great white horse.
- After they had been alone for a little while, she thought of what she
- had resolved to ask him.
- 'Please, king-papa,' she said, 'Will you tell me where I got this
- pretty ring? I can't remember.'
- The king looked at it. A strange beautiful smile spread like sunshine
- over his face, and an answering smile, but at the same time a
- questioning one, spread like moonlight over Irene's. 'It was your
- queen-mamma's once,' he said.
- 'And why isn't it hers now?' asked Irene.
- 'She does not want it now,' said the king, looking grave.
- 'Why doesn't she want it now?'
- 'Because she's gone where all those rings are made.'
- 'And when shall I see her?' asked the princess.
- 'Not for some time yet,' answered the king, and the tears came into his
- eyes.
- Irene did not remember her mother and did not know why her father
- looked so, and why the tears came in his eyes; but she put her arms
- round his neck and kissed him, and asked no more questions.
- The king was much disturbed on hearing the report of the
- gentlemen-at-arms concerning the creatures they had seen; and I presume
- would have taken Irene with him that very day, but for what the
- presence of the ring on her finger assured him of. About an hour
- before he left, Irene saw him go up the old stair; and he did not come
- down again till they were just ready to start; and she thought with
- herself that he had been up to see the old lady. When he went away he
- left other six gentlemen behind him, that there might be six of them
- always on guard.
- And now, in the lovely spring weather, Irene was out on the mountain
- the greater part of the day. In the warmer hollows there were lovely
- primroses, and not so many that she ever got tired of them. As often
- as she saw a new one opening an eye of light in the blind earth, she
- would clap her hands with gladness, and unlike some children I know,
- instead of pulling it, would touch it as tenderly as if it had been a
- new baby, and, having made its acquaintance, would leave it as happy as
- she found it. She treated the plants on which they grew like birds'
- nests; every fresh flower was like a new little bird to her. She would
- pay visits to all the flower-nests she knew, remembering each by
- itself. She would go down on her hands and knees beside one and say:
- 'Good morning! Are you all smelling very sweet this morning?
- Good-bye!' and then she would go to another nest, and say the same. It
- was a favourite amusement with her. There were many flowers up and
- down, and she loved them all, but the primroses were her favourites.
- 'They're not too shy, and they're not a bit forward,' she would say to
- Lootie.
- There were goats too about, over the mountain, and when the little kids
- came she was as pleased with them as with the flowers. The goats
- belonged to the miners mostly-a few of them to Curdie's mother; but
- there were a good many wild ones that seemed to belong to nobody.
- These the goblins counted theirs, and it was upon them partly that they
- lived. They set snares and dug pits for them; and did not scruple to
- take what tame ones happened to be caught; but they did not try to
- steal them in any other manner, because they were afraid of the dogs
- the hill-people kept to watch them, for the knowing dogs always tried
- to bite their feet. But the goblins had a kind of sheep of their
- own--very queer creatures, which they drove out to feed at night, and
- the other goblin creatures were wise enough to keep good watch over
- them, for they knew they should have their bones by and by.
- CHAPTER 18
- Curdie's Clue
- Curdie was as watchful as ever, but was almost getting tired of his ill
- success. Every other night or so he followed the goblins about, as
- they went on digging and boring, and getting as near them as he could,
- watched them from behind stones and rocks; but as yet he seemed no
- nearer finding out what they had in view. As at first, he always kept
- hold of the end of his string, while his pickaxe, left just outside the
- hole by which he entered the goblins' country from the mine, continued
- to serve as an anchor and hold fast the other end. The goblins,
- hearing no more noise in that quarter, had ceased to apprehend an
- immediate invasion, and kept no watch.
- One night, after dodging about and listening till he was nearly falling
- asleep with weariness, he began to roll up his ball, for he had
- resolved to go home to bed. It was not long, however, before he began
- to feel bewildered. One after another he passed goblin houses, caves,
- that is, occupied by goblin families, and at length was sure they were
- many more than he had passed as he came. He had to use great caution
- to pass unseen--they lay so close together. Could his string have led
- him wrong? He still followed winding it, and still it led him into
- more thickly populated quarters, until he became quite uneasy, and
- indeed apprehensive; for although he was not afraid of the cobs, he was
- afraid of not finding his way out. But what could he do? It was of no
- use to sit down and wait for the morning--the morning made no
- difference here. It was dark, and always dark; and if his string
- failed him he was helpless. He might even arrive within a yard of the
- mine and never know it. Seeing he could do nothing better he would at
- least find where the end of his string was, and, if possible, how it
- had come to play him such a trick. He knew by the size of the ball
- that he was getting pretty near the last of it, when he began to feel a
- tugging and pulling at it. What could it mean? Turning a sharp
- corner, he thought he heard strange sounds. These grew, as he went on,
- to a scuffling and growling and squeaking; and the noise increased,
- until, turning a second sharp corner, he found himself in the midst of
- it, and the same moment tumbled over a wallowing mass, which he knew
- must be a knot of the cobs' creatures. Before he could recover his
- feet, he had caught some great scratches on his face and several severe
- bites on his legs and arms. But as he scrambled to get up, his hand
- fell upon his pickaxe, and before the horrid beasts could do him any
- serious harm, he was laying about with it right and left in the dark.
- The hideous cries which followed gave him the satisfaction of knowing
- that he had punished some of them pretty smartly for their rudeness,
- and by their scampering and their retreating howls, he perceived that
- he had routed them. He stood for a little, weighing his battle-axe in
- his hand as if it had been the most precious lump of metal--but indeed
- no lump of gold itself could have been so precious at the time as that
- common tool--then untied the end of the string from it, put the ball in
- his pocket, and still stood thinking. It was clear that the cobs'
- creatures had found his axe, had between them carried it off, and had
- so led him he knew not where. But for all his thinking he could not
- tell what he ought to do, until suddenly he became aware of a glimmer
- of light in the distance. Without a moment's hesitation he set out for
- it, as fast as the unknown and rugged way would permit. Yet again
- turning a corner, led by the dim light, he spied something quite new in
- his experience of the underground regions--a small irregular shape of
- something shining. Going up to it, he found it was a piece of mica, or
- Muscovy glass, called sheep-silver in Scotland, and the light flickered
- as if from a fire behind it. After trying in vain for some time to
- discover an entrance to the place where it was burning, he came at
- length to a small chamber in which an opening, high in the wall,
- revealed a glow beyond. To this opening he managed to scramble up, and
- then he saw a strange sight.
- Below sat a little group of goblins around a fire, the smoke of which
- vanished in the darkness far aloft. The sides of the cave were full of
- shining minerals like those of the palace hall; and the company was
- evidently of a superior order, for every one wore stones about head, or
- arms, or waist, shining dull gorgeous colours in the light of the fire.
- Nor had Curdie looked long before he recognized the king himself, and
- found that he had made his way into the inner apartment of the royal
- family. He had never had such a good chance of hearing something. He
- crept through the hole as softly as he could, scrambled a good way down
- the wall towards them without attracting attention, and then sat down
- and listened. The king, evidently the queen, and probably the crown
- prince and the Prime Minister were talking together. He was sure of
- the queen by her shoes, for as she warmed her feet at the fire, he saw
- them quite plainly.
- 'That will be fun!' said the one he took for the crown prince. It was
- the first whole sentence he heard.
- 'I don't see why you should think it such a grand affair!' said his
- stepmother, tossing her head backward.
- 'You must remember, my spouse,' interposed His Majesty, as if making
- excuse for his son, 'he has got the same blood in him. His mother--'
- 'Don't talk to me of his mother! You positively encourage his
- unnatural fancies. Whatever belongs to that mother ought to be cut out
- of him.'
- 'You forget yourself, my dear!' said the king.
- 'I don't,' said the queen, 'nor you either. If you expect me to
- approve of such coarse tastes, you will find yourself mistaken. I
- don't wear shoes for nothing.'
- 'You must acknowledge, however,' the king said, with a little groan,
- 'that this at least is no whim of Harelip's, but a matter of State
- policy. You are well aware that his gratification comes purely from
- the pleasure of sacrificing himself to the public good.
- Does it not, Harelip?'
- 'Yes, father; of course it does. Only it will be nice to make her cry.
- I'll have the skin taken off between her toes, and tie them up till
- they grow together. Then her feet will be like other people's, and
- there will be no occasion for her to wear shoes.'
- 'Do you mean to insinuate I've got toes, you unnatural wretch?' cried
- the queen; and she moved angrily towards Harelip. The councillor,
- however, who was betwixt them, leaned forward so as to prevent her
- touching him, but only as if to address the prince.
- 'Your Royal Highness,' he said, 'possibly requires to be reminded that
- you have got three toes yourself--one on one foot, two on the other.'
- 'Ha! ha! ha!' shouted the queen triumphantly.
- The councillor, encouraged by this mark of favour, went on.
- 'It seems to me, Your Royal Highness, it would greatly endear you to
- your future people, proving to them that you are not the less one of
- themselves that you had the misfortune to be born of a sun-mother, if
- you were to command upon yourself the comparatively slight operation
- which, in a more extended form, you so wisely meditate with regard to
- your future princess.'
- 'Ha! ha! ha!' laughed the queen louder than before, and the king and
- the minister joined in the laugh. Harelip growled, and for a few
- moments the others continued to express their enjoyment of his
- discomfiture.
- The queen was the only one Curdie could see with any distinctness. She
- sat sideways to him, and the light of the fire shone full upon her
- face. He could not consider her handsome. Her nose was certainly
- broader at the end than its extreme length, and her eyes, instead of
- being horizontal, were set up like two perpendicular eggs, one on the
- broad, the other on the small end. Her mouth was no bigger than a
- small buttonhole until she laughed, when it stretched from ear to
- ear--only, to be sure, her ears were very nearly in the middle of her
- cheeks.
- Anxious to hear everything they might say, Curdie ventured to slide
- down a smooth part of the rock just under him, to a projection below,
- upon which he thought to rest. But whether he was not careful enough,
- or the projection gave way, down he came with a rush on the floor of
- the cavern, bringing with him a great rumbling shower of stones.
- The goblins jumped from their seats in more anger than consternation,
- for they had never yet seen anything to be afraid of in the palace.
- But when they saw Curdie with his pick in his hand their rage was
- mingled with fear, for they took him for the first of an invasion of
- miners. The king notwithstanding drew himself up to his full height of
- four feet, spread himself to his full breadth of three and a half, for
- he was the handsomest and squarest of all the goblins, and strutting up
- to Curdie, planted himself with outspread feet before him, and said
- with dignity:
- 'Pray what right have you in my palace?'
- 'The right of necessity, Your Majesty,' answered Curdie. 'I lost my
- way and did not know where I was wandering to.'
- 'How did you get in?'
- 'By a hole in the mountain.'
- 'But you are a miner! Look at your pickaxe!'
- Curdie did look at it, answering:
- 'I came upon it lying on the ground a little way from here. I tumbled
- over some wild beasts who were playing with it. Look, Your Majesty.'
- And Curdie showed him how he was scratched and bitten.
- The king was pleased to find him behave more politely than he had
- expected from what his people had told him concerning the miners, for
- he attributed it to the power of his own presence; but he did not
- therefore feel friendly to the intruder.
- 'You will oblige me by walking out of my dominions at once,' he said,
- well knowing what a mockery lay in the words.
- 'With pleasure, if Your Majesty will give me a guide,' said Curdie.
- 'I will give you a thousand,' said the king with a scoffing air of
- magnificent liberality.
- 'One will be quite sufficient,' said Curdie.
- But the king uttered a strange shout, half halloo, half roar, and in
- rushed goblins till the cave was swarming. He said something to the
- first of them which Curdie could not hear, and it was passed from one
- to another till in a moment the farthest in the crowd had evidently
- heard and understood it. They began to gather about him in a way he
- did not relish, and he retreated towards the wall. They pressed upon
- him.
- 'Stand back,' said Curdie, grasping his pickaxe tighter by his knee.
- They only grinned and pressed closer. Curdie bethought himself and
- began to rhyme.
- 'Ten, twenty, thirty--
- You're all so very dirty!
- Twenty, thirty, forty--
- You're all so thick and snorty!
- 'Thirty, forty, fifty--
- You're all so puff-and-snifty!
- Forty, fifty, sixty--
- Beast and man so mixty!
- 'Fifty, sixty, seventy--
- Mixty, maxty, leaventy!
- Sixty, seventy, eighty--
- All your cheeks so slaty!
- 'Seventy, eighty, ninety,
- All your hands so flinty!
- Eighty, ninety, hundred,
- Altogether dundred!'
- The goblins fell back a little when he began, and made horrible
- grimaces all through the rhyme, as if eating something so disagreeable
- that it set their teeth on edge and gave them the creeps; but whether
- it was that the rhyming words were most of them no words at all, for, a
- new rhyme being considered the more efficacious, Curdie had made it on
- the spur of the moment, or whether it was that the presence of the king
- and queen gave them courage, I cannot tell; but the moment the rhyme
- was over they crowded on him again, and out shot a hundred long arms,
- with a multitude of thick nailless fingers at the ends of them, to lay
- hold upon him. Then Curdie heaved up his axe. But being as gentle as
- courageous and not wishing to kill any of them, he turned the end which
- was square and blunt like a hammer, and with that came down a great
- blow on the head of the goblin nearest him. Hard as the heads of all
- goblins are, he thought he must feel that. And so he did, no doubt;
- but he only gave a horrible cry, and sprung at Curdie's throat.
- Curdie, however, drew back in time, and just at that critical moment
- remembered the vulnerable part of the goblin body. He made a sudden
- rush at the king and stamped with all his might on His Majesty's feet.
- The king gave a most unkingly howl and almost fell into the fire.
- Curdie then rushed into the crowd, stamping right and left. The
- goblins drew back, howling on every side as he approached, but they
- were so crowded that few of those he attacked could escape his tread;
- and the shrieking and roaring that filled the cave would have appalled
- Curdie but for the good hope it gave him. They were tumbling over each
- other in heaps in their eagerness to rush from the cave, when a new
- assailant suddenly faced him--the queen, with flaming eyes and expanded
- nostrils, her hair standing half up from her head, rushed at him. She
- trusted in her shoes: they were of granite--hollowed like French
- sabots. Curdie would have endured much rather than hurt a woman, even
- if she was a goblin; but here was an affair of life and death:
- forgetting her shoes, he made a great stamp on one of her feet. But
- she instantly returned it with very different effect, causing him
- frightful pain, and almost disabling him. His only chance with her
- would have been to attack the granite shoes with his pickaxe, but
- before he could think of that she had caught him up in her arms and was
- rushing with him across the cave. She dashed him into a hole in the
- wall, with a force that almost stunned him. But although he could not
- move, he was not too far gone to hear her great cry, and the rush of
- multitudes of soft feet, followed by the sounds of something heaved up
- against the rock; after which came a multitudinous patter of stones
- falling near him. The last had not ceased when he grew very faint, for
- his head had been badly cut, and at last insensible.
