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  • The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Tales of Mother Goose, by Charles Perrault
  • This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
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  • Title: The Tales of Mother Goose
  • As First Collected by Charles Perrault in 1696
  • Author: Charles Perrault
  • Annotator: M. V. O'Shea
  • Illustrator: D. J. Munro
  • Translator: Charles Welsh
  • Release Date: December 3, 2005 [EBook #17208]
  • Language: English
  • *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TALES OF MOTHER GOOSE ***
  • Produced by Geetu Melwani, Suzanne Shell and the Online
  • Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
  • THE
  • TALES OF MOTHER GOOSE
  • AS FIRST COLLECTED BY
  • CHARLES PERRAULT IN 1696
  • _A NEW TRANSLATION BY CHARLES WELSH_
  • WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY
  • M.V. O'SHEA
  • PROFESSOR OF EDUCATION AT THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN
  • ILLUSTRATED BY D.J. MUNRO
  • AFTER DRAWINGS BY GUSTAVE DORÉ
  • D.C. HEATH & CO., PUBLISHERS
  • BOSTON NEW YORK CHICAGO
  • [Illustration: "SHE MET WITH GAFFER WOLF." p. 80.]
  • [Transcriber's note: In the story "Riquet of the Tuft,"
  • the following symbols are used to represent
  • special characters:
  • [=e] = the letter "e" with superior macron
  • [=a] = the letter "a" with superior macron]
  • CONTENTS
  • PAGE
  • INTRODUCTION BY PROFESSOR M.V. O'SHEA vii
  • LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS ix
  • CINDERELLA, OR THE LITTLE GLASS SLIPPER 1
  • THE SLEEPING BEAUTY IN THE WOOD 13
  • LITTLE THUMB 29
  • THE MASTER CAT, OR PUSS IN BOOTS 45
  • RIQUET OF THE TUFT 54
  • BLUE BEARD 66
  • THE FAIRY 75
  • LITTLE RED RIDING-HOOD 80
  • NOTE 85
  • LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
  • "She met with Gaffer Wolf" _Frontispiece_
  • PAGE
  • "It went on very easily" 11
  • "Let me see if I can do it" 15
  • "Slipped in under his father's seat" 30
  • "The Marquis of Carabas is drowning!" 48
  • "I am exact in keeping my word" 63
  • "If you open it, there's nothing you
  • may not expect from my anger" 67
  • "With all my heart, Goody" 75
  • "He fell upon the good woman" 81
  • INTRODUCTION
  • What virtues do these stories possess that have kept them alive for so
  • long a time? They have to some degree stimulated and nourished qualities
  • of supreme worth in individual and social life. With the young the
  • struggle against greed and falsehood and pride and cowardice is a very
  • real one, and situations in which these homely, fundamental traits are
  • involved are full of interest and seriousness. Again, to mature people
  • the reward of well-doing and the punishment of evil conduct portrayed in
  • these stories are apt to seem too realistic, too much also on the
  • cut-and-dried pattern; but it is far different with children. They have
  • a very concrete sense of right and wrong, and they demand a clear,
  • explicit, tangible outcome for every sort of action. They must have
  • concrete, living examples, with the appropriate outcome of each, set
  • before them.
  • A modest, faithful child will be strengthened in his good qualities;
  • while one lacking these will have them aroused, to some extent at any
  • rate, by following Cinderella in her career. Arrogance and selfishness
  • come to unhappy straits in this fancy world, and they are likely to
  • fare the same in the real world; so it would be better to part company
  • with them, and take up with gentleness and kindliness and faithfulness
  • instead. And every one may be of some help to others if he be only of
  • the right mind. The brother who thought himself faring badly with only a
  • cat for a legacy learns betimes that even so small and apparently
  • helpless a creature may be of much service when he is rightly disposed.
  • A person might think little Thumb could accomplish nothing of value to
  • any one, but he again teaches the child that all depends on the
  • willingness to be of assistance, the good-heartedness, the
  • fellow-feeling which one has for others.
  • In making this version anew the translator has endeavored to retain the
  • characteristics of the style of the early chap-book versions, while
  • evading the pompous, stilted language and Johnsonian phraseology so
  • fashionable when they were first translated.
  • M.V. O'SHEA.
  • UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN.
  • The Tales of Mother Goose.
  • CINDERELLA, OR THE LITTLE GLASS SLIPPER.
  • Once upon a time there was a gentleman who married, for his second wife,
  • the proudest and most haughty woman that ever was seen. She had two
  • daughters of her own, who were, indeed, exactly like her in all things.
  • The gentleman had also a young daughter, of rare goodness and sweetness
  • of temper, which she took from her mother, who was the best creature in
  • the world.
  • The wedding was scarcely over, when the stepmother's bad temper began to
  • show itself. She could not bear the goodness of this young girl, because
  • it made her own daughters appear the more odious. The stepmother gave
  • her the meanest work in the house to do; she had to scour the dishes,
  • tables, etc., and to scrub the floors and clean out the bedrooms. The
  • poor girl had to sleep in the garret, upon a wretched straw bed, while
  • her sisters lay in fine rooms with inlaid floors, upon beds of the very
  • newest fashion, and where they had looking-glasses so large that they
  • might see themselves at their full length. The poor girl bore all
  • patiently, and dared not complain to her father, who would have scolded
  • her if she had done so, for his wife governed him entirely.
  • When she had done her work, she used to go into the chimney corner, and
  • sit down among the cinders, hence she was called Cinderwench. The
  • younger sister of the two, who was not so rude and uncivil as the elder,
  • called her Cinderella. However, Cinderella, in spite of her mean
  • apparel, was a hundred times more handsome than her sisters, though they
  • were always richly dressed.
  • It happened that the King's son gave a ball, and invited to it all
  • persons of fashion. Our young misses were also invited, for they cut a
  • very grand figure among the people of the country-side. They were highly
  • delighted with the invitation, and wonderfully busy in choosing the
  • gowns, petticoats, and head-dresses which might best become them. This
  • made Cinderella's lot still harder, for it was she who ironed her
  • sisters' linen and plaited their ruffles. They talked all day long of
  • nothing but how they should be dressed.
  • "For my part," said the elder, "I will wear my red velvet suit with
  • French trimmings."
  • "And I," said the younger, "shall wear my usual skirt; but then, to make
  • amends for that I will put on my gold-flowered mantle, and my diamond
  • stomacher, which is far from being the most ordinary one in the world."
  • They sent for the best hairdressers they could get to make up their hair
  • in fashionable style, and bought patches for their cheeks. Cinderella
  • was consulted in all these matters, for she had good taste. She advised
  • them always for the best, and even offered her services to dress their
  • hair, which they were very willing she should do.
  • As she was doing this, they said to her:--
  • "Cinderella, would you not be glad to go to the ball?"
  • "Young ladies," she said, "you only jeer at me; it is not for such as I
  • am to go there."
  • "You are right," they replied; "people would laugh to see a Cinderwench
  • at a ball."
  • Any one but Cinderella would have dressed their hair awry, but she was
  • good-natured, and arranged it perfectly well. They were almost two days
  • without eating, so much were they transported with joy. They broke above
  • a dozen laces in trying to lace themselves tight, that they might have a
  • fine, slender shape, and they were continually at their looking-glass.
  • At last the happy day came; they went to Court, and Cinderella followed
  • them with her eyes as long as she could, and when she had lost sight of
  • them, she fell a-crying.
  • Her godmother, who saw her all in tears, asked her what was the matter.
  • "I wish I could--I wish I could--" but she could not finish for sobbing.
  • Her godmother, who was a fairy, said to her, "You wish you could go to
  • the ball; is it not so?"
  • "Alas, yes," said Cinderella, sighing.
  • "Well," said her godmother, "be but a good girl, and I will see that you
  • go." Then she took her into her chamber, and said to her, "Run into the
  • garden, and bring me a pumpkin."
  • Cinderella went at once to gather the finest she could get, and brought
  • it to her godmother, not being able to imagine how this pumpkin could
  • help her to go to the ball. Her godmother scooped out all the inside of
  • it, leaving nothing but the rind. Then she struck it with her wand, and
  • the pumpkin was instantly turned into a fine gilded coach.
  • She then went to look into the mouse-trap, where she found six mice, all
  • alive. She ordered Cinderella to lift the trap-door, when, giving each
  • mouse, as it went out, a little tap with her wand, it was that moment
  • turned into a fine horse, and the six mice made a fine set of six horses
  • of a beautiful mouse-colored, dapple gray.
  • Being at a loss for a coachman, Cinderella said, "I will go and see if
  • there is not a rat in the rat-trap--we may make a coachman of him."
  • "You are right," replied her godmother; "go and look."
  • Cinderella brought the rat-trap to her, and in it there were three huge
  • rats. The fairy chose the one which had the largest beard, and, having
  • touched him with her wand, he was turned into a fat coachman with the
  • finest mustache and whiskers ever seen.
  • After that, she said to her:--
  • "Go into the garden, and you will find six lizards behind the
  • watering-pot; bring them to me."
  • She had no sooner done so than her godmother turned them into six
  • footmen, who skipped up immediately behind the coach, with their
  • liveries all trimmed with gold and silver, and they held on as if they
  • had done nothing else their whole lives.