- When he came to himself there was perfect silence about him, and utter
- darkness, but for the merest glimmer in one tiny spot. He crawled to
- it, and found that they had heaved a slab against the mouth of the
- hole, past the edge of which a poor little gleam found its way from the
- fire. He could not move it a hairbreadth, for they had piled a great
- heap of stones against it. He crawled back to where he had been lying,
- in the faint hope of finding his pickaxe, But after a vain search he
- was at last compelled to acknowledge himself in an evil plight. He sat
- down and tried to think, but soon fell fast asleep.
- CHAPTER 19
- Goblin Counsels
- He must have slept a long time, for when he awoke he felt wonderfully
- restored--indeed almost well--and very hungry. There were voices in
- the outer cave.
- Once more, then, it was night; for the goblins slept during the day and
- went about their affairs during the night.
- In the universal and constant darkness of their dwelling they had no
- reason to prefer the one arrangement to the other; but from aversion to
- the sun-people they chose to be busy when there was least chance of
- their being met either by the miners below, when they were burrowing,
- or by the people of the mountain above, when they were feeding their
- sheep or catching their goats. And indeed it was only when the sun was
- away that the outside of the mountain was sufficiently like their own
- dismal regions to be endurable to their mole eyes, so thoroughly had
- they become unaccustomed to any light beyond that of their own fires
- and torches.
- Curdie listened, and soon found that they were talking of himself.
- 'How long will it take?' asked Harelip.
- 'Not many days, I should think,' answered the king. 'They are poor
- feeble creatures, those sun-people, and want to be always eating. We
- can go a week at a time without food, and be all the better for it; but
- I've been told they eat two or three times every day! Can you believe
- it? They must be quite hollow inside--not at all like us, nine-tenths
- of whose bulk is solid flesh and bone. Yes--I judge a week of
- starvation will do for him.'
- 'If I may be allowed a word,' interposed the queen,--'and I think I
- ought to have some voice in the matter--'
- 'The wretch is entirely at your disposal, my spouse,' interrupted the
- king. 'He is your property. You caught him yourself. We should never
- have done it.'
- The queen laughed. She seemed in far better humour than the night
- before.
- 'I was about to say,' she resumed, 'that it does seem a pity to waste
- so much fresh meat.'
- 'What are you thinking of, my love?' said the king. 'The very notion
- of starving him implies that we are not going to give him any meat,
- either salt or fresh.'
- 'I'm not such a stupid as that comes to,' returned Her Majesty. 'What I
- mean is that by the time he is starved there will hardly be a picking
- upon his bones.'
- The king gave a great laugh.
- 'Well, my spouse, you may have him when you like,' he said. 'I don't
- fancy him for my part. I am pretty sure he is tough eating.'
- 'That would be to honour instead of punish his insolence,' returned the
- queen. 'But why should our poor creatures be deprived of so much
- nourishment? Our little dogs and cats and pigs and small bears would
- enjoy him very much.'
- 'You are the best of housekeepers, my lovely queen!' said her husband.
- 'Let it be so by all means. Let us have our people in, and get him out
- and kill him at once. He deserves it. The mischief he might have
- brought upon us, now that he had penetrated so far as our most retired
- citadel, is incalculable. Or rather let us tie him hand and foot, and
- have the pleasure of seeing him torn to pieces by full torchlight in
- the great hall.'
- 'Better and better!' cried the queen and the prince together, both of
- them clapping their hands. And the prince made an ugly noise with his
- hare-lip, just as if he had intended to be one at the feast.
- 'But,' added the queen, bethinking herself, 'he is so troublesome. For
- poor creatures as they are, there is something about those sun-people
- that is very troublesome. I cannot imagine how it is that with such
- superior strength and skill and understanding as ours, we permit them
- to exist at all. Why do we not destroy them entirely, and use their
- cattle and grazing lands at our pleasure? Of course we don't want to
- live in their horrid country! It is far too glaring for our quieter
- and more refined tastes. But we might use it as a sort of outhouse,
- you know. Even our creatures' eyes might get used to it, and if they
- did grow blind that would be of no consequence, provided they grew fat
- as well. But we might even keep their great cows and other creatures,
- and then we should have a few more luxuries, such as cream and cheese,
- which at present we only taste occasionally, when our brave men have
- succeeded in carrying some off from their farms.'
- 'It is worth thinking of,' said the king; 'and I don't know why you
- should be the first to suggest it, except that you have a positive
- genius for conquest. But still, as you say, there is something very
- troublesome about them; and it would be better, as I understand you to
- suggest, that we should starve him for a day or two first, so that he
- may be a little less frisky when we take him out.'
- 'Once there was a goblin
- Living in a hole;
- Busy he was cobblin'
- A shoe without a sole.
- 'By came a birdie:
- "Goblin, what do you do?"
- "Cobble at a sturdie
- Upper leather shoe."
- '"What's the good o' that, Sir?"
- Said the little bird.
- "Why it's very Pat, Sir--
- Plain without a word.
- '"Where 'tis all a hole, Sir,
- Never can be holes:
- Why should their shoes have soles, Sir,
- When they've got no souls?"'
- 'What's that horrible noise?' cried the queen, shuddering from
- pot-metal head to granite shoes.
- 'I declare,' said the king with solemn indignation, 'it's the
- sun-creature in the hole!'
- 'Stop that disgusting noise!' cried the crown prince valiantly, getting
- up and standing in front of the heap of stones, with his face towards
- Curdie's prison. 'Do now, or I'll break your head.'
- 'Break away,' shouted Curdie, and began singing again:
- 'Once there was a goblin,
- Living in a hole--'
- 'I really cannot bear it,' said the queen. 'If I could only get at his
- horrid toes with my slippers again!'
- 'I think we had better go to bed,' said the king.
- 'It's not time to go to bed,' said the queen.
- 'I would if I was you,' said Curdie.
- 'Impertinent wretch!' said the queen, with the utmost scorn in her
- voice.
- 'An impossible if,' said His Majesty with dignity.
- 'Quite,' returned Curdie, and began singing again:
- 'Go to bed,
- Goblin, do.
- Help the queen
- Take off her shoe.
- 'If you do,
- It will disclose
- A horrid set
- Of sprouting toes.'
- 'What a lie!' roared the queen in a rage.
- 'By the way, that reminds me,' said the king, 'that for as long as we
- have been married, I have never seen your feet, queen. I think you
- might take off your shoes when you go to bed! They positively hurt me
- sometimes.'
- 'I will do as I like,' retorted the queen sulkily.
- 'You ought to do as your own hubby wishes you,' said the king.
- 'I will not,' said the queen.
- 'Then I insist upon it,' said the king.
- Apparently His Majesty approached the queen for the purpose of
- following the advice given by Curdie, for the latter heard a scuffle,
- and then a great roar from the king.
- 'Will you be quiet, then?' said the queen wickedly.
- 'Yes, yes, queen. I only meant to coax you.'
- 'Hands off!' cried the queen triumphantly. 'I'm going to bed. You may
- come when you like. But as long as I am queen I will sleep in my
- shoes. It is my royal privilege. Harelip, go to bed.'
- 'I'm going,' said Harelip sleepily.
- 'So am I,' said the king.
- 'Come along, then,' said the queen; 'and mind you are good, or I'll--'
- 'Oh, no, no, no!' screamed the king in the most supplicating of tones.
- Curdie heard only a muttered reply in the distance; and then the cave
- was quite still.
- They had left the fire burning, and the light came through brighter
- than before. Curdie thought it was time to try again if anything could
- be done. But he found he could not get even a finger through the chink
- between the slab and the rock. He gave a great rush with his shoulder
- against the slab, but it yielded no more than if it had been part of
- the rock. All he could do was to sit down and think again.
- By and by he came to the resolution to pretend to be dying, in the hope
- they might take him out before his strength was too much exhausted to
- let him have a chance. Then, for the creatures, if he could but find
- his axe again, he would have no fear of them; and if it were not for
- the queen's horrid shoes, he would have no fear at all.
- Meantime, until they should come again at night, there was nothing for
- him to do but forge new rhymes, now his only weapons. He had no
- intention of using them at present, of course; but it was well to have
- a stock, for he might live to want them, and the manufacture of them
- would help to while away the time.
- CHAPTER 20
- Irene's Clue
- That same morning early, the princess woke in a terrible fright. There
- was a hideous noise in her room--creatures snarling and hissing and
- rocketing about as if they were fighting. The moment she came to
- herself, she remembered something she had never thought of again--what
- her grandmother told her to do when she was frightened. She
- immediately took off her ring and put it under her pillow. As she did
- so she fancied she felt a finger and thumb take it gently from under
- her palm. 'It must be my grandmother!' she said to herself, and the
- thought gave her such courage that she stopped to put on her dainty
- little slippers before running from the room. While doing this she
- caught sight of a long cloak of sky-blue, thrown over the back of a
- chair by the bedside. She had never seen it before but it was
- evidently waiting for her. She put it on, and then, feeling with the
- forefinger of her right hand, soon found her grandmother's thread,
- which she proceeded at once to follow, expecting it would lead her
- straight up the old stair. When she reached the door she found it went
- down and ran along the floor, so that she had almost to crawl in order
- to keep a hold of it. Then, to her surprise, and somewhat to her
- dismay, she found that instead of leading her towards the stair it
- turned in quite the opposite direction. It led her through certain
- narrow passages towards the kitchen, turning aside ere she reached it,
- and guiding her to a door which communicated with a small back yard.
- Some of the maids were already up, and this door was standing open.
- Across the yard the thread still ran along the ground, until it brought
- her to a door in the wall which opened upon the Mountainside. When she
- had passed through, the thread rose to about half her height, and she
- could hold it with ease as she walked. It led her straight up the
- mountain.
- The cause of her alarm was less frightful than she supposed. The
- cook's great black cat, pursued by the housekeeper's terrier, had
- bounced against her bedroom door, which had not been properly fastened,
- and the two had burst into the room together and commenced a battle
- royal. How the nurse came to sleep through it was a mystery, but I
- suspect the old lady had something to do with it.
- It was a clear warm morning. The wind blew deliciously over the
- Mountainside. Here and there she saw a late primrose but she did not
- stop to call upon them. The sky was mottled with small clouds.
- The sun was not yet up, but some of their fluffy edges had caught his
- light, and hung out orange and gold-coloured fringes upon the air. The
- dew lay in round drops upon the leaves, and hung like tiny diamond
- ear-rings from the blades of grass about her path.
- 'How lovely that bit of gossamer is!' thought the princess, looking at
- a long undulating line that shone at some distance from her up the
- hill. It was not the time for gossamers though; and Irene soon
- discovered that it was her own thread she saw shining on before her in
- the light of the morning. It was leading her she knew not whither; but
- she had never in her life been out before sunrise, and everything was
- so fresh and cool and lively and full of something coming, that she
- felt too happy to be afraid of anything.
- After leading her up a good distance, the thread turned to the left,
- and down the path upon which she and Lootie had met Curdie. But she
- never thought of that, for now in the morning light, with its far
- outlook over the country, no path could have been more open and airy
- and cheerful. She could see the road almost to the horizon, along
- which she had so often watched her king-papa and his troop come
- shining, with the bugle-blast cleaving the air before them; and it was
- like a companion to her. Down and down the path went, then up, and
- then down and then up again, getting rugged and more rugged as it went;
- and still along the path went the silvery thread, and still along the
- thread went Irene's little rosy-tipped forefinger. By and by she came
- to a little stream that jabbered and prattled down the hill, and up the
- side of the stream went both path and thread. And still the path grew
- rougher and steeper, and the mountain grew wilder, till Irene began to
- think she was going a very long way from home; and when she turned to
- look back she saw that the level country had vanished and the rough
- bare mountain had closed in about her. But still on went the thread,
- and on went the princess. Everything around her was getting brighter
- and brighter as the sun came nearer; till at length his first rays all
- at once alighted on the top of a rock before her, like some golden
- creature fresh from the sky. Then she saw that the little stream ran
- out of a hole in that rock, that the path did not go past the rock, and
- that the thread was leading her straight up to it. A shudder ran
- through her from head to foot when she found that the thread was
- actually taking her into the hole out of which the stream ran. It ran
- out babbling joyously, but she had to go in.
- She did not hesitate. Right into the hole she went, which was high
- enough to let her walk without stooping. For a little way there was a
- brown glimmer, but at the first turn it all but ceased, and before she
- had gone many paces she was in total darkness. Then she began to be
- frightened indeed. Every moment she kept feeling the thread backwards
- and forwards, and as she went farther and farther into the darkness of
- the great hollow mountain, she kept thinking more and more about her
- grandmother, and all that she had said to her, and how kind she had
- been, and how beautiful she was, and all about her lovely room, and the
- fire of roses, and the great lamp that sent its light through stone
- walls. And she became more and more sure that the thread could not
- have gone there of itself, and that her grandmother must have sent it.
- But it tried her dreadfully when the path went down very steep, and
- especially When she came to places where she had to go down rough
- stairs, and even sometimes a ladder. Through one narrow passage after
- another, over lumps of rock and sand and clay, the thread guided her,
- until she came to a small hole through which she had to creep. Finding
- no change on the other side, 'Shall I ever get back?' she thought, over
- and over again, wondering at herself that she was not ten times more
- frightened, and often feeling as if she were only walking in the story
- of a dream. Sometimes she heard the noise of water, a dull gurgling
- inside the rock. By and by she heard the sounds of blows, which came
- nearer and nearer; but again they grew duller, and almost died away.
- In a hundred directions she turned, obedient to the guiding thread.
- At last she spied a dull red shine, and came up to the mica window, and
- thence away and round about, and right, into a cavern, where glowed the
- red embers of a fire. Here the thread began to rise. It rose as high
- as her head and higher still. What should she do if she lost her hold?
- She was pulling it down: She might break it! She could see it far up,
- glowing as red as her fire-opal in the light of the embers.
- But presently she came to a huge heap of stones, piled in a slope
- against the wall of the cavern. On these she climbed, and soon
- recovered the level of the thread only however to find, the next
- moment, that it vanished through the heap of stones, and left her
- standing on it, with her face to the solid rock. For one terrible
- moment she felt as if her grandmother had forsaken her. The thread
- which the spiders had spun far over the seas, which her grandmother had
- sat in the moonlight and spun again for her, which she had tempered in
- the rose-fire and tied to her opal ring, had left her--had gone where
- she could no longer follow it--had brought her into a horrible cavern,
- and there left her! She was forsaken indeed!
- 'When shall I wake?' she said to herself in an agony, but the same
- moment knew that it was no dream. She threw herself upon the heap, and
- began to cry. It was well she did not know what creatures, one of them
- with stone shoes on her feet, were lying in the next cave. But neither
- did she know who was on the other side of the slab.
- At length the thought struck her that at least she could follow the
- thread backwards, and thus get out of the mountain, and home. She rose
- at once, and found the thread. But the instant she tried to feel it
- backwards, it vanished from her touch. Forwards, it led her hand up to
- the heap of stones--backwards it seemed nowhere. Neither could she see
- it as before in the light of the fire. She burst into a wailing cry,
- and again threw herself down on the stones.
- CHAPTER 21
- The Escape
- As the princess lay and sobbed she kept feeling the thread
- mechanically, following it with her finger many times up to the stones
- in which it disappeared. By and by she began, still mechanically, to
- poke her finger in after it between the stones as far as she could.
- All at once it came into her head that she might remove some of the
- stones and see where the thread went next. Almost laughing at herself
- for never having thought of this before, she jumped to her feet. Her
- fear vanished; once more she was certain her grandmother's thread could
- not have brought her there just to leave her there; and she began to
- throw away the stones from the top as fast as she could, sometimes two
- or three at a handful, sometimes taking both hands to lift one. After
- clearing them away a little, she found that the thread turned and went
- straight downwards. Hence, as the heap sloped a good deal, growing of
- course wider towards its base, she had to throw away a multitude of
- stones to follow the thread. But this was not all, for she soon found
- that the thread, after going straight down for a little way, turned
- first sideways in one direction, then sideways in another, and then
- shot, at various angles, hither and thither inside the heap, so that
- she began to be afraid that to clear the thread she must remove the
- whole huge gathering. She was dismayed at the very idea, but, losing
- no time, set to work with a will; and with aching back, and bleeding
- fingers and hands, she worked on, sustained by the pleasure of seeing
- the heap slowly diminish and begin to show itself on the opposite side
- of the fire. Another thing which helped to keep up her courage was
- that, as often as she uncovered a turn of the thread, instead of lying
- loose upon the stone, it tightened up; this made her sure that her
- grandmother was at the end of it somewhere.
- She had got about half-way down when she started, and nearly fell with
- fright. Close to her ears as it seemed, a voice broke out singing:
- 'Jabber, bother, smash!
- You'll have it all in a crash.
- Jabber, smash, bother!
- You'll have the worst of the pother.
- Smash, bother, jabber!--'
- Here Curdie stopped, either because he could not find a rhyme to
- 'jabber', or because he remembered what he had forgotten when he woke
- up at the sound of Irene's labours, that his plan was to make the
- goblins think he was getting weak. But he had uttered enough to let
- Irene know who he was.
- 'It's Curdie!' she cried joyfully.
- 'Hush! hush!' came Curdie's voice again from somewhere. 'Speak softly.'
- 'Why, you were singing loud!' said Irene.
- 'Yes. But they know I am here, and they don't know you are. Who are
- you?'
- 'I'm Irene,' answered the princess. 'I know who you are quite well.
- You're Curdie.'
- 'Why, how ever did you come here, Irene?'
- 'My great-great-grandmother sent me; and I think I've found out why.
- You can't get out, I suppose?'
- 'No, I can't. What are you doing?'
- 'Clearing away a huge heap of stones.'
- 'There's a princess!' exclaimed Curdie, in a tone of delight, but still
- speaking in little more than a whisper. 'I can't think how you got
- here, though.'
- 'My grandmother sent me after her thread.'
- 'I don't know what you mean,' said Curdie; 'but so you're there, it
- doesn't much matter.'
- 'Oh, yes, it does!' returned Irene. 'I should never have been here but
- for her.'
- 'You can tell me all about it when we get out, then. There's no time
- to lose now,'said Curdie.
- And Irene went to work, as fresh as when she began.
- 'There's such a lot of stones!' she said. 'It will take me a long time
- to get them all away.'
- 'How far on have you got?' asked Curdie.
- 'I've got about the half away, but the other half is ever so much
- bigger.'
- 'I don't think you will have to move the lower half. Do you see a slab
- laid up against the wall?'
- Irene looked, and felt about with her hands, and soon perceived the
- outlines of the slab.
- 'Yes,' she answered, 'I do.'
- 'Then, I think,' rejoined Curdie, 'when you have cleared the slab about
- half-way down, or a bit more, I shall be able to push it over.'
- 'I must follow my thread,' returned Irene, 'whatever I do.'
- 'What do you mean?' exclaimed Curdie. 'You will see when you get out,'
- answered the princess, and went on harder than ever.
- But she was soon satisfied that what Curdie wanted done and what the
- thread wanted done were one and the same thing. For she not only saw
- that by following the turns of the thread she had been clearing the
- face of the slab, but that, a little more than half-way down, the
- thread went through the chink between the slab and the wall into the
- place where Curdie was confined, so that she could not follow it any
- farther until the slab was out of her way. As soon as she found this,
- she said in a right joyous whisper:
- 'Now, Curdie, I think if you were to give a great push, the slab would
- tumble over.'
- 'Stand quite clear of it, then,' said Curdie, 'and let me know when you
- are ready.'
- Irene got off the heap, and stood on one side of it. 'Now, Curdie!'
- she cried.
- Curdie gave a great rush with his shoulder against it. Out tumbled the
- slab on the heap, and out crept Curdie over the top of it.
- 'You've saved my life, Irene!' he whispered.
- 'Oh, Curdie! I'm so glad! Let's get out of this horrid place as fast
- as we can.'
- 'That's easier said than done,' returned he.
- 'Oh, no, it's quite easy,' said Irene. 'We have only to follow my
- thread. I am sure that it's going to take us out now.'
- She had already begun to follow it over the fallen slab into the hole,
- while Curdie was searching the floor of the cavern for his pickaxe.
- 'Here it is!' he cried. 'No, it is not,' he added, in a disappointed
- tone. 'What can it be, then? I declare it's a torch. That is jolly!
- It's better almost than my pickaxe. Much better if it weren't for
- those stone shoes!' he went on, as he lighted the torch by blowing the
- last embers of the expiring fire.
- When he looked up, with the lighted torch casting a glare into the
- great darkness of the huge cavern, he caught sight of Irene
- disappearing in the hole out of which he had himself just come.
- 'Where are you going there?' he cried. 'That's not the way out. That's
- where I couldn't get out.'
- 'I know that,' whispered Irene. 'But this is the way my thread goes,
- and I must follow it.'
- 'What nonsense the child talks!' said Curdie to himself. 'I must
- follow her, though, and see that she comes to no harm. She will soon
- find she can't get out that way, and then she will come with me.'
- So he crept over the slab once more into the hole with his torch in his
- hand. But when he looked about in it, he could see her nowhere. And
- now he discovered that although the hole was narrow, it was much longer
- than he had supposed; for in one direction the roof came down very low,
- and the hole went off in a narrow passage, of which he could not see
- the end. The princess must have crept in there. He got on his knees
- and one hand, holding the torch with the other, and crept after her.
- The hole twisted about, in some parts so low that he could hardly get
- through, in others so high that he could not see the roof, but
- everywhere it was narrow--far too narrow for a goblin to get through,
- and so I presume they never thought that Curdie might. He was
- beginning to feel very uncomfortable lest something should have
- befallen the princess, when he heard her voice almost close to his ear,
- whispering:
- 'Aren't you coming, Curdie?'
- And when he turned the next corner there she stood waiting for him.
- 'I knew you couldn't go wrong in that narrow hole, but now you must
- keep by me, for here is a great wide place,' she said.
- 'I can't understand it,' said Curdie, half to himself, half to Irene.
- 'Never mind,' she returned. 'Wait till we get out.'
- Curdie, utterly astonished that she had already got so far, and by a
- path he had known nothing of, thought it better to let her do as she
- pleased. 'At all events,' he said again to himself, 'I know nothing
- about the way, miner as I am; and she seems to think she does know
- something about it, though how she should passes my comprehension. So
- she's just as likely to find her way as I am, and as she insists on
- taking the lead, I must follow. We can't be much worse off than we
- are, anyhow.' Reasoning thus, he followed her a few steps, and came
- out in another great cavern, across which Irene walked in a straight
- line, as confidently as if she knew every step of the way. Curdie went
- on after her, flashing his torch about, and trying to see something of
- what lay around them. Suddenly he started back a pace as the light fell
- upon something close by which Irene was passing. It was a platform of
- rock raised a few feet from the floor and covered with sheepskins, upon
- which lay two horrible figures asleep, at once recognized by Curdie as
- the king and queen of the goblins. He lowered his torch instantly lest
- the light should awake them. As he did so it flashed upon his pickaxe,
- lying by the side of the queen, whose hand lay close by the handle of
- it.
- 'Stop one moment,' he whispered. 'Hold my torch, and don't let the
- light on their faces.'
- Irene shuddered when she saw the frightful creatures, whom she had
- passed without observing them, but she did as he requested, and turning
- her back, held the torch low in front of her. Curdie drew his pickaxe
- carefully away, and as he did so spied one of her feet, projecting from
- under the skins. The great clumsy granite shoe, exposed thus to his
- hand, was a temptation not to be resisted. He laid hold of it, and,
- with cautious efforts, drew it off. The moment he succeeded, he saw to
- his astonishment that what he had sung in ignorance, to annoy the
- queen, was actually true: she had six horrible toes. Overjoyed at his
- success, and seeing by the huge bump in the sheepskins where the other
- foot was, he proceeded to lift them gently, for, if he could only
- succeed in carrying away the other shoe as well, he would be no more
- afraid of the goblins than of so many flies. But as he pulled at the
- second shoe the queen gave a growl and sat up in bed. The same instant
- the king awoke also and sat up beside her.
- 'Run, Irene!' cried Curdie, for though he was not now in the least
- afraid for himself, he was for the princess.
- Irene looked once round, saw the fearful creatures awake, and like the
- wise princess she was, dashed the torch on the ground and extinguished
- it, crying out:
- 'Here, Curdie, take my hand.'
- He darted to her side, forgetting neither the queen's shoe nor his
- pickaxe, and caught hold of her hand, as she sped fearlessly where her
- thread guided her. They heard the queen give a great bellow; but they
- had a good start, for it would be some time before they could get
- torches lighted to pursue them. Just as they thought they saw a gleam
- behind them, the thread brought them to a very narrow opening, through
- which Irene crept easily, and Curdie with difficulty.
- 'Now,'said Curdie; 'I think we shall be safe.'
- 'Of course we shall,' returned Irene. 'Why do you think so?'asked
- Curdie.
- 'Because my grandmother is taking care of us.'
- 'That's all nonsense,' said Curdie. 'I don't know what you mean.'
- 'Then if you don't know what I mean, what right have you to call it
- nonsense?' asked the princess, a little offended.
- 'I beg your pardon, Irene,' said Curdie; 'I did not mean to vex you.'
- 'Of course not,' returned the princess. 'But why do you think we shall
- be safe?'
- 'Because the king and queen are far too stout to get through that hole.'
- 'There might be ways round,' said the princess.
- 'To be sure there might: we are not out of it yet,' acknowledged Curdie.
- 'But what do you mean by the king and queen?' asked the princess. 'I
- should never call such creatures as those a king and a queen.'
- 'Their own people do, though,' answered Curdie.
- The princess asked more questions, and Curdie, as they walked leisurely
- along, gave her a full account, not only of the character and habits of
- the goblins, so far as he knew them, but of his own adventures with
- them, beginning from the very night after that in which he had met her
- and Lootie upon the mountain. When he had finished, he begged Irene to
- tell him how it was that she had come to his rescue. So Irene too had
- to tell a long story, which she did in rather a roundabout manner,
- interrupted by many questions concerning things she had not explained.
- But her tale, as he did not believe more than half of it, left
- everything as unaccountable to him as before, and he was nearly as much
- perplexed as to what he must think of the princess. He could not
- believe that she was deliberately telling stories, and the only
- conclusion he could come to was that Lootie had been playing the child
- tricks, inventing no end of lies to frighten her for her own purposes.
- 'But how ever did Lootie come to let you go into the mountains
- alone?'he asked.
- 'Lootie knows nothing about it. I left her fast asleep--at least I
- think so. I hope my grandmother won't let her get into trouble, for it
- wasn't her fault at all, as my grandmother very well knows.'
- 'But how did you find your way to me?' persisted Curdie.
- 'I told you already,' answered Irene; 'by keeping my finger upon my
- grandmother's thread, as I am doing now.'
- 'You don't mean you've got the thread there?'
- 'Of course I do. I have told you so ten times already. I have
- hardly--except when I was removing the stones--taken my finger off it.
- There!' she added, guiding Curdie's hand to the thread, 'you feel it
- yourself--don't you?'
- 'I feel nothing at all,' replied Curdie. 'Then what can be the matter
- with your finger? I feel it perfectly. To be sure it is very thin,
- and in the sunlight looks just like the thread of a spider, though
- there are many of them twisted together to make it--but for all that I
- can't think why you shouldn't feel it as well as I do.'
- Curdie was too polite to say he did not believe there was any thread
- there at all. What he did say was:
- 'Well, I can make nothing of it.'
- 'I can, though, and you must be glad of that, for it will do for both
- of us.'
- 'We're not out yet,' said Curdie.
- 'We soon shall be,' returned Irene confidently. And now the thread
- went downwards, and led Irene's hand to a hole in the floor of the
- cavern, whence came a sound of running water which they had been
- hearing for some time.
- 'It goes into the ground now, Curdie,' she said, stopping.
- He had been listening to another sound, which his practised ear had
- caught long ago, and which also had been growing louder. It was the
- noise the goblin-miners made at their work, and they seemed to be at no
- great distance now. Irene heard it the moment she stopped.
- 'What is that noise?' she asked. 'Do you know, Curdie?'