  • The fairy then said to Cinderella, "Well, you see here a carriage fit to
  • go to the ball in; are you not pleased with it?"
  • "Oh, yes!" she cried; "but must I go as I am in these rags?"
  • Her godmother simply touched her with her wand, and, at the same moment,
  • her clothes were turned into cloth of gold and silver, all decked with
  • jewels. This done, she gave her a pair of the prettiest glass slippers
  • in the whole world. Being thus attired, she got into the carriage, her
  • godmother commanding her, above all things, not to stay till after
  • midnight, and telling her, at the same time, that if she stayed one
  • moment longer, the coach would be a pumpkin again, her horses mice, her
  • coachman a rat, her footmen lizards, and her clothes would become just
  • as they were before.
  • She promised her godmother she would not fail to leave the ball before
  • midnight. She drove away, scarce able to contain herself for joy. The
  • King's son, who was told that a great princess, whom nobody knew, was
  • come, ran out to receive her. He gave her his hand as she alighted from
  • the coach, and led her into the hall where the company were assembled.
  • There was at once a profound silence; every one left off dancing, and
  • the violins ceased to play, so attracted was every one by the singular
  • beauties of the unknown newcomer. Nothing was then heard but a confused
  • sound of voices saying:--
  • "Ha! how beautiful she is! Ha! how beautiful she is!"
  • The King himself, old as he was, could not keep his eyes off her, and he
  • told the Queen under his breath that it was a long time since he had
  • seen so beautiful and lovely a creature.
  • All the ladies were busy studying her clothes and head-dress, so that
  • they might have theirs made next day after the same pattern, provided
  • they could meet with such fine materials and able hands to make them.
  • The King's son conducted her to the seat of honor, and afterwards took
  • her out to dance with him. She danced so very gracefully that they all
  • admired her more and more. A fine collation was served, but the young
  • Prince ate not a morsel, so intently was he occupied with her.
  • She went and sat down beside her sisters, showing them a thousand
  • civilities, and giving them among other things part of the oranges and
  • citrons with which the Prince had regaled her. This very much surprised
  • them, for they had not been presented to her.
  • Cinderella heard the clock strike a quarter to twelve. She at once made
  • her adieus to the company and hastened away as fast as she could.
  • As soon as she got home, she ran to find her godmother, and, after
  • having thanked her, she said she much wished she might go to the ball
  • the next day, because the King's son had asked her to do so. As she was
  • eagerly telling her godmother all that happened at the ball, her two
  • sisters knocked at the door; Cinderella opened it. "How long you have
  • stayed!" said she, yawning, rubbing her eyes, and stretching herself as
  • if she had been just awakened. She had not, however, had any desire to
  • sleep since they went from home.
  • "If you had been at the ball," said one of her sisters, "you would not
  • have been tired with it. There came thither the finest princess, the
  • most beautiful ever was seen with mortal eyes. She showed us a thousand
  • civilities, and gave us oranges and citrons."
  • Cinderella did not show any pleasure at this. Indeed, she asked them the
  • name of the princess; but they told her they did not know it, and that
  • the King's son was very much concerned, and would give all the world to
  • know who she was. At this Cinderella, smiling, replied:--
  • "Was she then so very beautiful? How fortunate you have been! Could I
  • not see her? Ah! dear Miss Charlotte, do lend me your yellow suit of
  • clothes which you wear every day."
  • "Ay, to be sure!" cried Miss Charlotte; "lend my clothes to such a dirty
  • Cinderwench as thou art! I should be out of my mind to do so."
  • Cinderella, indeed, expected such an answer and was very glad of the
  • refusal; for she would have been sadly troubled if her sister had lent
  • her what she jestingly asked for. The next day the two sisters went to
  • the ball, and so did Cinderella, but dressed more magnificently than
  • before. The King's son was always by her side, and his pretty speeches
  • to her never ceased. These by no means annoyed the young lady. Indeed,
  • she quite forgot her godmother's orders to her, so that she heard the
  • clock begin to strike twelve when she thought it could not be more than
  • eleven. She then rose up and fled, as nimble as a deer. The Prince
  • followed, but could not overtake her. She left behind one of her glass
  • slippers, which the Prince took up most carefully. She got home, but
  • quite out of breath, without her carriage, and in her old clothes,
  • having nothing left her of all her finery but one of the little
  • slippers, fellow to the one she had dropped. The guards at the palace
  • gate were asked if they had not seen a princess go out, and they replied
  • they had seen nobody go out but a young girl, very meanly dressed, and
  • who had more the air of a poor country girl than of a young lady.
  • When the two sisters returned from the ball, Cinderella asked them if
  • they had had a pleasant time, and if the fine lady had been there. They
  • told her, yes; but that she hurried away the moment it struck twelve,
  • and with so much haste that she dropped one of her little glass
  • slippers, the prettiest in the world, which the King's son had taken up.
  • They said, further, that he had done nothing but look at her all the
  • time, and that most certainly he was very much in love with the
  • beautiful owner of the glass slipper.
  • What they said was true; for a few days after the King's son caused it
  • to be proclaimed, by sound of trumpet, that he would marry her whose
  • foot this slipper would fit exactly. They began to try it on the
  • princesses, then on the duchesses, and then on all the ladies of the
  • Court; but in vain. It was brought to the two sisters, who did all they
  • possibly could to thrust a foot into the slipper, but they could not
  • succeed. Cinderella, who saw this, and knew her slipper, said to them,
  • laughing:--
  • "Let me see if it will not fit me."
  • Her sisters burst out a-laughing, and began to banter her. The gentleman
  • who was sent to try the slipper looked earnestly at Cinderella, and,
  • finding her very handsome, said it was but just that she should try, and
  • that he had orders to let every lady try it on.
  • He obliged Cinderella to sit down, and, putting the slipper to her
  • little foot, he found it went on very easily, and fitted her as if it
  • had been made of wax. The astonishment of her two sisters was great, but
  • it was still greater when Cinderella pulled out of her pocket the other
  • slipper and put it on her foot. Thereupon, in came her godmother, who,
  • having touched Cinderella's clothes with her wand, made them more
  • magnificent than those she had worn before.
  • [Illustration: "IT WENT ON VERY EASILY." p. 10.]
  • And now her two sisters found her to be that beautiful lady they had
  • seen at the ball. They threw themselves at her feet to beg pardon for
  • all their ill treatment of her. Cinderella took them up, and, as she
  • embraced them, said that she forgave them with all her heart, and begged
  • them to love her always.
  • She was conducted to the young Prince, dressed as she was. He thought
  • her more charming than ever, and, a few days after, married her.
  • Cinderella, who was as good as she was beautiful, gave her two sisters a
  • home in the palace, and that very same day married them to two great
  • lords of the Court.
  • THE SLEEPING BEAUTY IN THE WOODS.
  • Once upon a time there was a king and a queen, who were very sorry that
  • they had no children,--so sorry that it cannot be told.
  • At last, however, the Queen had a daughter. There was a very fine
  • christening; and the Princess had for her godmothers all the fairies
  • they could find in the whole kingdom (there were seven of them), so that
  • every one of them might confer a gift upon her, as was the custom of
  • fairies in those days. By this means the Princess had all the
  • perfections imaginable.
  • After the christening was over, the company returned to the King's
  • palace, where was prepared a great feast for the fairies. There was
  • placed before every one of them a magnificent cover with a case of
  • massive gold, wherein were a spoon, and a knife and fork, all of pure
  • gold set with diamonds and rubies. But as they were all sitting down at
  • table they saw a very old fairy come into the hall. She had not been
  • invited, because for more than fifty years she had not been out of a
  • certain tower, and she was believed to be either dead or enchanted.
  • The King ordered her a cover, but he could not give her a case of gold
  • as the others had, because seven only had been made for the seven
  • fairies. The old fairy fancied she was slighted, and muttered threats
  • between her teeth. One of the young fairies who sat near heard her, and,
  • judging that she might give the little Princess some unlucky gift, hid
  • herself behind the curtains as soon as they left the table. She hoped
  • that she might speak last and undo as much as she could the evil which
  • the old fairy might do.
  • In the meanwhile all the fairies began to give their gifts to the
  • Princess. The youngest gave her for her gift that she should be the most
  • beautiful person in the world; the next, that she should have the wit of
  • an angel; the third, that she should be able to do everything she did
  • gracefully; the fourth, that she should dance perfectly; the fifth, that
  • she should sing like a nightingale; and the sixth, that she should play
  • all kinds of musical instruments to the fullest perfection.
  • The old fairy's turn coming next, her head shaking more with spite than
  • with age, she said that the Princess should pierce her hand with a
  • spindle and die of the wound. This terrible gift made the whole company
  • tremble, and everybody fell a-crying.
  • At this very instant the young fairy came from behind the curtains and
  • said these words in a loud voice:--
  • "Assure yourselves, O King and Queen, that your daughter shall not die
  • of this disaster. It is true, I have no power to undo entirely what my
  • elder has done. The Princess shall indeed pierce her hand with a
  • spindle; but, instead of dying, she shall only fall into a deep sleep,
  • which shall last a hundred years, at the end of which a king's son shall
  • come and awake her."