- 'Yes. It is the goblins digging and burrowing,' he answered.
- 'And you don't know what they do it for?'
- 'No; I haven't the least idea. Would you like to see them?' he asked,
- wishing to have another try after their secret.
- 'If my thread took me there, I shouldn't much mind; but I don't want to
- see them, and I can't leave my thread. It leads me down into the hole,
- and we had better go at once.'
- 'Very well. Shall I go in first?' said Curdie.
- 'No; better not. You can't feel the thread,' she answered, stepping
- down through a narrow break in the floor of the cavern. 'Oh!' she
- cried, 'I am in the water. It is running strong--but it is not deep,
- and there is just room to walk. Make haste, Curdie.'
- He tried, but the hole was too small for him to get in.
- 'Go on a little bit he said, shouldering his pickaxe. In a few moments
- he had cleared a larger opening and followed her. They went on, down
- and down with the running water, Curdie getting more and more afraid it
- was leading them to some terrible gulf in the heart of the mountain.
- In one or two places he had to break away the rock to make room before
- even Irene could get through--at least without hurting herself. But at
- length they spied a glimmer of light, and in a minute more they were
- almost blinded by the full sunlight, into which they emerged. It was
- some little time before the princess could see well enough to discover
- that they stood in her own garden, close by the seat on which she and
- her king-papa had sat that afternoon. They had come out by the channel
- of the little stream. She danced and clapped her hands with delight.
- 'Now, Curdie!' she cried, 'won't you believe what I told you about my
- grandmother and her thread?'
- For she had felt all the time that Curdie was not believing what she
- told him.
- 'There!--don't you see it shining on before us?' she added.
- 'I don't see anything,' persisted Curdie.
- 'Then you must believe without seeing,' said the princess; 'for you
- can't deny it has brought us out of the mountain.'
- 'I can't deny we are out of the mountain, and I should be very
- ungrateful indeed to deny that you had brought me out of it.'
- 'I couldn't have done it but for the thread,' persisted Irene.
- 'That's the part I don't understand.'
- 'Well, come along, and Lootie will get you something to eat. I am sure
- you must want it very much.'
- 'Indeed I do. But my father and mother will be so anxious about me, I
- must make haste--first up the mountain to tell my mother, and then down
- into the mine again to let my father know.'
- 'Very well, Curdie; but you can't get out without coming this way, and
- I will take you through the house, for that is nearest.'
- They met no one by the way, for, indeed, as before, the people were
- here and there and everywhere searching for the princess. When they
- got in Irene found that the thread, as she had half expected, went up
- the old staircase, and a new thought struck her. She turned to Curdie
- and said:
- 'My grandmother wants me. Do come up with me and see her. Then you
- will know that I have been telling you the truth. Do come--to please
- me, Curdie. I can't bear you should think what I say is not true.'
- 'I never doubted you believed what you said,' returned Curdie. 'I only
- thought you had some fancy in your head that was not correct.' 'But do
- come, dear Curdie.'
- The little miner could not withstand this appeal, and though he felt
- shy in what seemed to him a huge grand house, he yielded, and followed
- her up the stair.
- CHAPTER 22
- The Old Lady and Curdie
- Up the stair then they went, and the next and the next, and through the
- long rows of empty rooms, and up the little tower stair, Irene growing
- happier and happier as she ascended. There was no answer when she
- knocked at length at the door of the workroom, nor could she hear any
- sound of the spinning-wheel, and once more her heart sank within her,
- but only for one moment, as she turned and knocked at the other door.
- 'Come in,' answered the sweet voice of her grandmother, and Irene
- opened the door and entered, followed by Curdie.
- 'You darling!' cried the lady, who was seated by a fire of red roses
- mingled with white. 'I've been waiting for you, and indeed getting a
- little anxious about you, and beginning to think whether I had not
- better go and fetch you myself.'
- As she spoke she took the little princess in her arms and placed her
- upon her lap. She was dressed in white now, and looking if possible
- more lovely than ever.
- 'I've brought Curdie, grandmother. He wouldn't believe what I told him
- and so I've brought him.'
- 'Yes--I see him. He is a good boy, Curdie, and a brave boy. Aren't you
- glad you've got him out?'
- 'Yes, grandmother. But it wasn't very good of him not to believe me
- when I was telling him the truth.'
- 'People must believe what they can, and those who believe more must not
- be hard upon those who believe less. I doubt if you would have
- believed it all yourself if you hadn't seen some of it.'
- 'Ah! yes, grandmother, I dare say. I'm sure you are right. But he'll
- believe now.'
- 'I don't know that,' replied her grandmother.
- 'Won't you, Curdie?' said Irene, looking round at him as she asked the
- question. He was standing in the middle of the floor, staring, and
- looking strangely bewildered. This she thought came of his
- astonishment at the beauty of the lady.
- 'Make a bow to my grandmother, Curdie,' she said.
- 'I don't see any grandmother,' answered Curdie rather gruffly.
- 'Don't see my grandmother, when I'm sitting in her lap?' exclaimed the
- princess.
- 'No, I don't,' reiterated Curdie, in an offended tone.
- 'Don't you see the lovely fire of roses--white ones amongst them this
- time?' asked Irene, almost as bewildered as he.
- 'No, I don't,' answered Curdie, almost sulkily.
- 'Nor the blue bed? Nor the rose-coloured counterpane?--Nor the
- beautiful light, like the moon, hanging from the roof?'
- 'You're making game of me, Your Royal Highness; and after what we have
- come through together this day, I don't think it is kind of you,' said
- Curdie, feeling very much hurt.
- 'Then what do you see?' asked Irene, who perceived at once that for her
- not to believe him was at least as bad as for him not to believe her.
- 'I see a big, bare, garret-room--like the one in mother's cottage, only
- big enough to take the cottage itself in, and leave a good margin all
- round,' answered Curdie.
- 'And what more do you see?'
- 'I see a tub, and a heap of musty straw, and a withered apple, and a
- ray of sunlight coming through a hole in the middle of the roof and
- shining on your head, and making all the place look a curious dusky
- brown. I think you had better drop it, princess, and go down to the
- nursery, like a good girl.'
- 'But don't you hear my grandmother talking to me?' asked Irene, almost
- crying.
- 'No. I hear the cooing of a lot of pigeons. If you won't come down, I
- will go without you. I think that will be better anyhow, for I'm sure
- nobody who met us would believe a word we said to them. They would
- think we made it all up. I don't expect anybody but my own father and
- mother to believe me. They know I wouldn't tell a story.'
- 'And yet you won't believe me, Curdie?' expostulated the princess, now
- fairly crying with vexation and sorrow at the gulf between her and
- Curdie.
- 'No. I can't, and I can't help it,' said Curdie, turning to leave the
- room.
- 'What SHALL I do, grandmother?' sobbed the princess, turning her face
- round upon the lady's bosom, and shaking with suppressed sobs.
- 'You must give him time,' said her grandmother; 'and you must be
- content not to be believed for a while. It is very hard to bear; but I
- have had to bear it, and shall have to bear it many a time yet. I will
- take care of what Curdie thinks of you in the end. You must let him go
- now.'
- 'You're not coming, are you?' asked Curdie.
- 'No, Curdie; my grandmother says I must let you go. Turn to the right
- when you get to the bottom of all the stairs, and that will take you to
- the hall where the great door is.'
- 'Oh! I don't doubt I can find my way--without you, princess, or your
- old grannie's thread either,' said Curdie quite rudely.
- 'Oh, Curdie! Curdie!'
- 'I wish I had gone home at once. I'm very much obliged to you, Irene,
- for getting me out of that hole, but I wish you hadn't made a fool of
- me afterwards.'
- He said this as he opened the door, which he left open, and, without
- another word, went down the stair. Irene listened with dismay to his
- departing footsteps. Then turning again to the lady:
- 'What does it all mean, grandmother?' she sobbed, and burst into fresh
- tears.
- 'It means, my love, that I did not mean to show myself. Curdie is not
- yet able to believe some things. Seeing is not believing--it is only
- seeing. You remember I told you that if Lootie were to see me, she
- would rub her eyes, forget the half she saw, and call the other half
- nonsense.'
- 'Yes; but I should have thought Curdie--'
- 'You are right. Curdie is much farther on than Lootie, and you will
- see what will come of it. But in the meantime you must be content, I
- say, to be misunderstood for a while. We are all very anxious to be
- understood, and it is very hard not to be. But there is one thing much
- more necessary.'
- 'What is that, grandmother?'
- 'To understand other people.'
- 'Yes, grandmother. I must be fair--for if I'm not fair to other
- people, I'm not worth being understood myself. I see. So as Curdie
- can't help it, I will not be vexed with him, but just wait.'
- 'There's my own dear child,' said her grandmother, and pressed her
- close to her bosom.
- 'Why weren't you in your workroom when we came up, grandmother?' asked
- Irene, after a few moments' silence.
- 'If I had been there, Curdie would have seen me well enough. But why
- should I be there rather than in this beautiful room?'
- 'I thought you would be spinning.'
- 'I've nobody to spin for just at present. I never spin without knowing
- for whom I am spinning.'
- 'That reminds me--there is one thing that puzzles me,' said the
- princess: 'how are you to get the thread out of the mountain again?
- Surely you won't have to make another for me? That would be such a
- trouble!'
- The lady set her down and rose and went to the fire. Putting in her
- hand, she drew it out again and held up the shining ball between her
- finger and thumb.
- 'I've got it now, you see,' she said, coming back to the princess, 'all
- ready for you when you want it.'
- Going to her cabinet, she laid it in the same drawer as before.
- 'And here is your ring,' she added, taking it from the little finger of
- her left hand and putting it on the forefinger of Irene's right hand.
- 'Oh, thank you, grandmother! I feel so safe now!'
- 'You are very tired, my child,' the lady went on. 'Your hands are hurt
- with the stones, and I have counted nine bruises on you. Just look
- what you are like.'
- And she held up to her a little mirror which she had brought from the
- cabinet. The princess burst into a merry laugh at the sight. She was
- so draggled with the stream and dirty with creeping through narrow
- places, that if she had seen the reflection without knowing it was a
- reflection, she would have taken herself for some gipsy child whose
- face was washed and hair combed about once in a month. The lady laughed
- too, and lifting her again upon her knee, took off her cloak and
- night-gown. Then she carried her to the side of the room. Irene
- wondered what she was going to do with her, but asked no
- questions--only starting a little when she found that she was going to
- lay her in the large silver bath; for as she looked into it, again she
- saw no bottom, but the stars shining miles away, as it seemed, in a
- great blue gulf. Her hands closed involuntarily on the beautiful arms
- that held her, and that was all.
- The lady pressed her once more to her bosom, saying:
- 'Do not be afraid, my child.'
- 'No, grandmother,' answered the princess, with a little gasp; and the
- next instant she sank in the clear cool water.
- When she opened her eyes, she saw nothing but a strange lovely blue
- over and beneath and all about her. The lady, and the beautiful room,
- had vanished from her sight, and she seemed utterly alone. But instead
- of being afraid, she felt more than happy--perfectly blissful. And
- from somewhere came the voice of the lady, singing a strange sweet
- song, of which she could distinguish every word; but of the sense she
- had only a feeling--no understanding. Nor could she remember a single
- line after it was gone. It vanished, like the poetry in a dream, as
- fast as it came. In after years, however, she would sometimes fancy
- that snatches of melody suddenly rising in her brain must be little
- phrases and fragments of the air of that song; and the very fancy would
- make her happier, and abler to do her duty.
- How long she lay in the water she did not know. It seemed a long
- time--not from weariness but from pleasure. But at last she felt the
- beautiful hands lay hold of her, and through the gurgling water she was
- lifted out into the lovely room. The lady carried her to the fire, and
- sat down with her in her lap, and dried her tenderly with the softest
- towel. It was so different from Lootie's drying. When the lady had
- done, she stooped to the fire, and drew from it her night-gown, as
- white as snow.
- 'How delicious!' exclaimed the princess. 'It smells of all the roses
- in the world, I think.'
- When she stood up on the floor she felt as if she had been made over
- again. Every bruise and all weariness were gone, and her hands were
- soft and whole as ever.
- 'Now I am going to put you to bed for a good sleep,' said her
- grandmother.
- 'But what will Lootie be thinking? And what am I to say to her when
- she asks me where I have been?'
- 'Don't trouble yourself about it. You will find it all come right,'
- said her grandmother, and laid her into the blue bed, under the rosy
- counterpane.
- 'There is just one thing more,' said Irene. 'I am a little anxious
- about Curdie. As I brought him into the house, I ought to have seen
- him safe on his way home.'
- 'I took care of all that,' answered the lady. 'I told you to let him
- go, and therefore I was bound to look after him. Nobody saw him, and
- he is now eating a good dinner in his mother's cottage far up in the
- mountain.'
- 'Then I will go to sleep,' said Irene, and in a few minutes she was
- fast asleep.
- CHAPTER 23
- Curdie and His Mother
- Curdie went up the mountain neither whistling nor singing, for he was
- vexed with Irene for taking him in, as he called it; and he was vexed
- with himself for having spoken to her so angrily. His mother gave a
- cry of joy when she saw him, and at once set about getting him
- something to eat, asking him questions all the time, which he did not
- answer so cheerfully as usual. When his meal was ready, she left him
- to eat it, and hurried to the mine to let his father know he was safe.
- When she came back, she found him fast asleep upon her bed; nor did he
- wake until his father came home in the evening.
- 'Now, Curdie,' his mother said, as they sat at supper, 'tell us the
- whole story from beginning to end, just as it all happened.'
- Curdie obeyed, and told everything to the point where they came out
- upon the lawn in the garden of the king's house.
- 'And what happened after that?' asked his mother. 'You haven't told us
- all. You ought to be very happy at having got away from those demons,
- and instead of that I never saw you so gloomy. There must be something
- more. Besides, you do not speak of that lovely child as I should like
- to hear you. She saved your life at the risk of her own, and yet
- somehow you don't seem to think much of it.'
- 'She talked such nonsense' answered Curdie, 'and told me a pack of
- things that weren't a bit true; and I can't get over it.'
- 'What were they?' asked his father. 'Your mother may be able to throw
- some light upon them.'
- Then Curdie made a clean breast of it, and told them everything.
- They all sat silent for some time, pondering the strange tale. At last
- Curdie's mother spoke.
- 'You confess, my boy,' she said, 'there is something about the whole
- affair you do not understand?'
- 'Yes, of course, mother,' he answered. 'I cannot understand how a
- child knowing nothing about the mountain, or even that I was shut up in
- it, should come all that way alone, straight to where I was; and then,
- after getting me out of the hole, lead me out of the mountain too,
- where I should not have known a step of the way if it had been as light
- as in the open air.'
- 'Then you have no right to say what she told you was not true. She did
- take you out, and she must have had something to guide her: why not a
- thread as well as a rope, or anything else? There is something you
- cannot explain, and her explanation may be the right one.'
- 'It's no explanation at all, mother; and I can't believe it.'
- 'That may be only because you do not understand it. If you did, you
- would probably find it was an explanation, and believe it thoroughly.
- I don't blame you for not being able to believe it, but I do blame you
- for fancying such a child would try to deceive you. Why should she?
- Depend upon it, she told you all she knew. Until you had found a better
- way of accounting for it all, you might at least have been more sparing
- of your judgement.'
- 'That is what something inside me has been saying all the time,' said
- Curdie, hanging down his head. 'But what do you make of the
- grandmother? That is what I can't get over. To take me up to an old
- garret, and try to persuade me against the sight of my own eyes that it
- was a beautiful room, with blue walls and silver stars, and no end of
- things in it, when there was nothing there but an old tub and a
- withered apple and a heap of straw and a sunbeam! It was too bad! She
- might have had some old woman there at least to pass for her precious
- grandmother!'
- 'Didn't she speak as if she saw those other things herself, Curdie?'
- 'Yes. That's what bothers me. You would have thought she really meant
- and believed that she saw every one of the things she talked about.
- And not one of them there! It was too bad, I say.'
- 'Perhaps some people can see things other people can't see, Curdie,'
- said his mother very gravely. 'I think I will tell you something I saw
- myself once--only Perhaps You won't believe me either!'
- 'Oh, mother, mother!' cried Curdie, bursting into tears; 'I don't
- deserve that, surely!'
- 'But what I am going to tell you is very strange,' persisted his
- mother; 'and if having heard it you were to say I must have been
- dreaming, I don't know that I should have any right to be vexed with
- you, though I know at least that I was not asleep.'
- 'Do tell me, mother. Perhaps it will help me to think better of the
- princess.'
- 'That's why I am tempted to tell you,' replied his mother. 'But first,
- I may as well mention that, according to old whispers, there is
- something more than common about the king's family; and the queen was
- of the same blood, for they were cousins of some degree. There were
- strange stories told concerning them--all good stories--but strange,
- very strange. What they were I cannot tell, for I only remember the
- faces of my grandmother and my mother as they talked together about
- them. There was wonder and awe--not fear--in their eyes, and they
- whispered, and never spoke aloud. But what I saw myself was this: Your
- father was going to work in the mine one night, and I had been down
- with his supper. It was soon after we were married, and not very long
- before you were born. He came with me to the mouth of the mine, and
- left me to go home alone, for I knew the way almost as well as the
- floor of our own cottage. It was pretty dark, and in some parts of the
- road where the rocks overhung nearly quite dark. But I got along
- perfectly well, never thinking of being afraid, until I reached a spot
- you know well enough, Curdie, where the path has to make a sharp turn
- out of the way of a great rock on the left-hand side. When I got
- there, I was suddenly surrounded by about half a dozen of the cobs, the
- first I had ever seen, although I had heard tell of them often enough.
- One of them blocked up the path, and they all began tormenting and
- teasing me in a way it makes me shudder to think of even now.'
- 'If I had only been with you!' cried father and son in a breath.
- The mother gave a funny little smile, and went on.
- 'They had some of their horrible creatures with them too, and I must
- confess I was dreadfully frightened. They had torn my clothes very
- much, and I was afraid they were going to tear myself to pieces, when
- suddenly a great white soft light shone upon me. I looked up. A broad
- ray, like a shining road, came down from a large globe of silvery
- light, not very high up, indeed not quite so high as the horizon--so it
- could not have been a new star or another moon or anything of that
- sort. The cobs dropped persecuting me, and looked dazed, and I thought
- they were going to run away, but presently they began again. The same
- moment, however, down the path from the globe of light came a bird,
- shining like silver in the sun. It gave a few rapid flaps first, and
- then, with its wings straight out, shot, sliding down the slope of the
- light. It looked to me just like a white pigeon. But whatever it was,
- when the cobs caught sight of it coming straight down upon them, they
- took to their heels and scampered away across the mountain, leaving me
- safe, only much frightened. As soon as it had sent them off, the bird
- went gliding again up the light, and the moment it reached the globe
- the light disappeared, just as if a shutter had been closed over a
- window, and I saw it no More. But I had no more trouble with the cobs
- that night or ever after.'
- 'How strange!' exclaimed Curdie.
- 'Yes, it was strange; but I can't help believing it, whether you do or
- not,' said his mother.
- 'It's exactly as your mother told it to me the very next morning,' said
- his father.
- 'You don't think I'm doubting my own mother?' cried Curdie. 'There are
- other people in the world quite as well worth believing as your own
- mother,' said his mother. 'I don't know that she's so much the fitter
- to be believed that she happens to be your mother, Mr. Curdie. There
- are mothers far more likely to tell lies than the little girl I saw
- talking to the primroses a few weeks ago. If she were to lie I should
- begin to doubt my own word.'
- 'But princesses have told lies as well as other people,' said Curdie.
- 'Yes, but not princesses like that child. She's a good girl, I am
- certain, and that's more than being a princess. Depend upon it you
- will have to be sorry for behaving so to her, Curdie. You ought at
- least to have held your tongue.'
- 'I am sorry now,' answered Curdie.
- 'You ought to go and tell her so, then.'
- 'I don't see how I could manage that. They wouldn't let a miner boy
- like me have a word with her alone; and I couldn't tell her before that
- nurse of hers. She'd be asking ever so many questions, and I don't
- know how many the little princess would like me to answer. She told me
- that Lootie didn't know anything about her coming to get me out of the
- mountain. I am certain she would have prevented her somehow if she had
- known it. But I may have a chance before long, and meantime I must try
- to do something for her. I think, father, I have got on the track at
- last.'
- 'Have you, indeed, my boy?' said Peter. 'I am sure you deserve some
- success; you have worked very hard for it. What have you found out?'
- 'It's difficult, you know, father, inside the mountain, especially in
- the dark, and not knowing what turns you have taken, to tell the lie of
- things outside.'
- 'Impossible, my boy, without a chart, or at least a compass,' returned
- his father.
- 'Well, I think I have nearly discovered in what direction the cobs are
- mining. If I am right, I know something else that I can put to it, and
- then one and one will make three.'
- 'They very often do, Curdie, as we miners ought to be very well aware.
- Now tell us, my boy, what the two things are, and see whether we can
- guess at the same third as you.'
- 'I don't see what that has to do with the princess,' interposed his
- mother.
- 'I will soon let you see that, mother. Perhaps you may think me
- foolish, but until I am sure there, is nothing in my present fancy, I
- am more determined than ever to go on with my observations. Just as we
- came to the channel by which we got out, I heard the miners at work
- somewhere near--I think down below us. Now since I began to watch
- them, they have mined a good half-mile, in a straight line; and so far
- as I am aware, they are working in no other part of the mountain. But
- I never could tell in what direction they were going. When we came out
- in the king's garden, however, I thought at once whether it was
- possible they were working towards the king's house; and what I want to
- do tonight is to make sure whether they are or not. I will take a
- light with me--'
- 'Oh, Curdie,' cried his mother, 'then they will see you.'
- 'I'm no more afraid of them now than I was before,' rejoined Curdie,
- 'now that I've got this precious shoe. They can't make another such in
- a hurry, and one bare foot will do for my purpose. Woman as she may be,
- I won't spare her next time. But I shall be careful with my light, for
- I don't want them to see me. I won't stick it in my hat.'
- 'Go on, then, and tell us what you mean to do.'
- 'I mean to take a bit of paper with me and a pencil, and go in at the
- mouth of the stream by which we came out. I shall mark on the paper as
- near as I can the angle of every turning I take until I find the cobs
- at work, and so get a good idea in what direction they are going. If
- it should prove to be nearly parallel with the stream, I shall know it
- is towards the king's house they are working.'
- 'And what if you should? How much wiser will you be then?'
- 'Wait a minute, mother dear. I told you that when I came upon the
- royal family in the cave, they were talking of their prince--Harelip,
- they called him--marrying a sun-woman--that means one of us--one with
- toes to her feet. Now in the speech one of them made that night at
- their great gathering, of which I heard only a part, he said that peace
- would be secured for a generation at least by the pledge the prince
- would hold for the good behaviour of her relatives: that's what he
- said, and he must have meant the sun-woman the prince was to marry. I
- am quite sure the king is much too proud to wish his son to marry any
- but a princess, and much too knowing to fancy that his having a peasant
- woman for a wife would be of any great advantage to them.'
- 'I see what you are driving at now,' said his mother.
- 'But,' said his father, 'our king would dig the mountain to the plain
- before he would have his princess the wife of a cob, if he were ten
- times a prince.'
- 'Yes; but they think so much of themselves!' said his mother. 'Small
- creatures always do. The bantam is the proudest cock in my little
- yard.'
- 'And I fancy,' said Curdie, 'if they once got her, they would tell the
- king they would kill her except he consented to the marriage.'
- 'They might say so,' said his father, 'but they wouldn't kill her; they
- would keep her alive for the sake of the hold it gave them over our
- king. Whatever he did to them, they would threaten to do the same to
- the princess.'
- 'And they are bad enough to torment her just for their own amusement--I
- know that,' said his mother.
- 'Anyhow, I will keep a watch on them, and see what they are up to,'
- said Curdie. 'It's too horrible to think of. I daren't let myself do
- it. But they shan't have her--at least if I can help it. So, mother
- dear--my clue is all right--will you get me a bit of paper and a pencil
- and a lump of pease pudding, and I will set out at once. I saw a place
- where I can climb over the wall of the garden quite easily.'
- 'You must mind and keep out of the way of the men on the watch,' said
- his mother.
- 'That I will. I don't want them to know anything about it. They would
- spoil it all. The cobs would only try some other plan--they are such
- obstinate creatures! I shall take good care, mother. They won't kill
- and eat me either, if they should come upon me. So you needn't mind
- them.'
- His mother got him what he had asked for, and Curdie set out. Close
- beside the door by which the princess left the garden for the mountain
- stood a great rock, and by climbing it Curdie got over the wall. He
- tied his clue to a stone just inside the channel of the stream, and
- took his pickaxe with him. He had not gone far before he encountered a
- horrid creature coming towards the mouth. The spot was too narrow for
- two of almost any size or shape, and besides Curdie had no wish to let
- the creature pass. Not being able to use his pickaxe, however, he had
- a severe struggle with him, and it was only after receiving many bites,
- some of them bad, that he succeeded in killing him with his
- pocket-knife. Having dragged him out, he made haste to get in again
- before another should stop up the way.
- I need not follow him farther in this night's adventures. He returned
- to his breakfast, satisfied that the goblins were mining in the
- direction of the palace--on so low a level that their intention must,
- he thought, be to burrow under the walls of the king's house, and rise
- up inside it--in order, he fully believed, to lay hands on the little
- princess, and carry her off for a wife to their horrid Harelip.
- CHAPTER 24
- Irene Behaves Like a Princess
- When the princess awoke from the sweetest of sleeps, she found her
- nurse bending over her, the housekeeper looking over the nurse's
- shoulder, and the laundry-maid looking over the housekeeper's. The room
- was full of women-servants; and the gentlemen-at-arms, with a long
- column of servants behind them, were peeping, or trying to peep in at
- the door of the nursery.
- 'Are those horrid creatures gone?' asked the princess, remembering
- first what had terrified her in the morning.
- 'You naughty, naughty little princess!' cried Lootie.
- Her face was very pale, with red streaks in it, and she looked as if
- she were going to shake her; but Irene said nothing--only waited to
- hear what should come next.
- 'How could you get under the clothes like that, and make us all fancy
- you were lost! And keep it up all day too! You are the most obstinate
- child! It's anything but fun to us, I can tell you!'
- It was the only way the nurse could account for her disappearance.
- 'I didn't do that, Lootie,' said Irene, very quietly.
- 'Don't tell stories!' cried her nurse quite rudely.
- 'I shall tell you nothing at all,' said Irene.
- 'That's just as bad,' said the nurse.
- 'Just as bad to say nothing at all as to tell stories?' exclaimed the
- princess. 'I will ask my papa about that. He won't say so. And I
- don't think he will like you to say so.'
- 'Tell me directly what you mean by it!' screamed the nurse, half wild
- with anger at the princess and fright at the possible consequences to
- herself.
- 'When I tell you the truth, Lootie,' said the princess, who somehow did
- not feel at all angry, 'you say to me "Don't tell stories": it seems I
- must tell stories before you will believe me.'
- 'You are very rude, princess,' said the nurse.
- 'You are so rude, Lootie, that I will not speak to you again till you
- are sorry. Why should I, when I know you will not believe me?'
- returned the princess. For she did know perfectly well that if she
- were to tell Lootie what she had been about, the more she went on to
- tell her, the less would she believe her.
- 'You are the most provoking child!' cried her nurse. 'You deserve to
- be well punished for your wicked behaviour.'
- 'Please, Mrs Housekeeper,' said the princess, 'will you take me to your
- room, and keep me till my king-papa comes? I will ask him to come as
- soon as he can.'
- Every one stared at these words. Up to this moment they had all
- regarded her as little more than a baby.
- But the housekeeper was afraid of the nurse, and sought to patch
- matters up, saying:
- 'I am sure, princess, nursie did not mean to be rude to you.'
- 'I do not think my papa would wish me to have a nurse who spoke to me
- as Lootie does. If she thinks I tell lies, she had better either say
- so to my papa, or go away. Sir Walter, will you take charge of me?'
- 'With the greatest of pleasure, princess,' answered the captain of the
- gentlemen-at-arms, walking with his great stride into the room.
- The crowd of servants made eager way for him, and he bowed low before
- the little princess's bed. 'I shall send my servant at once, on the
- fastest horse in the stable, to tell your king-papa that Your Royal
- Highness desires his presence. When you have chosen one of these
- under-servants to wait upon you, I shall order the room to be cleared.'
- 'Thank you very much, Sir Walter,' said the princess, and her eye
- glanced towards a rosy-cheeked girl who had lately come to the house as
- a scullery-maid.