  • The King, to avoid the misfortune foretold by the old fairy, issued
  • orders forbidding any one, on pain of death, to spin with a distaff and
  • spindle, or to have a spindle in his house. About fifteen or sixteen
  • years after, the King and Queen being absent at one of their country
  • villas, the young Princess was one day running up and down the palace;
  • she went from room to room, and at last she came into a little garret on
  • the top of the tower, where a good old woman, alone, was spinning with
  • her spindle. This good woman had never heard of the King's orders
  • against spindles.
  • "What are you doing there, my good woman?" said the Princess.
  • "I am spinning, my pretty child," said the old woman, who did not know
  • who the Princess was.
  • "Ha!" said the Princess, "this is very pretty; how do you do it? Give it
  • to me. Let me see if I can do it."
  • She had no sooner taken it into her hand than, either because she was
  • too quick and heedless, or because the decree of the fairy had so
  • ordained, it ran into her hand, and she fell down in a swoon.
  • The good old woman, not knowing what to do, cried out for help. People
  • came in from every quarter; they threw water upon the face of the
  • Princess, unlaced her, struck her on the palms of her hands, and rubbed
  • her temples with cologne water; but nothing would bring her to herself.
  • Then the King, who came up at hearing the noise, remembered what the
  • fairies had foretold. He knew very well that this must come to pass,
  • since the fairies had foretold it, and he caused the Princess to be
  • carried into the finest room in his palace, and to be laid upon a bed
  • all embroidered with gold and silver. One would have taken her for a
  • little angel, she was so beautiful; for her swooning had not dimmed the
  • brightness of her complexion: her cheeks were carnation, and her lips
  • coral. It is true her eyes were shut, but she was heard to breathe
  • softly, which satisfied those about her that she was not dead.
  • [Illustration: "LET ME SEE IF I CAN DO IT." p. 15.]
  • The King gave orders that they should let her sleep quietly till the
  • time came for her to awake. The good fairy who had saved her life by
  • condemning her to sleep a hundred years was in the kingdom of Matakin,
  • twelve thousand leagues off, when this accident befell the Princess;
  • but she was instantly informed of it by a little dwarf, who had
  • seven-leagued boots, that is, boots with which he could stride over
  • seven leagues of ground at once. The fairy started off at once, and
  • arrived, about an hour later, in a fiery chariot drawn by dragons.
  • The King handed her out of the chariot, and she approved everything he
  • had done; but as she had very great foresight, she thought that when the
  • Princess should awake she might not know what to do with herself, if she
  • was all alone in this old palace. This was what she did: she touched
  • with her wand everything in the palace (except the King and
  • Queen),--governesses, maids of honor, ladies of the bedchamber,
  • gentlemen, officers, stewards, cooks, undercooks, kitchen maids, guards
  • with their porters, pages, and footmen; she likewise touched all the
  • horses which were in the stables, the cart horses, the hunters and the
  • saddle horses, the grooms, the great dogs in the outward court, and
  • little Mopsey, too, the Princess's spaniel, which was lying on the bed.
  • As soon as she touched them they all fell asleep, not to awake again
  • until their mistress did, that they might be ready to wait upon her when
  • she wanted them. The very spits at the fire, as full as they could hold
  • of partridges and pheasants, fell asleep, and the fire itself as well.
  • All this was done in a moment. Fairies are not long in doing their
  • work.
  • And now the King and Queen, having kissed their dear child without
  • waking her, went out of the palace and sent forth orders that nobody
  • should come near it.
  • These orders were not necessary; for in a quarter of an hour's time
  • there grew up all round about the park such a vast number of trees,
  • great and small, bushes and brambles, twining one within another, that
  • neither man nor beast could pass through; so that nothing could be seen
  • but the very top of the towers of the palace; and that, too, only from
  • afar off. Every one knew that this also was the work of the fairy in
  • order that while the Princess slept she should have nothing to fear from
  • curious people.
  • After a hundred years the son of the King then reigning, who was of
  • another family from that of the sleeping Princess, was a-hunting on that
  • side of the country, and he asked what those towers were which he saw in
  • the middle of a great thick wood. Every one answered according as they
  • had heard. Some said that it was an old haunted castle, others that all
  • the witches of the country held their midnight revels there, but the
  • common opinion was that it was an ogre's dwelling, and that he carried
  • to it all the little children he could catch, so as to eat them up at
  • his leisure, without any one being able to follow him, for he alone had
  • the power to make his way through the wood.
  • The Prince did not know what to believe, and presently a very aged
  • countryman spake to him thus:--
  • "May it please your royal Highness, more than fifty years since I heard
  • from my father that there was then in this castle the most beautiful
  • princess that was ever seen; that she must sleep there a hundred years,
  • and that she should be waked by a king's son, for whom she was
  • reserved."
  • The young Prince on hearing this was all on fire. He thought, without
  • weighing the matter, that he could put an end to this rare adventure;
  • and, pushed on by love and the desire of glory, resolved at once to look
  • into it.
  • As soon as he began to get near to the wood, all the great trees, the
  • bushes, and brambles gave way of themselves to let him pass through. He
  • walked up to the castle which he saw at the end of a large avenue; and
  • you can imagine he was a good deal surprised when he saw none of his
  • people following him, because the trees closed again as soon as he had
  • passed through them. However, he did not cease from continuing his way;
  • a young prince in search of glory is ever valiant.
  • He came into a spacious outer court, and what he saw was enough to
  • freeze him with horror. A frightful silence reigned over all; the image
  • of death was everywhere, and there was nothing to be seen but what
  • seemed to be the outstretched bodies of dead men and animals. He,
  • however, very well knew, by the ruby faces and pimpled noses of the
  • porters, that they were only asleep; and their goblets, wherein still
  • remained some drops of wine, showed plainly that they had fallen asleep
  • while drinking their wine.
  • He then crossed a court paved with marble, went up the stairs, and came
  • into the guard chamber, where guards were standing in their ranks, with
  • their muskets upon their shoulders, and snoring with all their might. He
  • went through several rooms full of gentlemen and ladies, some standing
  • and others sitting, but all were asleep. He came into a gilded chamber,
  • where he saw upon a bed, the curtains of which were all open, the most
  • beautiful sight ever beheld--a princess who appeared to be about fifteen
  • or sixteen years of age, and whose bright and resplendent beauty had
  • something divine in it. He approached with trembling and admiration, and
  • fell down upon his knees before her.
  • Then, as the end of the enchantment was come, the Princess awoke, and
  • looking on him with eyes more tender than could have been expected at
  • first sight, said:--
  • "Is it you, my Prince? You have waited a long while."
  • The Prince, charmed with these words, and much more with the manner in
  • which they were spoken, knew not how to show his joy and gratitude; he
  • assured her that he loved her better than he did himself. Their
  • discourse was not very connected, but they were the better pleased, for
  • where there is much love there is little eloquence. He was more at a
  • loss than she, and we need not wonder at it; she had had time to think
  • of what to say to him; for it is evident (though history says nothing of
  • it) that the good fairy, during so long a sleep, had given her very
  • pleasant dreams. In short, they talked together for four hours, and then
  • they said not half they had to say.
  • In the meanwhile all the palace had woke up with the Princess; every one
  • thought upon his own business, and as they were not in love, they were
  • ready to die of hunger. The lady of honor, being as sharp set as the
  • other folks, grew very impatient, and told the Princess aloud that the
  • meal was served. The Prince helped the Princess to rise. She was
  • entirely and very magnificently dressed; but his royal Highness took
  • care not to tell her that she was dressed like his great-grandmother,
  • and had a high collar. She looked not a bit the less charming and
  • beautiful for all that.
  • They went into the great mirrored hall, where they supped, and were
  • served by the officers of the Princess's household. The violins and
  • hautboys played old tunes, but they were excellent, though they had not
  • been played for a hundred years; and after supper, without losing any
  • time, the lord almoner married them in the chapel of the castle. They
  • had but very little sleep--the Princess scarcely needed any; and the
  • Prince left her next morning to return into the city, where his father
  • was greatly troubled about him.
  • The Prince told him that he lost his way in the forest as he was
  • hunting, and that he had slept in the cottage of a charcoal-burner, who
  • gave him cheese and brown bread.
  • The King, his father, who was a good man, believed him; but his mother
  • could not be persuaded that it was true; and seeing that he went almost
  • every day a-hunting, and that he always had some excuse ready for so
  • doing, though he had been out three or four nights together, she began
  • to suspect that he was married; for he lived thus with the Princess
  • above two whole years, during which they had two children, the elder, a
  • daughter, was named Dawn, and the younger, a son, they called Day,
  • because he was a great deal handsomer than his sister.
  • The Queen spoke several times to her son, to learn after what manner he
  • was passing his time, and told him that in this he ought in duty to
  • satisfy her. But he never dared to trust her with his secret; he feared
  • her, though he loved her, for she was of the race of the Ogres, and the
  • King married her for her vast riches alone. It was even whispered about
  • the Court that she had Ogreish inclinations, and that, whenever she saw
  • little children passing by, she had all the difficulty in the world to
  • prevent herself from falling upon them. And so the Prince would never
  • tell her one word.