- But when Lootie saw the eyes of her dear princess going in search of
- another instead of her, she fell upon her knees by the bedside, and
- burst into a great cry of distress.
- 'I think, Sir Walter,' said the princess, 'I will keep Lootie. But I
- put myself under your care; and you need not trouble my king-papa until
- I speak to you again. Will you all please to go away? I am quite safe
- and well, and I did not hide myself for the sake either of amusing
- myself, or of troubling my people. Lootie, will you please to dress
- me.'
- CHAPTER 25
- Curdie Comes to Grief
- Everything was for some time quiet above ground. The king was still
- away in a distant part of his dominions. The men-at-arms kept watching
- about the house. They had been considerably astonished by finding at
- the foot of the rock in the garden the hideous body of the goblin
- creature killed by Curdie; but they came to the conclusion that it had
- been slain in the mines, and had crept out there to die; and except an
- occasional glimpse of a live one they saw nothing to cause alarm.
- Curdie kept watching in the mountain, and the goblins kept burrowing
- deeper into the earth. As long as they went deeper there was, Curdie
- judged, no immediate danger.
- To Irene the summer was as full of pleasure as ever, and for a long
- time, although she often thought of her grandmother during the day, and
- often dreamed about her at night, she did not see her. The kids and
- the flowers were as much her delight as ever, and she made as much
- friendship with the miners' children she met on the mountain as Lootie
- would permit; but Lootie had very foolish notions concerning the
- dignity of a princess, not understanding that the truest princess is
- just the one who loves all her brothers and sisters best, and who is
- most able to do them good by being humble towards them. At the same
- time she was considerably altered for the better in her behaviour to
- the princess. She could not help seeing that she was no longer a mere
- child, but wiser than her age would account for. She kept foolishly
- whispering to the servants, however--sometimes that the princess was
- not right in her mind, sometimes that she was too good to live, and
- other nonsense of the same sort.
- All this time Curdie had to be sorry, without a chance of confessing,
- that he had behaved so unkindly to the princess. This perhaps made him
- the more diligent in his endeavours to serve her. His mother and he
- often talked on the subject, and she comforted him, and told him she
- was sure he would some day have the opportunity he so much desired.
- Here I should like to remark, for the sake of princes and princesses in
- general, that it is a low and contemptible thing to refuse to confess a
- fault, or even an error. If a true princess has done wrong, she is
- always uneasy until she has had an opportunity of throwing the
- wrongness away from her by saying: 'I did it; and I wish I had not; and
- I am sorry for having done it.' So you see there is some ground for
- supposing that Curdie was not a miner only, but a prince as well. Many
- such instances have been known in the world's history.
- At length, however, he began to see signs of a change in the
- proceedings of the goblin excavators: they were going no deeper, but
- had commenced running on a level; and he watched them, therefore, more
- closely than ever. All at once, one night, coming to a slope of very
- hard rock, they began to ascend along the inclined plane of its
- surface. Having reached its top, they went again on a level for a
- night or two, after which they began to ascend once more, and kept on
- at a pretty steep angle. At length Curdie judged it time to transfer
- his observation to another quarter, and the next night he did not go to
- the mine at all; but, leaving his pickaxe and clue at home, and taking
- only his usual lumps of bread and pease pudding, went down the mountain
- to the king's house. He climbed over the wall, and remained in the
- garden the whole night, creeping on hands and knees from one spot to
- the other, and lying at full length with his ear to the ground,
- listening. But he heard nothing except the tread of the men-at-arms as
- they marched about, whose observation, as the night was cloudy and
- there was no moon, he had little difficulty in avoiding. For several
- following nights he continued to haunt the garden and listen, but with
- no success.
- At length, early one evening, whether it was that he had got careless
- of his own safety, or that the growing moon had become strong enough to
- expose him, his watching came to a sudden end. He was creeping from
- behind the rock where the stream ran out, for he had been listening all
- round it in the hope it might convey to his ear some indication of the
- whereabouts of the goblin miners, when just as he came into the
- moonlight on the lawn, a whizz in his ear and a blow upon his leg
- startled him. He instantly squatted in the hope of eluding further
- notice. But when he heard the sound of running feet, he jumped up to
- take the chance of escape by flight. He fell, however, with a keen
- shoot of pain, for the bolt of a crossbow had wounded his leg, and the
- blood was now streaming from it. He was instantly laid Hold of by two
- or three of the men-at-arms. It was useless to struggle, and he
- submitted in silence.
- 'It's a boy!' cried several of them together, in a tone of amazement.
- 'I thought it was one of those demons. What are you about here?'
- 'Going to have a little rough usage, apparently,' said Curdie,
- laughing, as the men shook him.
- 'Impertinence will do you no good. You have no business here in the
- king's grounds, and if you don't give a true account of yourself, you
- shall fare as a thief.'
- 'Why, what else could he be?' said one.
- 'He might have been after a lost kid, you know,' suggested another.
- 'I see no good in trying to excuse him. He has no business here,
- anyhow.'
- 'Let me go away, then, if you please,' said Curdie.
- 'But we don't please--not except you give a good account of yourself.'
- 'I don't feel quite sure whether I can trust you,' said Curdie.
- 'We are the king's own men-at-arms,' said the captain courteously, for
- he was taken with Curdie's appearance and courage.
- 'Well, I will tell you all about it--if you will promise to listen to
- me and not do anything rash.'
- 'I call that cool!' said one of the party, laughing. 'He will tell us
- what mischief he was about, if we promise to do as pleases him.'
- 'I was about no mischief,' said Curdie.
- But ere he could say more he turned faint, and fell senseless on the
- grass. Then first they discovered that the bolt they had shot, taking
- him for one of the goblin creatures, had wounded him.
- They carried him into the house and laid him down in the hall. The
- report spread that they had caught a robber, and the servants crowded
- in to see the villain. Amongst the rest came the nurse. The moment she
- saw him she exclaimed with indignation:
- 'I declare it's the same young rascal of a miner that was rude to me
- and the princess on the mountain. He actually wanted to kiss the
- princess. I took good care of that--the wretch! And he was prowling
- about, was he? Just like his impudence!' The princess being fast
- asleep, she could misrepresent at her pleasure.
- When he heard this, the captain, although he had considerable doubt of
- its truth, resolved to keep Curdie a prisoner until they could search
- into the affair. So, after they had brought him round a little, and
- attended to his wound, which was rather a bad one, they laid him, still
- exhausted from the loss of blood, upon a mattress in a disused
- room--one of those already so often mentioned--and locked the door, and
- left him. He passed a troubled night, and in the morning they found
- him talking wildly. In the evening he came to himself, but felt very
- weak, and his leg was exceedingly painful. Wondering where he was, and
- seeing one of the men-at-arms in the room, he began to question him and
- soon recalled the events of the preceding night. As he was himself
- unable to watch any more, he told the soldier all he knew about the
- goblins, and begged him to tell his companions, and stir them up to
- watch with tenfold vigilance; but whether it was that he did not talk
- quite coherently, or that the whole thing appeared incredible,
- certainly the man concluded that Curdie was only raving still, and
- tried to coax him into holding his tongue. This, of course, annoyed
- Curdie dreadfully, who now felt in his turn what it was not to be
- believed, and the consequence was that his fever returned, and by the
- time when, at his persistent entreaties, the captain was called, there
- could be no doubt that he was raving. They did for him what they
- could, and promised everything he wanted, but with no intention of
- fulfilment. At last he went to sleep, and when at length his sleep
- grew profound and peaceful, they left him, locked the door again, and
- withdrew, intending to revisit him early in the morning.
- CHAPTER 26
- The Goblin-Miners
- That same night several of the servants were having a chat together
- before going to bed.
- 'What can that noise be?' said one of the housemaids, who had been
- listening for a moment or two.
- 'I've heard it the last two nights,' said the cook. 'If there were any
- about the place, I should have taken it for rats, but my Tom keeps them
- far enough.'
- 'I've heard, though,' said the scullery-maid, 'that rats move about in
- great companies sometimes. There may be an army of them invading us.
- I've heard the noises yesterday and today too.'
- 'It'll be grand fun, then, for my Tom and Mrs Housekeeper's Bob,' said
- the cook. 'They'll be friends for once in their lives, and fight on
- the same side. I'll engage Tom and Bob together will put to flight any
- number of rats.'
- 'It seems to me,' said the nurse, 'that the noises are much too loud
- for that. I have heard them all day, and my princess has asked me
- several times what they could be. Sometimes they sound like distant
- thunder, and sometimes like the noises you hear in the mountain from
- those horrid miners underneath.'
- 'I shouldn't wonder,' said the cook, 'if it was the miners after all.
- They may have come on some hole in the mountain through which the
- noises reach to us. They are always boring and blasting and breaking,
- you know.'
- As he spoke, there came a great rolling rumble beneath them, and the
- house quivered. They all started up in affright, and rushing to the
- hall found the gentlemen-at-arms in consternation also. They had sent
- to wake their captain, who said from their description that it must
- have been an earthquake, an occurrence which, although very rare in
- that country, had taken place almost within the century; and then went
- to bed again, strange to say, and fell fast asleep without once
- thinking of Curdie, or associating the noises they had heard with what
- he had told them. He had not believed Curdie. If he had, he would at
- once have thought of what he had said, and would have taken
- precautions. As they heard nothing more, they concluded that Sir
- Walter was right, and that the danger was over for perhaps another
- hundred years. The fact, as discovered afterwards, was that the
- goblins had, in working up a second sloping face of stone, arrived at a
- huge block which lay under the cellars of the house, within the line of
- the foundations.
- It was so round that when they succeeded, after hard work, in
- dislodging it without blasting, it rolled thundering down the slope
- with a bounding, jarring roll, which shook the foundations of the
- house. The goblins were themselves dismayed at the noise, for they
- knew, by careful spying and measuring, that they must now be very near,
- if not under the king's house, and they feared giving an alarm. They,
- therefore, remained quiet for a while, and when they began to work
- again, they no doubt thought themselves very fortunate in coming upon a
- vein of sand which filled a winding fissure in the rock on which the
- house was built. By scooping this away they came out in the king's
- wine cellar.
- No sooner did they find where they were, than they scurried back again,
- like rats into their holes, and running at full speed to the goblin
- palace, announced their success to the king and queen with shouts of
- triumph.
- In a moment the goblin royal family and the whole goblin people were on
- their way in hot haste to the king's house, each eager to have a share
- in the glory of carrying off that same night the Princess Irene.
- The queen went stumping along in one shoe of stone and one of skin.
- This could not have been pleasant, and my readers may wonder that, with
- such skilful workmen about her, she had not yet replaced the shoe
- carried off by Curdie. As the king, however, had more than one ground
- of objection to her stone shoes, he no doubt took advantage of the
- discovery of her toes, and threatened to expose her deformity if she
- had another made. I presume he insisted on her being content with skin
- shoes, and allowed her to wear the remaining granite one on the present
- occasion only because she was going out to war.
- They soon arrived in the king's wine cellar, and regardless of its huge
- vessels, of which they did not know the use, proceeded at once, but as
- quietly as they could, to force the door that led upwards.
- CHAPTER 27
- The Goblins in the King's House
- When Curdie fell asleep he began at once to dream. He thought he was
- ascending the Mountainside from the mouth of the mine, whistling and
- singing 'Ring, dod, bang!' when he came upon a woman and child who had
- lost their way; and from that point he went on dreaming everything that
- had happened to him since he thus met the princess and Lootie; how he
- had watched the goblins, how he had been taken by them, how he had been
- rescued by the princess; everything, indeed, until he was wounded,
- captured, and imprisoned by the men-at-arms. And now he thought he was
- lying wide awake where they had laid him, when suddenly he heard a
- great thundering sound.
- 'The cobs are coming!' he said. 'They didn't believe a word I told
- them! The cobs'll be carrying off the princess from under their stupid
- noses! But they shan't! that they shan't!'
- He jumped up, as he thought, and began to dress, but, to his dismay,
- found that he was still lying in bed.
- 'Now then, I will!' he said. 'Here goes! I am up now!'
- But yet again he found himself snug in bed. Twenty times he tried, and
- twenty times he failed; for in fact he was not awake, only dreaming
- that he was. At length in an agony of despair, fancying he heard the
- goblins all over the house, he gave a great cry. Then there came, as
- he thought, a hand upon the lock of his door. It opened, and, looking
- up, he saw a lady with white hair, carrying a silver box in her hand,
- enter the room. She came to his bed, he thought, stroked his head and
- face with cool, soft hands, took the dressing from his leg, rubbed it
- with something that smelt like roses, and then waved her hands over him
- three times. At the last wave of her hands everything vanished, he
- felt himself sinking into the profoundest slumber, and remembered
- nothing more until he awoke in earnest.
- The setting moon was throwing a feeble light through the casement, and
- the house was full of uproar. There was soft heavy multitudinous
- stamping, a clashing and clanging of weapons, the voices of men and the
- cries of women, mixed with a hideous bellowing, which sounded
- victorious. The cobs were in the house! He sprang from his bed,
- hurried on some of his clothes, not forgetting his shoes, which were
- armed with nails; then spying an old hunting-knife, or short sword,
- hanging on the wall, he caught it, and rushed down the stairs, guided
- by the sounds of strife, which grew louder and louder.
- When he reached the ground floor he found the whole place swarming.
- All the goblins of the mountain seemed gathered there. He rushed
- amongst them, shouting:
- 'One, two,
- Hit and hew!
- Three, four,
- Blast and bore!'
- and with every rhyme he came down a great stamp upon a foot, cutting at
- the same time their faces--executing, indeed, a sword dance of the
- wildest description. Away scattered the goblins in every
- direction--into closets, up stairs, into chimneys, up on rafters, and
- down to the cellars. Curdie went on stamping and slashing and singing,
- but saw nothing of the people of the house until he came to the great
- hall, in which, the moment he entered it, arose a great goblin shout.
- The last of the men-at-arms, the captain himself, was on the floor,
- buried beneath a wallowing crowd of goblins. For, while each knight
- was busy defending himself as well as he could, by stabs in the thick
- bodies of the goblins, for he had soon found their heads all but
- invulnerable, the queen had attacked his legs and feet with her
- horrible granite shoe, and he was soon down; but the captain had got
- his back to the wall and stood out longer. The goblins would have torn
- them all to pieces, but the king had given orders to carry them away
- alive, and over each of them, in twelve groups, was standing a knot of
- goblins, while as many as could find room were sitting upon their
- prostrate bodies.