  • But when the King was dead, which happened about two years afterward,
  • and he saw himself lord and master, he openly declared his marriage: and
  • he went in great state to conduct his Queen to the palace. They made a
  • magnificent entry into the capital city, she riding between her two
  • children.
  • Soon after, the King made war on Emperor Cantalabutte, his neighbor. He
  • left the government of the kingdom to the Queen, his mother, and
  • earnestly commended his wife and children to her care. He was obliged to
  • carry on the war all the summer, and as soon as he left, the
  • Queen-mother sent her daughter-in-law and her children to a country
  • house among the woods, that she might with the more ease gratify her
  • horrible longing. Some few days afterward she went thither herself, and
  • said to her head cook:--
  • "I intend to eat little Dawn for my dinner to-morrow."
  • "O! madam!" cried the head cook.
  • "I will have it so," replied the Queen (and this she spoke in the tone
  • of an Ogress who had a strong desire to eat fresh meat), "and will eat
  • her with a sharp sauce."
  • The poor man, knowing very well that he must not play tricks with
  • Ogresses, took his great knife and went up into little Dawn's chamber.
  • She was then nearly four years old, and came up to him, jumping and
  • laughing, to put her arms round his neck, and ask him for some
  • sugar-candy. Upon which he began to weep, the great knife fell out of
  • his hand, and he went into the back yard and killed a little lamb, and
  • dressed it with such good sauce that his mistress assured him she had
  • never eaten anything so good in her life. He had at the same time taken
  • up little Dawn and carried her to his wife, to conceal her in his
  • lodging at the end of the courtyard.
  • Eight days afterwards the wicked Queen said to the chief cook, "I will
  • sup upon little Day."
  • He answered not a word, being resolved to cheat her again as he had done
  • before. He went to find little Day, and saw him with a foil in his hand,
  • with which he was fencing with a great monkey: the child was then only
  • three years of age. He took him up in his arms and carried him to his
  • wife, that she might conceal him in her chamber along with his sister,
  • and instead of little Day he served up a young and very tender kid,
  • which the Ogress found to be wonderfully good.
  • All had gone well up to now; but one evening this wicked Queen said to
  • her chief cook:--
  • "I will eat the Queen with the same sauce I had with her children."
  • Now the poor chief cook was in despair and could not imagine how to
  • deceive her again. The young Queen was over twenty years old, not
  • reckoning the hundred years she had been asleep: and how to find
  • something to take her place greatly puzzled him. He then decided, to
  • save his own life, to cut the Queen's throat; and going up into her
  • chamber, with intent to do it at once, he put himself into as great fury
  • as he possibly could, and came into the young Queen's room with his
  • dagger in his hand. He would not, however, deceive her, but told her,
  • with a great deal of respect, the orders he had received from the
  • Queen-mother.
  • "Do it; do it," she said, stretching out her neck. "Carry out your
  • orders, and then I shall go and see my children, my poor children, whom
  • I loved so much and so tenderly."
  • For she thought them dead, since they had been taken away without her
  • knowledge.
  • "No, no, madam," cried the poor chief cook, all in tears; "you shall not
  • die, and you shall see your children again at once. But then you must
  • go home with me to my lodgings, where I have concealed them, and I will
  • deceive the Queen once more, by giving her a young hind in your stead."
  • Upon this he forthwith conducted her to his room, where, leaving her to
  • embrace her children, and cry along with them, he went and dressed a
  • young hind, which the Queen had for her supper, and devoured with as
  • much appetite as if it had been the young Queen. She was now well
  • satisfied with her cruel deeds, and she invented a story to tell the
  • King on his return, of how the Queen his wife and her two children had
  • been devoured by mad wolves.
  • One evening, as she was, according to her custom, rambling round about
  • the courts and yards of the palace to see if she could smell any fresh
  • meat, she heard, in a room on the ground floor, little Day crying, for
  • his mamma was going to whip him, because he had been naughty; and she
  • heard, at the same time, little Dawn begging mercy for her brother.
  • The Ogress knew the voice of the Queen and her children at once, and
  • being furious at having been thus deceived, she gave orders (in a most
  • horrible voice which made everybody tremble) that, next morning by break
  • of day, they should bring into the middle of the great court a large tub
  • filled with toads, vipers, snakes, and all sorts of serpents, in order
  • to have the Queen and her children, the chief cook, his wife and maid,
  • thrown into it, all of whom were to be brought thither with their hands
  • tied behind them.
  • They were brought out accordingly, and the executioners were just going
  • to throw them into the tub, when the King, who was not so soon expected,
  • entered the court on horseback and asked, with the utmost astonishment,
  • what was the meaning of that horrible spectacle.
  • No one dared to tell him, when the Ogress, all enraged to see what had
  • happened, threw herself head foremost into the tub, and was instantly
  • devoured by the ugly creatures she had ordered to be thrown into it to
  • kill the others. The King was of course very sorry, for she was his
  • mother; but he soon comforted himself with his beautiful wife and his
  • pretty children.
  • LITTLE THUMB.
  • Once upon a time there was a fagot-maker and his wife, who had seven
  • children, all boys. The eldest was but ten years old, and the youngest
  • only seven.
  • They were very poor, and their seven children were a great source of
  • trouble to them because not one of them was able to earn his bread. What
  • gave them yet more uneasiness was that the youngest was very delicate,
  • and scarce ever spoke a word, which made people take for stupidity that
  • which was a sign of good sense. He was very little, and when born he was
  • no bigger than one's thumb; hence he was called Little Thumb.
  • The poor child was the drudge of the household, and was always in the
  • wrong. He was, however, the most bright and discreet of all the
  • brothers; and if he spoke little, he heard and thought the more.
  • There came a very bad year, and the famine was so great that these poor
  • people resolved to rid themselves of their children. One evening, when
  • they were in bed, and the fagot-maker was sitting with his wife at the
  • fire, he said to her, with his heart ready to burst with grief:--
  • "You see plainly that we no longer can give our children food, and I
  • cannot bear to see them die of hunger before my eyes; I am resolved to
  • lose them in the wood to-morrow, which may very easily be done, for,
  • while they amuse themselves in tying up fagots, we have only to run away
  • and leave them without their seeing us."
  • "Ah!" cried out his wife, "could you really take the children and lose
  • them?"
  • In vain did her husband represent to her their great poverty; she would
  • not consent to it. She was poor, but she was their mother.
  • However, having considered what a grief it would be to her to see them
  • die of hunger, she consented, and went weeping to bed.
  • Little Thumb heard all they had said; for, hearing that they were
  • talking business, he got up softly and slipped under his father's seat,
  • so as to hear without being seen. He went to bed again, but did not
  • sleep a wink all the rest of the night, thinking of what he had to do.
  • He got up early in the morning, and went to the brookside, where he
  • filled his pockets full of small white pebbles, and then returned home.
  • They all went out, but Little Thumb never told his brothers a word of
  • what he knew.
  • [Illustration: "SLIPPED UNDER HIS FATHER'S SEAT." p. 30.]
  • They went into a very thick forest, where they could not see one
  • another at ten paces apart. The fagot-maker began to cut wood, and the
  • children to gather up sticks to make fagots. Their father and mother,
  • seeing them busy at their work, got away from them unbeknown and then
  • all at once ran as fast as they could through a winding by-path.
  • When the children found they were alone, they began to cry with all
  • their might. Little Thumb let them cry on, knowing very well how to get
  • home again; for, as he came, he had dropped the little white pebbles he
  • had in his pockets all along the way. Then he said to them, "Do not be
  • afraid, my brothers,--father and mother have left us here, but I will
  • lead you home again; only follow me."
  • They followed, and he brought them home by the very same way they had
  • come into the forest. They dared not go in at first, but stood outside
  • the door to listen to what their father and mother were saying.
  • The very moment the fagot-maker and his wife reached home the lord of
  • the manor sent them ten crowns, which he had long owed them, and which
  • they never hoped to see. This gave them new life, for the poor people
  • were dying of hunger. The fagot-maker sent his wife to the butcher's at
  • once. As it was a long while since they had eaten, she bought thrice as
  • much meat as was needed for supper for two people. When they had eaten,
  • the woman said:--
  • "Alas! where are our poor children now? They would make a good feast of
  • what we have left here; it was you, William, who wished to lose them. I
  • told you we should repent of it. What are they now doing in the forest?
  • Alas! perhaps the wolves have already eaten them up; you are very
  • inhuman thus to have lost your children."
  • The fagot-maker grew at last quite out of patience, for she repeated
  • twenty times that he would repent of it, and that she was in the right.
  • He threatened to beat her if she did not hold her tongue. The
  • fagot-maker was, perhaps, more sorry than his wife, but she teased him
  • so he could not endure it. She wept bitterly, saying:--
  • "Alas! where are my children now, my poor children?"
  • She said this once so very loud that the children, who were at the door,
  • heard her and cried out all together:--
  • "Here we are! Here we are!"
  • She ran immediately to let them in, and said as she embraced them:--
  • "How happy I am to see you again, my dear children; you are very tired
  • and very hungry, and, my poor Peter, you are covered with mud. Come in
  • and let me clean you."
  • Peter was her eldest son, whom she loved more than all the rest, because
  • he was red haired, as she was herself.
  • They sat down to table, and ate with an appetite which pleased both
  • father and mother, to whom they told how frightened they were in the
  • forest, nearly all speaking at once. The good folk were delighted to see
  • their children once more, and this joy continued while the ten crowns
  • lasted. But when the money was all spent, they fell again into their
  • former uneasiness, and resolved to lose their children again. And, that
  • they might be the surer of doing it, they determined to take them much
  • farther than before.
  • They could not talk of this so secretly but they were overheard by
  • Little Thumb, who laid his plans to get out of the difficulty as he had
  • done before; but, though he got up very early to go and pick up some
  • little pebbles, he could not, for he found the house-door double-locked.
  • He did not know what to do. Their father had given each of them a piece
  • of bread for their breakfast. He reflected that he might make use of the
  • bread instead of the pebbles, by throwing crumbs all along the way they
  • should pass, and so he stuffed it in his pocket. Their father and mother
  • led them into the thickest and most obscure part of the forest, and
  • then, stealing away into a by-path, left them there. Little Thumb was
  • not very much worried about it, for he thought he could easily find the
  • way again by means of his bread, which he had scattered all along as he
  • came; but he was very much surprised when he could not find a single
  • crumb: the birds had come and eaten them all.
  • They were now in great trouble; for the more they wandered, the deeper
  • they went into the forest. Night now fell, and there arose a high wind,
  • which filled them with fear. They fancied they heard on every side the
  • howling of wolves coming to devour them. They scarce dared to speak or
  • turn their heads. Then it rained very hard, which wetted them to the
  • skin. Their feet slipped at every step, and they fell into the mud,
  • covering their hands with it so that they knew not what to do with them.
  • Little Thumb climbed up to the top of a tree, to see if he could
  • discover anything. Looking on every side, he saw at last a glimmering
  • light, like that of a candle, but a long way beyond the forest. He came
  • down, and, when upon the ground, he could see it no more, which
  • grieved him sadly. However, having walked for some time with his
  • brothers toward that side on which he had seen the light, he discovered
  • it again as he came out of the wood.
  • They arrived at last at the house where this candle was, not without
  • many frights; for very often they lost sight of it, which happened
  • every time they came into a hollow. They knocked at the door, and a good
  • woman came and opened it.
  • She asked them what they wanted. Little Thumb told her they were poor
  • children who were lost in the forest, and desired to lodge there for
  • charity's sake. The woman, seeing them all so very pretty, began to weep
  • and said to them: "Alas! poor babies, where do you come from? Do you
  • know that this house belongs to a cruel Ogre who eats little children?"
  • "Alas! dear madam," answered Little Thumb (who, with his brothers, was
  • trembling in every limb), "what shall we do? The wolves of the forest
  • surely will devour us to-night if you refuse us shelter in your house;
  • and so we would rather the gentleman should eat us. Perhaps he may take
  • pity upon us if you will be pleased to ask him to do so."
  • The Ogre's wife, who believed she could hide them from her husband till
  • morning, let them come in, and took them to warm themselves at a very
  • good fire; for there was a whole sheep roasting for the Ogre's supper.
  • As they began to warm themselves they heard three or four great raps at
  • the door; this was the Ogre, who was come home. His wife quickly hid
  • them under the bed and went to open the door. The Ogre at once asked if
  • supper was ready and the wine drawn, and then sat himself down to
  • table. The sheep was as yet all raw, but he liked it the better for
  • that. He sniffed about to the right and left, saying:--
  • "I smell fresh meat."
  • "What you smell," said his wife, "must be the calf which I have just now
  • killed and flayed."
  • "I smell fresh meat, I tell you once more," replied the Ogre, looking
  • crossly at his wife, "and there is something here which I do not
  • understand."
  • As he spoke these words he got up from the table and went straight to
  • the bed.
  • "Ah!" said he, "that is how you would cheat me; I know not why I do not
  • eat you, too; it is well for you that you are tough. Here is game, which
  • comes very luckily to entertain three Ogres of my acquaintance who are
  • to pay me a visit in a day or two."
  • He dragged them out from under the bed, one by one. The poor children
  • fell upon their knees and begged his pardon, but they had to do with one
  • of the most cruel of Ogres, who, far from having any pity on them, was
  • already devouring them in his mind, and told his wife they would be
  • delicate eating when she had made a good sauce.
  • He then took a great knife, and, coming up to these poor children,
  • sharpened it upon a great whetstone which he held in his left hand. He
  • had already taken hold of one of them when his wife said to him:--
  • "What need you do it now? Will you not have time enough to-morrow?"
  • "Hold your prating," said the Ogre; "they will eat the tenderer."
  • "But you have so much meat already," replied his wife; "here are a calf,
  • two sheep, and half a pig."
  • "That is true," said the Ogre; "give them a good supper that they may
  • not grow thin, and put them to bed."
  • The good woman was overjoyed at this, and gave them a good supper; but
  • they were so much afraid that they could not eat. As for the Ogre, he
  • sat down again to drink, being highly pleased that he had the
  • wherewithal to treat his friends. He drank a dozen glasses more than
  • ordinary, which got up into his head and obliged him to go to bed.
  • The Ogre had seven daughters, who were still little children. These
  • young Ogresses had all of them very fine complexions; but they all had
  • little gray eyes, quite round, hooked noses, a very large mouth, and
  • very long, sharp teeth, set far apart. They were not as yet wicked, but
  • they promised well to be, for they had already bitten little children.
  • They had been put to bed early, all seven in one bed, with every one a
  • crown of gold upon her head. There was in the same chamber a bed of the
  • like size, and the Ogre's wife put the seven little boys into this bed,
  • after which she went to bed herself.
  • Little Thumb, who had observed that the Ogre's daughters had crowns of
  • gold upon their heads, and was afraid lest the Ogre should repent his
  • not killing them that evening, got up about midnight, and, taking his
  • brothers' bonnets and his own, went very softly and put them upon the
  • heads of the seven little Ogresses, after having taken off their crowns
  • of gold, which he put upon his own head and his brothers', so that the
  • Ogre might take them for his daughters, and his daughters for the little
  • boys whom he wanted to kill.
  • Things turned out just as he had thought; for the Ogre, waking about
  • midnight, regretted that he had deferred till morning to do that which
  • he might have done overnight, and jumped quickly out of bed, taking his
  • great knife.
  • "Let us see," said he, "how our little rogues do, and not make two jobs
  • of the matter."
  • He then went up, groping all the way, into his daughters' chamber; and,
  • coming to the bed where the little boys lay, and who were all fast
  • asleep, except Little Thumb, who was terribly afraid when he found the
  • Ogre fumbling about his head, as he had done about his brothers', he
  • felt the golden crowns, and said:--
  • "I should have made a fine piece of work of it, truly; it is clear I
  • drank too much last night."
  • Then he went to the bed where the girls lay, and, having found the boys'
  • little bonnets:--
  • "Ah!" said he, "my merry lads, are you there? Let us work boldly."
  • And saying these words, without more ado, he cruelly murdered all his
  • seven daughters. Well pleased with what he had done, he went to bed
  • again.
  • So soon as Little Thumb heard the Ogre snore, he waked his brothers, and
  • bade them put on their clothes quickly and follow him. They stole softly
  • into the garden and got over the wall. They ran about, all night,
  • trembling all the while, without knowing which way they went.
  • The Ogre, when he woke, said to his wife: "Go upstairs and dress those
  • young rascals who came here last night." The Ogress was very much
  • surprised at this goodness of her husband, not dreaming after what
  • manner she should dress them; but, thinking that he had ordered her to
  • go up and put on their clothes, she went, and was horrified when she
  • perceived her seven daughters all dead.
  • She began by fainting away, as was only natural in such a case. The
  • Ogre, fearing his wife was too long in doing what he had ordered, went
  • up himself to help her. He was no less amazed than his wife at this
  • frightful spectacle.
  • "Ah! what have I done?" cried he. "The wretches shall pay for it, and
  • that instantly."
  • He threw a pitcher of water upon his wife's face, and having brought her
  • to herself, "Give me quickly," cried he, "my seven-leagued boots, that I
  • may go and catch them."
  • He went out into the country, and, after running in all directions, he
  • came at last into the very road where the poor children were, and not
  • above a hundred paces from their father's house. They espied the Ogre,
  • who went at one step from mountain to mountain, and over rivers as
  • easily as the narrowest brooks. Little Thumb, seeing a hollow rock near
  • the place where they were, hid his brothers in it, and crowded into it
  • himself, watching always what would become of the Ogre.
  • The Ogre, who found himself tired with his long and fruitless journey
  • (for these boots of seven leagues greatly taxed the wearer), had a great
  • mind to rest himself, and, by chance, went to sit down upon the rock in
  • which the little boys had hidden themselves. As he was worn out with
  • fatigue, he fell asleep, and, after reposing himself some time, began to
  • snore so frightfully that the poor children were no less afraid of him
  • than when he held up his great knife and was going to take their lives.