- Curdie burst in dancing and gyrating and stamping and singing like a
- small incarnate whirlwind.
- 'Where 'tis all a hole, sir,
- Never can be holes:
- Why should their shoes have soles, sir,
- When they've got no souls?
- 'But she upon her foot, sir,
- Has a granite shoe:
- The strongest leather boot, sir,
- Six would soon be through.'
- The queen gave a howl of rage and dismay; and before she recovered her
- presence of mind, Curdie, having begun with the group nearest him, had
- eleven of the knights on their legs again.
- 'Stamp on their feet!' he cried as each man rose, and in a few minutes
- the hall was nearly empty, the goblins running from it as fast as they
- could, howling and shrieking and limping, and cowering every now and
- then as they ran to cuddle their wounded feet in their hard hands, or
- to protect them from the frightful stamp-stamp of the armed men.
- And now Curdie approached the group which, in trusting in the queen and
- her shoe, kept their guard over the prostrate captain. The king sat on
- the captain's head, but the queen stood in front, like an infuriated
- cat, with her perpendicular eyes gleaming green, and her hair standing
- half up from her horrid head. Her heart was quaking, however, and she
- kept moving about her skin-shod foot with nervous apprehension. When
- Curdie was within a few paces, she rushed at him, made one tremendous
- stamp at his opposing foot, which happily he withdrew in time, and
- caught him round the waist, to dash him on the marble floor. But just
- as she caught him, he came down with all the weight of his iron-shod
- shoe upon her skin-shod foot, and with a hideous howl she dropped him,
- squatted on the floor, and took her foot in both her hands. Meanwhile
- the rest rushed on the king and the bodyguard, sent them flying, and
- lifted the prostrate captain, who was all but pressed to death. It was
- some moments before he recovered breath and consciousness.
- 'Where's the princess?' cried Curdie, again and again.
- No one knew, and off they all rushed in search of her.
- Through every room in the house they went, but nowhere was she to be
- found. Neither was one of the servants to be seen. But Curdie, who
- had kept to the lower part of the house, which was now quiet enough,
- began to hear a confused sound as of a distant hubbub, and set out to
- find where it came from. The noise grew as his sharp ears guided him
- to a stair and so to the wine cellar. It was full of goblins, whom the
- butler was supplying with wine as fast as he could draw it.
- While the queen and her party had encountered the men-at-arms, Harelip
- with another company had gone off to search the house. They captured
- every one they met, and when they could find no more, they hurried away
- to carry them safe to the caverns below. But when the butler, who was
- amongst them, found that their path lay through the wine cellar, he
- bethought himself of persuading them to taste the wine, and, as he had
- hoped, they no sooner tasted than they wanted more. The routed
- goblins, on their way below, joined them, and when Curdie entered they
- were all, with outstretched hands, in which were vessels of every
- description from sauce pan to silver cup, pressing around the butler,
- who sat at the tap of a huge cask, filling and filling. Curdie cast
- one glance around the place before commencing his attack, and saw in
- the farthest corner a terrified group of the domestics unwatched, but
- cowering without courage to attempt their escape. Amongst them was the
- terror-stricken face of Lootie; but nowhere could he see the princess.
- Seized with the horrible conviction that Harelip had already carried
- her off, he rushed amongst them, unable for wrath to sing any more, but
- stamping and cutting with greater fury than ever.
- 'Stamp on their feet; stamp on their feet!' he shouted, and in a moment
- the goblins were disappearing through the hole in the floor like rats
- and mice.
- They could not vanish so fast, however, but that many more goblin feet
- had to go limping back over the underground ways of the mountain that
- morning.
- Presently, however, they were reinforced from above by the king and his
- party, with the redoubtable queen at their head. Finding Curdie again
- busy amongst her unfortunate subjects, she rushed at him once more with
- the rage of despair, and this time gave him a bad bruise on the foot.
- Then a regular stamping fight got up between them, Curdie, with the
- point of his hunting-knife, keeping her from clasping her mighty arms
- about him, as he watched his opportunity of getting once more a good
- stamp at her skin-shod foot. But the queen was more wary as well as
- more agile than hitherto.
- The rest meantime, finding their adversary thus matched for the moment,
- paused in their headlong hurry, and turned to the shivering group of
- women in the corner. As if determined to emulate his father and have a
- sun-woman of some sort to share his future throne, Harelip rushed at
- them, caught up Lootie, and sped with her to the hole. She gave a
- great shriek, and Curdie heard her, and saw the plight she was in.
- Gathering all his strength, he gave the queen a sudden cut across the
- face with his weapon, came down, as she started back, with all his
- weight on the proper foot, and sprung to Lootie's rescue. The prince
- had two defenceless feet, and on both of them Curdie stamped just as he
- reached the hole. He dropped his burden and rolled shrieking into the
- earth. Curdie made one stab at him as he disappeared, caught hold of
- the senseless Lootie, and having dragged her back to the corner, there
- mounted guard over her, preparing once more to encounter the queen.
- Her face streaming with blood, and her eyes flashing green lightning
- through it, she came on with her mouth open and her teeth grinning like
- a tiger's, followed by the king and her bodyguard of the thickest
- goblins. But the same moment in rushed the captain and his men, and
- ran at them stamping furiously. They dared not encounter such an
- onset. Away they scurried, the queen foremost. Of course, the right
- thing would have been to take the king and queen prisoners, and hold
- them hostages for the princess, but they were so anxious to find her
- that no one thought of detaining them until it was too late.
- Having thus rescued the servants, they set about searching the house
- once more. None of them could give the least information concerning
- the princess. Lootie was almost silly with terror, and, although
- scarcely able to walk would not leave Curdie's side for a single
- moment. Again he allowed the others to search the rest of the
- house--where, except a dismayed goblin lurking here and there, they
- found no one--while he requested Lootie to take him to the princess's
- room. She was as submissive and obedient as if he had been the king.
- He found the bedclothes tossed about, and most of them on the floor,
- while the princess's garments were scattered all over the room, which
- was in the greatest confusion. It was only too evident that the
- goblins had been there, and Curdie had no longer any doubt that she had
- been carried off at the very first of the inroad. With a pang of
- despair he saw how wrong they had been in not securing the king and
- queen and prince; but he determined to find and rescue the princess as
- she had found and rescued him, or meet the worst fate to which the
- goblins could doom him.
- CHAPTER 28
- Curdie's Guide
- Just as the consolation of this resolve dawned upon his mind and he was
- turning away for the cellar to follow the goblins into their hole,
- something touched his hand. It was the slightest touch, and when he
- looked he could see nothing. Feeling and peering about in the grey of
- the dawn, his fingers came upon a tight thread. He looked again, and
- narrowly, but still could see nothing. It flashed upon him that this
- must be the princess's thread. Without saying a word, for he knew no
- one would believe him any more than he had believed the princess, he
- followed the thread with his finger, contrived to give Lootie the slip,
- and was soon out of the house and on the mountainside--surprised that,
- if the thread were indeed the grandmother's messenger, it should have
- led the princess, as he supposed it must, into the mountain, where she
- would be certain to meet the goblins rushing back enraged from their
- defeat. But he hurried on in the hope of overtaking her first. When
- he arrived, however, at the place where the path turned off for the
- mine, he found that the thread did not turn with it, but went straight
- up the mountain. Could it be that the thread was leading him home to
- his mother's cottage? Could the princess be there? He bounded up the
- mountain like one of its own goats, and before the sun was up the
- thread had brought him indeed to his mother's door. There it vanished
- from his fingers, and he could not find it, search as he might.
- The door was on the latch, and he entered. There sat his mother by the
- fire, and in her arms lay the princess, fast asleep.
- 'Hush, Curdie!' said his mother. 'Do not wake her. I'm so glad you're
- come! I thought the cobs must have got you again!'
- With a heart full of delight, Curdie sat down at a corner of the
- hearth, on a stool opposite his mother's chair, and gazed at the
- princess, who slept as peacefully as if she had been in her own bed.
- All at once she opened her eyes and fixed them on him.
- 'Oh, Curdie! you're come!' she said quietly. 'I thought you would!'
- Curdie rose and stood before her with downcast eyes.
- 'Irene,' he said, 'I am very sorry I did not believe you.'
- 'Oh, never mind, Curdie!' answered the princess. 'You couldn't, you
- know. You do believe me now, don't you?'
- 'I can't help it now. I ought to have helped it before.'
- 'Why can't you help it now?'
- 'Because, just as I was going into the mountain to look for you, I got
- hold of your thread, and it brought me here.'
- 'Then you've come from my house, have you?'
- 'Yes, I have.'
- 'I didn't know you were there.'
- 'I've been there two or three days, I believe.'
- 'And I never knew it! Then perhaps you can tell me why my grandmother
- has brought me here? I can't think. Something woke me--I didn't know
- what, but I was frightened, and I felt for the thread, and there it
- was! I was more frightened still when it brought me out on the
- mountain, for I thought it was going to take me into it again, and I
- like the outside of it best. I supposed you were in trouble again, and
- I had to get you out. But it brought me here instead; and, oh, Curdie!
- your mother has been so kind to me--just like my own grandmother!'
- Here Curdie's mother gave the princess a hug, and the princess turned
- and gave her a sweet smile, and held up her mouth to kiss her.
- 'Then you didn't see the cobs?'asked Curdie.
- 'No; I haven't been into the mountain, I told you, Curdie.'
- 'But the cobs have been into your house--all over it--and into your
- bedroom, making such a row!'
- 'What did they want there? It was very rude of them.'
- 'They wanted you--to carry you off into the mountain with them, for a
- wife to their prince Harelip.'
- 'Oh, how dreadful' cried the princess, shuddering.
- 'But you needn't be afraid, you know. Your grandmother takes care of
- you.'
- 'Ah! you do believe in my grandmother, then? I'm so glad! She made me
- think you would some day.'
- All at once Curdie remembered his dream, and was silent, thinking.
- 'But how did you come to be in my house, and me not know it?' asked the
- princess.
- Then Curdie had to explain everything--how he had watched for her sake,
- how he had been wounded and shut up by the soldiers, how he heard the
- noises and could not rise, and how the beautiful old lady had come to
- him, and all that followed.
- 'Poor Curdie! to lie there hurt and ill, and me never to know it!'
- exclaimed the princess, stroking his rough hand. 'I would have come
- and nursed you, if they had told me.'
- 'I didn't see you were lame,' said his mother.
- 'Am I, mother? Oh--yes--I suppose I ought to be! I declare I've never
- thought of it since I got up to go down amongst the cobs!'
- 'Let me see the wound,' said his mother.
- He pulled down his stocking--when behold, except a great scar, his leg
- was perfectly sound!
- Curdie and his mother gazed in each other's eyes, full of wonder, but
- Irene called out:
- 'I thought so, Curdie! I was sure it wasn't a dream. I was sure my
- grandmother had been to see you. Don't you smell the roses? It was my
- grandmother healed your leg, and sent you to help me.'
- 'No, Princess Irene,' said Curdie; 'I wasn't good enough to be allowed
- to help you: I didn't believe you. Your grandmother took care of you
- without me.'
- 'She sent you to help my people, anyhow. I wish my king-papa would
- come. I do want so to tell him how good you have been!'
- 'But,' said the mother, 'we are forgetting how frightened your people
- must be. You must take the princess home at once, Curdie--or at least
- go and tell them where she is.'
- 'Yes, mother. Only I'm dreadfully hungry. Do let me have some
- breakfast first. They ought to have listened to me, and then they
- wouldn't have been taken by surprise as they were.'
- 'That is true, Curdie; but it is not for you to blame them much. You
- remember?'
- 'Yes, mother, I do. Only I must really have something to eat.'
- 'You shall, my boy--as fast as I can get it,' said his mother, rising
- and setting the princess on her chair.
- But before his breakfast was ready, Curdie jumped up so suddenly as to
- startle both his companions.
- 'Mother, mother!' he cried, 'I was forgetting. You must take the
- princess home yourself. I must go and wake my father.'
- Without a word of explanation, he rushed to the place where his father
- was sleeping. Having thoroughly roused him with what he told him he
- darted out of the cottage.
- CHAPTER 29
- Masonwork
- He had all at once remembered the resolution of the goblins to carry
- out their second plan upon the failure of the first. No doubt they
- were already busy, and the mine was therefore in the greatest danger of
- being flooded and rendered useless--not to speak of the lives of the
- miners.
- When he reached the mouth of the mine, after rousing all the miners
- within reach, he found his father and a good many more just entering.
- They all hurried to the gang by which he had found a way into the
- goblin country. There the foresight of Peter had already collected a
- great many blocks of stone, with cement, ready for building up the weak
- place--well enough known to the goblins. Although there was not room
- for more than two to be actually building at once, they managed, by
- setting all the rest to work in preparing the cement and passing the
- stones, to finish in the course of the day a huge buttress filling the
- whole gang, and supported everywhere by the live rock. Before the hour
- when they usually dropped work, they were satisfied the mine was secure.
- They had heard goblin hammers and pickaxes busy all the time, and at
- length fancied they heard sounds of water they had never heard before.
- But that was otherwise accounted for when they left the mine, for they
- stepped out into a tremendous storm which was raging all over the
- mountain. The thunder was bellowing, and the lightning lancing out of
- a huge black cloud which lay above it and hung down its edges of thick
- mist over its sides. The lightning was breaking out of the mountain,
- too, and flashing up into the cloud. From the state of the brooks, now
- swollen into raging torrents, it was evident that the storm had been
- storming all day.
- The wind was blowing as if it would blow him off the mountain, but,
- anxious about his mother and the princess, Curdie darted up through the
- thick of the tempest. Even if they had not set out before the storm
- came on, he did not judge them safe, for in such a storm even their
- poor little house was in danger. Indeed he soon found that but for a
- huge rock against which it was built, and which protected it both from
- the blasts and the waters, it must have been swept if it was not blown
- away; for the two torrents into which this rock parted the rush of
- water behind it united again in front of the cottage--two roaring and
- dangerous streams, which his mother and the princess could not possibly
- have passed. It was with great difficulty that he forced his way
- through one of them, and up to the door.
- The moment his hand fell on the latch, through all the uproar of winds
- and Waters came the joyous cry of the princess:
- 'There's Curdie! Curdie! Curdie!'