  • Little Thumb was not so much frightened as his brothers, and told them
  • that they should run away at once toward home while the Ogre was asleep
  • so soundly, and that they need not be in any trouble about him. They
  • took his advice, and got home quickly.
  • Little Thumb then went close to the Ogre, pulled off his boots gently,
  • and put them on his own legs. The boots were very long and large, but as
  • they were fairy boots, they had the gift of becoming big or little,
  • according to the legs of those who wore them; so that they fitted his
  • feet and legs as well as if they had been made for him. He went straight
  • to the Ogre's house, where he saw his wife crying bitterly for the loss
  • of her murdered daughters.
  • "Your husband," said Little Thumb, "is in very great danger, for he has
  • been taken by a gang of thieves, who have sworn to kill him if he does
  • not give them all his gold and silver. At the very moment they held
  • their daggers at his throat he perceived me and begged me to come and
  • tell you the condition he was in, and to say that you should give me all
  • he has of value, without retaining any one thing; for otherwise they
  • will kill him without mercy. As his case is very pressing, he desired me
  • to make use of his seven-leagued boots, which you see I have on, so that
  • I might make the more haste and that I might show you that I do not
  • impose upon you."
  • The good woman, being greatly frightened, gave him all she had; for this
  • Ogre was a very good husband, though he ate up little children. Little
  • Thumb, having thus got all the Ogre's money, came home to his father's
  • house, where he was received with abundance of joy.
  • There are many people who do not agree in regard to this act of Little
  • Thumb's, and pretend that he never robbed the Ogre at all, and that he
  • only thought he might very justly take off his seven-leagued boots
  • because he made no other use of them but to run after little children.
  • These folks affirm that they are very well assured of this, because they
  • have drunk and eaten often at the fagot-maker's house. They declare that
  • when Little Thumb had taken off the Ogre's boots he went to Court, where
  • he was informed that they were very much in trouble about a certain
  • army, which was two hundred leagues off, and anxious as to the success
  • of a battle. He went, they say, to the King and told him that if he
  • desired it, he would bring him news from the army before night.
  • The King promised him a great sum of money if he succeeded. Little Thumb
  • returned that very same night with the news; and, this first expedition
  • causing him to be known, he earned as much as he wished, for the King
  • paid him very well for carrying his orders to the army. Many ladies
  • employed him also to carry messages, from which he made much money.
  • After having for some time carried on the business of a messenger and
  • gained thereby great wealth, he went home to his father, and it is
  • impossible to express the joy of his family. He placed them all in
  • comfortable circumstances, bought places for his father and brothers,
  • and by that means settled them very handsomely in the world, while he
  • successfully continued to make his own way.
  • THE MASTER CAT, OR PUSS IN BOOTS.
  • Once upon a time there was a miller who left no more riches to the three
  • sons he had than his mill, his ass, and his cat. The division was soon
  • made. Neither the lawyer nor the attorney was sent for. They would soon
  • have eaten up all the poor property. The eldest had the mill, the second
  • the ass, and the youngest nothing but the cat.
  • The youngest, as we can understand, was quite unhappy at having so poor
  • a share.
  • "My brothers," said he, "may get their living handsomely enough by
  • joining their stocks together; but, for my part, when I have eaten up my
  • cat, and made me a muff of his skin, I must die of hunger."
  • The Cat, who heard all this, without appearing to take any notice, said
  • to him with a grave and serious air:--
  • "Do not thus afflict yourself, my master; you have nothing else to do
  • but to give me a bag, and get a pair of boots made for me, that I may
  • scamper through the brambles, and you shall see that you have not so
  • poor a portion in me as you think."
  • Though the Cat's master did not think much of what he said, he had seen
  • him play such cunning tricks to catch rats and mice--hanging himself by
  • the heels, or hiding himself in the meal, to make believe he was
  • dead--that he did not altogether despair of his helping him in his
  • misery. When the Cat had what he asked for, he booted himself very
  • gallantly, and putting his bag about his neck, he held the strings of it
  • in his two forepaws, and went into a warren where was a great number of
  • rabbits. He put bran and sow-thistle into his bag, and, stretching out
  • at length, as if he were dead, he waited for some young rabbits, not yet
  • acquainted with the deceits of the world, to come and rummage his bag
  • for what he had put into it.
  • Scarcely was he settled but he had what he wanted. A rash and foolish
  • young rabbit jumped into his bag, and Monsieur Puss, immediately drawing
  • close the strings, took him and killed him at once. Proud of his prey,
  • he went with it to the palace, and asked to speak with the King. He was
  • shown upstairs into his Majesty's apartment, and, making a low bow to
  • the King, he said:--
  • "I have brought you, sire, a rabbit which my noble Lord, the Master of
  • Carabas" (for that was the title which Puss was pleased to give his
  • master) "has commanded me to present to your Majesty from him."
  • "Tell thy master," said the King, "that I thank him, and that I am
  • pleased with his gift."
  • Another time he went and hid himself among some standing corn, still
  • holding his bag open; and when a brace of partridges ran into it, he
  • drew the strings, and so caught them both. He then went and made a
  • present of these to the King, as he had done before of the rabbit which
  • he took in the warren. The King, in like manner, received the partridges
  • with great pleasure, and ordered his servants to reward him.
  • The Cat continued for two or three months thus to carry his Majesty,
  • from time to time, some of his master's game. One day when he knew that
  • the King was to take the air along the riverside, with his daughter, the
  • most beautiful princess in the world, he said to his master:--
  • "If you will follow my advice, your fortune is made. You have nothing
  • else to do but go and bathe in the river, just at the spot I shall show
  • you, and leave the rest to me."
  • The Marquis of Carabas did what the Cat advised him to, without knowing
  • what could be the use of doing it. While he was bathing, the King passed
  • by, and the Cat cried out with all his might:--
  • "Help! help! My Lord the Marquis of Carabas is drowning!"
  • At this noise the King put his head out of the coach window, and seeing
  • the Cat who had so often brought him game, he commanded his guards to
  • run immediately to the assistance of his Lordship the Marquis of
  • Carabas.
  • While they were drawing the poor Marquis out of the river, the Cat came
  • up to the coach and told the King that, while his master was bathing,
  • there came by some rogues, who ran off with his clothes, though he had
  • cried out, "Thieves! thieves!" several times, as loud as he could. The
  • cunning Cat had hidden the clothes under a great stone. The King
  • immediately commanded the officers of his wardrobe to run and fetch one
  • of his best suits for the Lord Marquis of Carabas.
  • [Illustration: "THE MARQUIS OF CARABAS IS DROWNING!" p. 48.]
  • The King was extremely polite to him, and as the fine clothes he had
  • given him set off his good looks (for he was well made and handsome),
  • the King's daughter found him very much to her liking, and the Marquis
  • of Carabas had no sooner cast two or three respectful and somewhat
  • tender glances than she fell in love with him to distraction. The King
  • would have him come into the coach and take part in the airing. The Cat,
  • overjoyed to see his plan begin to succeed, marched on before, and,
  • meeting with some countrymen, who were mowing a meadow, he said to
  • them:--
  • "Good people, you who are mowing, if you do not tell the King that the
  • meadow you mow belongs to my Lord Marquis of Carabas, you shall be
  • chopped as small as herbs for the pot."
  • The King did not fail to ask the mowers to whom the meadow they were
  • mowing belonged.
  • "To my Lord Marquis of Carabas," answered they all together, for the
  • Cat's threat had made them afraid.
  • "You have a good property there," said the King to the Marquis of
  • Carabas.
  • "You see, sire," said the Marquis, "this is a meadow which never fails
  • to yield a plentiful harvest every year."
  • The Master Cat, who went still on before, met with some reapers, and
  • said to them:--
  • "Good people, you who are reaping, if you do not say that all this corn
  • belongs to the Marquis of Carabas, you shall be chopped as small as
  • herbs for the pot."
  • The King, who passed by a moment after, wished to know to whom belonged
  • all that corn, which he then saw.
  • "To my Lord Marquis of Carabas," replied the reapers, and the King was
  • very well pleased with it, as well as the Marquis, whom he congratulated
  • thereupon. The Master Cat, who went always before, said the same thing
  • to all he met, and the King was astonished at the vast estates of my
  • Lord Marquis of Carabas.
  • Monsieur Puss came at last to a stately castle, the master of which was
  • an Ogre, the richest ever known; for all the lands which the King had
  • then passed through belonged to this castle. The Cat, who had taken care
  • to inform himself who this Ogre was and what he could do, asked to speak
  • with him, saying he could not pass so near his castle without having the
  • honor of paying his respects to him.
  • The Ogre received him as civilly as an Ogre could do, and made him sit
  • down.
  • "I have been assured," said the Cat, "that you have the gift of being
  • able to change yourself into all sorts of creatures you have a mind to;
  • that you can, for example, transform yourself into a lion, or elephant,
  • and the like."
  • "That is true," answered the Ogre, roughly; "and to convince you, you
  • shall see me now become a lion."
  • Puss was so terrified at the sight of a lion so near him that he
  • immediately climbed into the gutter, not without much trouble and
  • danger, because of his boots, which were of no use at all to him for
  • walking upon the tiles. A little while after, when Puss saw that the
  • Ogre had resumed his natural form, he came down, and owned he had been
  • very much frightened.
  • "I have, moreover, been informed," said the Cat, "but I know not how to
  • believe it, that; you have also the power to take on you the shape of
  • the smallest animals; for example, to change yourself into a rat or a
  • mouse, but I must own to you I take this to be impossible."
  • "Impossible!" cried the Ogre; "you shall see." And at the same time he
  • changed himself into a mouse, and began to run about the floor. Puss no
  • sooner perceived this than he fell upon him and ate him up.
  • Meanwhile, the King, who saw, as he passed, this fine castle of the
  • Ogre's, had a mind to go into it. Puss, who heard the noise of his
  • Majesty's coach coming over the drawbridge, ran out, and said to the
  • King, "Your Majesty is welcome to this castle of my Lord Marquis of
  • Carabas."
  • "What! my Lord Marquis," cried the King, "and does this castle also
  • belong to you? There can be nothing finer than this courtyard and all
  • the stately buildings which surround it; let us see the interior, if you
  • please."
  • The Marquis gave his hand to the young Princess, and followed the King,
  • who went first. They passed into the great hall, where they found a
  • magnificent collation, which the Ogre had prepared for his friends, who
  • were that very day to visit him, but dared not to enter, knowing the
  • King was there. His Majesty, charmed with the good qualities of my Lord
  • of Carabas, as was also his daughter, who had fallen violently in love
  • with him, and seeing the vast estate he possessed, said to him:--
  • "It will be owing to yourself only, my Lord Marquis, if you are not my
  • son-in-law."
  • The Marquis, with low bows, accepted the honor which his Majesty
  • conferred upon him, and forthwith that very same day married the
  • Princess.
  • Puss became a great lord, and never ran after mice any more except for
  • his diversion.
  • RIQUET WITH THE TUFT.
  • Once upon a time there was a Queen who had a son so ugly and so
  • misshapen that it was long disputed whether he had human form. A fairy
  • who was at his birth said, however, that he would be very amiable for
  • all that, since he would have uncommon good sense. She even added that
  • it would be in his power, by virtue of a gift she had just then given
  • him, to bestow as much sense as he pleased on the person he loved the
  • best. All this somewhat comforted the poor Queen. It is true that this
  • child no sooner began to talk than he said a thousand pretty things, and
  • in all his actions there was an intelligence that was quite charming. I
  • forgot to tell you that he was born with a little tuft of hair upon his
  • head, which made them call him Riquet[1] with the Tuft, for Riquet was
  • the family name.
  • [Footnote 1: R[=e]k[=a].]
  • Seven or eight years later the Queen of a neighboring kingdom had two
  • daughters who were twins. The first born of these was more beautiful
  • than the day; whereat the Queen was so very glad that those present were
  • afraid that her excess of joy would do her harm. The same fairy who was
  • present at the birth of little Riquet with the Tuft was here also, and,
  • to moderate the Queen's gladness, she declared that this little Princess
  • should have no sense at all, but should be as stupid as she was pretty.
  • This mortified the Queen extremely; but afterward she had a far greater
  • sorrow, for the second daughter proved to be very ugly.
  • "Do not afflict yourself so much, madam," said the fairy. "Your daughter
  • shall have her recompense; she shall have so great a portion of sense
  • that the want of beauty will hardly be perceived."
  • "God grant it," replied the Queen; "but is there no way to make the
  • eldest, who is so pretty, have any sense?"
  • "I can do nothing for her, madam, as to sense," answered the fairy, "but
  • everything as to beauty; and as there is nothing I would not do for your
  • satisfaction, I give her for gift that she shall have power to make
  • handsome the person who shall best please her."
  • As these princesses grew up, their perfections grew with them. All the
  • public talk was of the beauty of the elder and the rare good sense of
  • the younger. It is true also that their defects increased considerably
  • with their age. The younger visibly grew uglier and uglier, and the
  • elder became every day more and more stupid: she either made no answer
  • at all to what was asked her, or said something very silly. She was with
  • all this so unhandy that she could not place four pieces of china upon
  • the mantelpiece without breaking one of them, nor drink a glass of water
  • without spilling half of it upon her clothes.
  • Although beauty is a very great advantage in young people, the younger
  • sister was always the more preferred in society. People would indeed go
  • first to the Beauty to look upon and admire her, but turn aside soon
  • after to the Wit to hear a thousand most entertaining and agreeable
  • things; and it was amazing to see, in less than a quarter of an hour's
  • time, the elder with not a soul near her, and the whole company crowding
  • about the younger. The elder, dull as she was, could not fail to notice
  • this; and without the slightest regret would have given all her beauty
  • to have half her sister's wit. The Queen, prudent as she was, could not
  • help reproaching her several times for her stupidity, which almost made
  • the poor Princess die of grief.
  • One day, as she had hidden herself in a wood to bewail her misfortune,
  • she saw coming to her a very disagreeable little man, but most
  • magnificently dressed. This was the young Prince Riquet with the Tuft,
  • who having fallen in love with her upon seeing her picture,--many of
  • which were distributed all the world over,--had left his father's
  • kingdom to have the pleasure of seeing and talking with her. Overjoyed
  • to find her thus alone, he addressed himself to her with all imaginable
  • politeness and respect. Having observed, after he had paid her the
  • ordinary compliments, that she was extremely melancholy, he said to
  • her:--
  • "I cannot comprehend, madam, how a person so beautiful as you are can be
  • so sorrowful as you seem to be; for though I can boast of having seen a
  • great number of exquisitely charming ladies, I can say that I never
  • beheld any one whose beauty approaches yours."
  • "You are pleased to say so," answered the Princess, and here she
  • stopped.
  • "Beauty," replied Riquet with the Tuft, "is such a great advantage, that
  • it ought to take place of all things besides; and since you possess this
  • treasure, I can see nothing that can possibly very much afflict you."
  • "I had far rather," cried the Princess, "be as ugly as you are, and have
  • sense, than have the beauty I possess, and be as stupid as I am."
  • "There is nothing, madam," returned he, "shows more that we have good
  • sense than to believe we have none; and it is the nature of that
  • excellent quality that the more people have of it, the more they believe
  • they want it."
  • "I do not know that," said the Princess; "but I know very well that I
  • am very senseless, and that vexes me mightily."
  • "If that be all which troubles you, madam, I can very easily put an end
  • to your affliction."
  • "And how will you do that?" cried the Princess.
  • "I have the power, madam," replied Riquet with the Tuft, "to give to
  • that person whom I love best as much good sense as can be had; and as
  • you, madam, are that very person, it will be your fault only if you have
  • not as great a share of it as any one living, provided you will be
  • pleased to marry me."
  • The Princess was quite confused, and answered not a word.
  • "I see," replied Riquet with the Tuft, "that this proposal does not
  • please you, and I do not wonder at it; but I will give you a whole year
  • to consider it."
  • The Princess had so little sense and, at the same time, so great a
  • longing to have some, that she imagined the end of that year would never
  • come, so she accepted the proposal which was made her.
  • She had no sooner promised Riquet with the Tuft that she would marry him
  • on that day twelvemonth than she found herself quite otherwise than she
  • was before: she had an incredible faculty of speaking whatever she had
  • in her mind in a polite, easy, and natural manner.
  • She began that moment a very gallant conversation with Riquet with the
  • Tuft, which she kept up at such a rate that Riquet with the Tuft
  • believed he had given her more sense than he had reserved for himself.
  • When she returned to the palace, the whole court knew not what to think
  • of such a sudden and extraordinary change; for they heard from her now
  • as much sensible discourse and as many infinitely witty phrases as they
  • had heard stupid and silly impertinences before. The whole court was
  • overjoyed beyond imagination at it. It pleased all but her younger
  • sister, because, having no longer the advantage of her in respect of
  • wit, she appeared in comparison with her a very disagreeable, homely
  • girl.
  • The King governed himself by her advice, and would even sometimes hold a
  • council in her apartment. The news of this change in the Princess spread
  • everywhere; the young princes of the neighboring kingdoms strove all
  • they could to gain her favor, and almost all of them asked her in
  • marriage; but she found not one of them had sense enough for her. She
  • gave them all a hearing, but would not engage herself to any.
  • However, there came one so powerful, so rich, so witty, and so handsome
  • that she could not help feeling a strong inclination toward him. Her
  • father perceived it, and told her that she was her own mistress as to
  • the choice of a husband, and that she might declare her intentions. She
  • thanked her father, and desired him to give her time to consider it.
  • She went by chance to walk in the same wood where she met Riquet with
  • the Tuft, the more conveniently to think what she ought to do. While she
  • was walking in a profound meditation, she heard a confused noise under
  • her feet, as it were of a great many people busily running backward and
  • forward. Listening more attentively, she heard one say:--
  • "Bring me that pot," another, "Give me that kettle," and a third, "Put
  • some wood upon the fire."