- She was sitting wrapped in blankets on the bed, his mother trying for
- the hundredth time to light the fire which had been drowned by the rain
- that came down the chimney. The clay floor was one mass of mud, and
- the whole place looked wretched. But the faces of the mother and the
- princess shone as if their troubles only made them the merrier. Curdie
- burst out laughing at the sight of them.
- 'I never had such fun!' said the princess, her eyes twinkling and her
- pretty teeth shining. 'How nice it must be to live in a cottage on the
- mountain!'
- 'It all depends on what kind your inside house is,' said the mother.
- 'I know what you mean,' said Irene. 'That's the kind of thing my
- grandmother says.'
- By the time Peter returned the storm was nearly over, but the streams
- were so fierce and so swollen that it was not only out of the question
- for the princess to go down the mountain, but most dangerous for Peter
- even or Curdie to make the attempt in the gathering darkness.
- 'They will be dreadfully frightened about you,' said Peter to the
- princess, 'but we cannot help it. We must wait till the morning.'
- With Curdie's help, the fire was lighted at last, and the mother set
- about making their supper; and after supper they all told the princess
- stories till she grew sleepy. Then Curdie's mother laid her in
- Curdie's bed, which was in a tiny little garret-room. As soon as she
- was in bed, through a little window low down in the roof she caught
- sight of her grandmother's lamp shining far away beneath, and she gazed
- at the beautiful silvery globe until she fell asleep.
- CHAPTER 30
- The King and the Kiss
- The next morning the sun rose so bright that Irene said the rain had
- washed his face and let the light out clean. The torrents were still
- roaring down the side of the mountain, but they were so much smaller as
- not to be dangerous in the daylight. After an early breakfast, Peter
- went to his work and Curdie and his mother set out to take the princess
- home. They had difficulty in getting her dry across the streams, and
- Curdie had again and again to carry her, but at last they got safe on
- the broader part of the road, and walked gently down towards the king's
- house. And what should they see as they turned the last corner but the
- last of the king's troop riding through the gate!
- 'Oh, Curdie!' cried Irene, clapping her hands right joyfully,'my
- king-papa is come.'
- The moment Curdie heard that, he caught her up in his arms, and set off
- at full speed, crying:
- 'Come on, mother dear! The king may break his heart before he knows
- that she is safe.'
- Irene clung round his neck and he ran with her like a deer. When he
- entered the gate into the court, there sat the king on his horse, with
- all the people of the house about him, weeping and hanging their heads.
- The king was not weeping, but his face was white as a dead man's, and
- he looked as if the life had gone out of him. The men-at-arms he had
- brought with him sat with horror-stricken faces, but eyes flashing with
- rage, waiting only for the word of the king to do something--they did
- not know what, and nobody knew what.
- The day before, the men-at-arms belonging to the house, as soon as they
- were satisfied the princess had been carried away, rushed after the
- goblins into the hole, but found that they had already so skilfully
- blockaded the narrowest part, not many feet below the cellar, that
- without miners and their tools they could do nothing. Not one of them
- knew where the mouth of the mine lay, and some of those who had set out
- to find it had been overtaken by the storm and had not even yet
- returned. Poor Sir Walter was especially filled with shame, and almost
- hoped the king would order his head to be cut off, for to think of that
- sweet little face down amongst the goblins was unendurable.
- When Curdie ran in at the gate with the princess in his arms, they were
- all so absorbed in their own misery and awed by the king's presence and
- grief, that no one observed his arrival. He went straight up to the
- king, where he sat on his horse.
- 'Papa! papa!' the princess cried, stretching out her arms to him; 'here
- I am!'
- The king started. The colour rushed to his face. He gave an
- inarticulate cry. Curdie held up the princess, and the king bent down
- and took her from his arms. As he clasped her to his bosom, the big
- tears went dropping down his cheeks and his beard. And such a shout
- arose from all the bystanders that the startled horses pranced and
- capered, and the armour rang and clattered, and the rocks of the
- mountain echoed back the noises. The princess greeted them all as she
- nestled in her father's bosom, and the king did not set her down until
- she had told them all the story. But she had more to tell about Curdie
- than about herself, and what she did tell about herself none of them
- could understand--except the king and Curdie, who stood by the king's
- knee stroking the neck of the great white horse. And still as she told
- what Curdie had done, Sir Walter and others added to what she told,
- even Lootie joining in the praises of his courage and energy.
- Curdie held his peace, looking quietly up in the king's face. And his
- mother stood on the outskirts of the crowd listening with delight, for
- her son's deeds were pleasant in her ears, until the princess caught
- sight of her.
- 'And there is his mother, king-papa!' she said. 'See--there. She is
- such a nice mother, and has been so kind to me!'
- They all parted asunder as the king made a sign to her to come forward.
- She obeyed, and he gave her his hand, but could not speak.
- 'And now, king-papa,' the princess went on, 'I must tell you another
- thing. One night long ago Curdie drove the goblins away and brought
- Lootie and me safe from the mountain. And I promised him a kiss when
- we got home, but Lootie wouldn't let me give it him. I don't want you
- to scold Lootie, but I want you to tell her that a princess must do as
- she promises.'
- 'Indeed she must, my child--except it be wrong,' said the king. 'There,
- give Curdie a kiss.'
- And as he spoke he held her towards him.
- The princess reached down, threw her arms round Curdie's neck, and
- kissed him on the mouth, saying: 'There, Curdie! There's the kiss I
- promised you!'
- Then they all went into the house, and the cook rushed to the kitchen
- and the servants to their work. Lootie dressed Irene in her shiningest
- clothes, and the king put off his armour, and put on purple and gold;
- and a messenger was sent for Peter and all the miners, and there was a
- great and a grand feast, which continued long after the princess was
- put to bed.
- CHAPTER 31
- The Subterranean Waters
- The king's harper, who always formed a part of his escort, was chanting
- a ballad which he made as he went on playing on his instrument--about
- the princess and the goblins, and the prowess of Curdie, when all at
- once he ceased, with his eyes on one of the doors of the hall.
- Thereupon the eyes of the king and his guests turned thitherward also.
- The next moment, through the open doorway came the princess Irene. She
- went straight up to her father, with her right hand stretched out a
- little sideways, and her forefinger, as her father and Curdie
- understood, feeling its way along the invisible thread. The king took
- her on his knee, and she said in his ear:
- 'King-papa, do you hear that noise?'
- 'I hear nothing,' said the king.
- 'Listen,' she said, holding up her forefinger.
- The king listened, and a great stillness fell upon the company. Each
- man, seeing that the king listened, listened also, and the harper sat
- with his harp between his arms, and his finger silent upon the strings.
- 'I do hear a noise,' said the king at length--'a noise as of distant
- thunder. It is coming nearer and nearer. What can it be?'
- They all heard it now, and each seemed ready to start to his feet as he
- listened. Yet all sat perfectly still. The noise came rapidly nearer.
- 'What can it be?' said the king again.
- 'I think it must be another storm coming over the mountain,' said Sir
- Walter.
- Then Curdie, who at the first word of the king had slipped from his
- seat, and laid his ear to the ground, rose up quickly, and approaching
- the king said, speaking very fast:
- 'Please, Your Majesty, I think I know what it is. I have no time to
- explain, for that might make it too late for some of us. Will Your
- Majesty give orders that everybody leave the house as quickly as
- possible and get up the mountain?'
- The king, who was the wisest man in the kingdom, knew well there was a
- time when things must be done and questions left till afterwards. He
- had faith in Curdie, and rose instantly, with Irene in his arms.
- 'Every man and woman follow me,' he said, and strode out into the
- darkness.
- Before he had reached the gate, the noise had grown to a great
- thundering roar, and the ground trembled beneath their feet, and before
- the last of them had crossed the court, out after them from the great
- hall door came a huge rush of turbid water, and almost swept them away.
- But they got safe out of the gate and up the mountain, while the
- torrent went roaring down the road into the valley beneath.
- Curdie had left the king and the princess to look after his mother,
- whom he and his father, one on each side, caught up when the stream
- overtook them and carried safe and dry.
- When the king had got out of the way of the water, a little up the
- mountain, he stood with the princess in his arms, looking back with
- amazement on the issuing torrent, which glimmered fierce and foamy
- through the night. There Curdie rejoined them.
- 'Now, Curdie,' said the king, 'what does it mean? Is this what you
- expected?'
- 'It is, Your Majesty,' said Curdie; and proceeded to tell him about the
- second scheme of the goblins, who, fancying the miners of more
- importance to the upper world than they were, had resolved, if they
- should fail in carrying off the king's daughter, to flood the mine and
- drown the miners. Then he explained what the miners had done to
- prevent it. The goblins had, in pursuance of their design, let loose
- all the underground reservoirs and streams, expecting the water to run
- down into the mine, which was lower than their part of the mountain,
- for they had, as they supposed, not knowing of the solid wall close
- behind, broken a passage through into it. But the readiest outlet the
- water could find had turned out to be the tunnel they had made to the
- king's house, the possibility of which catastrophe had not occurred to
- the young miner until he had laid his ear to the floor of the hall.
- What was then to be done? The house appeared in danger of falling, and
- every moment the torrent was increasing.
- 'We must set out at once,' said the king. 'But how to get at the
- horses!'
- 'Shall I see if we can manage that?' said Curdie.
- 'Do,' said the king.
- Curdie gathered the men-at-arms, and took them over the garden wall,
- and so to the stables. They found their horses in terror; the water
- was rising fast around them, and it was quite time they were got out.
- But there was no way to get them out, except by riding them through the
- stream, which was now pouring from the lower windows as well as the
- door. As one horse was quite enough for any man to manage through such
- a torrent, Curdie got on the king's white charger and, leading the way,
- brought them all in safety to the rising ground.
- 'Look, look, Curdie!' cried Irene, the moment that, having dismounted,
- he led the horse up to the king.
- Curdie did look, and saw, high in the air, somewhere about the top of
- the king's house, a great globe of light shining like the purest silver.
- 'Oh!' he cried in some consternation, 'that is your grandmother's lamp!
- We must get her out. I will go an find her. The house may fall, you
- know.'
- 'My grandmother is in no danger,' said Irene, smiling.
- 'Here, Curdie, take the princess while I get on my horse,' said the
- king.
- Curdie took the princess again, and both turned their eyes to the globe
- of light. The same moment there shot from it a white bird, which,
- descending with outstretched wings, made one circle round the king an
- Curdie and the princess, and then glided up again. The light and the
- pigeon vanished together.
- 'Now, Curdie!' said the princess, as he lifted her to her father's
- arms, 'you see my grandmother knows all about it, and isn't frightened.
- I believe she could walk through that water and it wouldn't wet her a
- bit.'
- 'But, my child,' said the king, 'you will be cold if you haven't
- Something more on. Run, Curdie, my boy, and fetch anything you can lay
- your hands on, to keep the princess warm. We have a long ride before
- us.'
- Curdie was gone in a moment, and soon returned with a great rich fur,
- and the news that dead goblins were tossing about in the current
- through the house. They had been caught in their own snare; instead of
- the mine they had flooded their own country, whence they were now swept
- up drowned. Irene shuddered, but the king held her close to his bosom.
- Then he turned to Sir Walter, and said:
- 'Bring Curdie's father and mother here.'
- 'I wish,' said the king, when they stood before him, 'to take your son
- with me. He shall enter my bodyguard at once, and wait further
- promotion.'
- Peter and his wife, overcome, only murmured almost inaudible thanks.
- But Curdie spoke aloud.
- 'Please, Your Majesty,' he said, 'I cannot leave my father and mother.'
- 'That's right, Curdie!' cried the princess. 'I wouldn't if I was you.'
- The king looked at the princess and then at Curdie with a glow of
- satisfaction on his countenance.
- 'I too think you are right, Curdie,' he said, 'and I will not ask you
- again. But I shall have a chance of doing something for you some time.'
- 'Your Majesty has already allowed me to serve you,' said Curdie.
- 'But, Curdie,' said his mother, 'why shouldn't you go with the king?
- We can get on very well without you.'
- 'But I can't get on very well without you,' said Curdie. 'The king is
- very kind, but I could not be half the use to him that I am to you.
- Please, Your Majesty, if you wouldn't mind giving my mother a red
- petticoat! I should have got her one long ago, but for the goblins.'
- 'As soon as we get home,' said the king, 'Irene and I will search out
- the warmest one to be found, and send it by one of the gentlemen.'
- 'Yes, that we will, Curdie!' said the princess. 'And next summer we'll
- come back and see you wear it, Curdie's mother,' she added. 'Shan't we,
- king-papa?'
- 'Yes, my love; I hope so,' said the king.
- Then turning to the miners, he said:
- 'Will you do the best you can for my servants tonight? I hope they
- will be able to return to the house tomorrow.'
- The miners with one voice promised their hospitality. Then the king
- commanded his servants to mind whatever Curdie should say to them, and
- after shaking hands with him and his father and mother, the king and
- the princess and all their company rode away down the side of the new
- stream, which had already devoured half the road, into the starry night.
- CHAPTER 32
- The Last Chapter
- All the rest went up the mountain, and separated in groups to the homes
- of the miners. Curdie and his father and mother took Lootie with them.
- And the whole way a light, of which all but Lootie understood the
- origin, shone upon their path. But when they looked round they could
- see nothing of the silvery globe.
- For days and days the water continued to rush from the doors and
- windows of the king's house, and a few goblin bodies were swept out
- into the road.
- Curdie saw that something must be done. He spoke to his father and the
- rest of the miners, and they at once proceeded to make another outlet
- for the waters. By setting all hands to the work, tunnelling here and
- building there, they soon succeeded; and having also made a little
- tunnel to drain the water away from under the king's house, they were
- soon able to get into the wine cellar, where they found a multitude of
- dead goblins--among the rest the queen, with the skin-shoe gone, and
- the stone one fast to her ankle--for the water had swept away the
- barricade, which prevented the men-at-arms from following the goblins,
- and had greatly widened the passage. They built it securely up, and
- then went back to their labours in the mine.
- A good many of the goblins with their creatures escaped from the
- inundation out upon the mountain. But most of them soon left that part
- of the country, and most of those who remained grew milder in
- character, and indeed became very much like the Scotch brownies. Their
- skulls became softer as well as their hearts, and their feet grew
- harder, and by degrees they became friendly with the inhabitants of the
- mountain and even with the miners. But the latter were merciless to
- any of the cobs' creatures that came in their way, until at length they
- all but disappeared.
- The rest of the history of The Princess and Curdie must be kept for
- another volume.
- End of Project Gutenberg's The Princess and the Goblin, by George MacDonald
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