  • The ground at the same time opened, and she saw under her feet a great
  • kitchen full of cooks, kitchen helps, and all sorts of officers
  • necessary for a magnificent entertainment. There came out of it a
  • company of cooks, to the number of twenty or thirty, who went to plant
  • themselves about a very long table set up in the forest, with their
  • larding pins in their hands and fox tails in their caps, and began to
  • work, keeping time to a very harmonious tune.
  • The Princess, all astonished at this sight, asked them for whom they
  • worked.
  • "For Prince Riquet with the Tuft," said the chief of them, "who is to be
  • married to-morrow."
  • The Princess, more surprised than ever, and recollecting all at once
  • that it was now that day twelvemonth on which she had promised to marry
  • the Prince Riquet with the Tuft, was ready to sink into the ground.
  • What made her forget this was that when she made this promise, she was
  • very silly; and having obtained that vast stock of sense which the
  • prince had bestowed upon her, she had entirely forgotten the things she
  • had done in the days of her stupidity. She continued her walk, but had
  • not taken thirty steps before Riquet with the Tuft presented himself to
  • her, gallant and most magnificently dressed, like a prince who was going
  • to be married.
  • "You see, madam," said he, "I am exact in keeping my word, and doubt not
  • in the least but you are come hither to perform your promise."
  • "I frankly confess," answered the Princess, "that I have not yet come to
  • a decision in this matter, and I believe I never shall be able to arrive
  • at such a one as you desire."
  • "You astonish me, madam," said Riquet with the Tuft.
  • "I can well believe it," said the Princess; "and surely if I had to do
  • with a clown, or a man of no sense, I should find myself very much at a
  • loss. 'A princess always keeps her word,' he would say to me, 'and you
  • must marry me, since you promised to do so.' But as he to whom I talk
  • is the one man in the world who is master of the greatest sense and
  • judgment, I am sure he will hear reason. You know that when I was but a
  • fool I could scarcely make up my mind to marry you; why will you have
  • me, now I have so much judgment as you gave me, come to such a decision
  • which I could not then make up my mind to agree to? If you sincerely
  • thought to make me your wife, you have been greatly in the wrong to
  • deprive me of my dull simplicity, and make me see things much more
  • clearly than I did."
  • "If a man of no wit and sense," replied Riquet with the Tuft, "would be
  • well received, as you say, in reproaching you for breach of your word,
  • why will you not let me, madam, have the same usage in a matter wherein
  • all the happiness of my life is concerned? Is it reasonable that persons
  • of wit and sense should be in a worse condition than those who have
  • none? Can you pretend this, you who have so great a share, and desired
  • so earnestly to have it? But let us come to the fact, if you please.
  • Putting aside my ugliness and deformity, is there anything in me which
  • displeased you? Are you dissatisfied with my birth, my wit, my humor, or
  • my manners?"
  • "Not at all," answered the Princess; "I love you and respect you in all
  • that you mention."
  • [Illustration: "I AM EXACT IN KEEPING MY WORD." p. 61.]
  • "If it be so," said Riquet with the Tuft, "I am happy, since it is in
  • your power to make me the most amiable of men."
  • "How can that be?" said the Princess.
  • "It is done," said Riquet with the Tuft, "if you love me enough to wish
  • it was so; and that you may no ways doubt, madam, of what I say, know
  • that the same fairy who on my birthday gave me for gift the power of
  • making the person who should please me witty and judicious, has in like
  • manner given you for gift the power of making him whom you love and to
  • whom you would grant the favor, to be extremely handsome."
  • "If it be so," said the Princess, "I wish with all my heart that you may
  • be the most lovable prince in the world, and I bestow my gift on you as
  • much as I am able."
  • The Princess had no sooner pronounced these words than Riquet with the
  • Tuft appeared to her the finest prince upon earth, the handsomest and
  • most amiable man she ever saw. Some affirm that it was not the fairy's
  • charms, but love alone, which worked the change.
  • They say that the Princess, having made due reflection on the
  • perseverance of her lover, his discretion, and all the good qualities of
  • his mind, his wit and judgment, saw no longer the deformity of his body,
  • nor the ugliness of his face; that his hump seemed to her no more than
  • the grand air of one having a broad back, and that whereas till then
  • she saw him limp horribly, she now found it nothing more than a certain
  • sidling air, which charmed her.
  • They say further that his eyes, which were squinted very much, seemed to
  • her most bright and sparkling, that their irregularity passed in her
  • judgment for a mark of the warmth of his affection, and, in short, that
  • his great red nose was, in her opinion, somewhat martial and heroic in
  • character.
  • However it was, the Princess promised immediately to marry him, on
  • condition that he obtained the King's consent. The King, knowing that
  • his daughter highly esteemed Riquet with the Tuft, whom he knew also for
  • a most sage and judicious prince, received him for his son-in-law with
  • pleasure, and the next morning their nuptials were celebrated, as Riquet
  • with the Tuft had foreseen, and according to the orders he had given a
  • long time before.
  • BLUE BEARD.
  • Once upon a time there was a man who had fine houses, both in town and
  • country, a deal of silver and gold plate, carved furniture, and coaches
  • gilded all over. But unhappily this man had a blue beard, which made him
  • so ugly and so terrible that all the women and girls ran away from him.
  • One of his neighbors, a lady of quality, had two daughters who were
  • perfect beauties. He asked for one of them in marriage, leaving to her
  • the choice of which she would bestow on him. They would neither of them
  • have him, and they sent him backward and forward from one to the other,
  • neither being able to make up her mind to marry a man who had a blue
  • beard. Another thing which made them averse to him was that he had
  • already married several wives, and nobody knew what had become of them.
  • Blue Beard, to become better acquainted, took them, with their mother
  • and three or four of their best friends, with some young people of the
  • neighborhood to one of his country seats, where they stayed a whole
  • week.
  • There was nothing going on but pleasure parties, hunting, fishing,
  • dancing, mirth, and feasting. Nobody went to bed, but all passed the
  • night in playing pranks on each other. In short, everything succeeded so
  • well that the youngest daughter began to think that the beard of the
  • master of the house was not so very blue, and that he was a very civil
  • gentleman. So as soon as they returned home, the marriage was concluded.
  • About a month afterward Blue Beard told his wife that he was obliged to
  • take a country journey for six weeks at least, upon business of great
  • importance. He desired her to amuse herself well in his absence, to send
  • for her friends, to take them into the country, if she pleased, and to
  • live well wherever she was.
  • "Here," said he, "are the keys of the two great warehouses wherein I
  • have my best furniture: these are of the room where I keep my silver and
  • gold plate, which is not in everyday use; these open my safes, which
  • hold my money, both gold and silver; these my caskets of jewels; and
  • this is the master-key to all my apartments. But as for this little key,
  • it is the key of the closet at the end of the great gallery on the
  • ground floor. Open them all; go everywhere; but as for that little
  • closet, I forbid you to enter it, and I promise you surely that, if you
  • open it, there's nothing that you may not expect from my anger."
  • She promised to obey exactly all his orders; and he, after having
  • embraced her, got into his coach and proceeded on his journey.
  • Her neighbors and good friends did not stay to be sent for by the
  • new-married lady, so great was their impatience to see all the riches of
  • her house, not daring to come while her husband was there, because of
  • his blue beard, which frightened them. They at once ran through all the
  • rooms, closets, and wardrobes, which were so fine and rich, and each
  • seemed to surpass all others. They went up into the warehouses, where
  • was the best and richest furniture; and they could not sufficiently
  • admire the number and beauty of the tapestry, beds, couches, cabinets,
  • stands, tables, and looking-glasses, in which you might see yourself
  • from head to foot. Some of them were framed with glass, others with
  • silver, plain and gilded, the most beautiful and the most magnificent
  • ever seen.
  • [Illustration: "IF YOU OPEN IT, THERE'S NOTHING YOU MAY NOT EXPECT
  • FROM MY ANGER." p. 67.]
  • They ceased not to praise and envy the happiness of their friend, who,
  • in the meantime, was not at all amused by looking upon all these rich
  • things, because of her impatience to go and open the closet on the
  • ground floor. Her curiosity was so great that, without considering how
  • uncivil it was to leave her guests, she went down a little back
  • staircase, with such excessive haste that twice or thrice she came near
  • breaking her neck. Having reached the closet-door, she stood still for
  • some time, thinking of her husband's orders, and considering that
  • unhappiness might attend her if she was disobedient; but the temptation
  • was so strong she could not overcome it. She then took the little key,
  • and opened the door, trembling. At first she could not see anything
  • plainly, because the windows were shut. After some moments she began to
  • perceive that several dead women were scattered about the floor. (These
  • were all the wives whom Blue Beard had married and murdered, one after
  • the other, because they did not obey his orders about the closet on the
  • ground floor.) She thought she surely would die for fear, and the key,
  • which she pulled out of the lock, fell out of her hand.
  • After having somewhat recovered from the shock, she picked up the key,
  • locked the door, and went upstairs into her chamber to compose herself;
  • but she could not rest, so much was she frightened.
  • Having observed that the key of the closet was stained, she tried two or
  • three times to wipe off the stain, but the stain would not come out. In
  • vain did she wash it, and even rub it with soap and sand. The stain
  • still remained, for the key was a magic key, and she could never make it
  • quite clean; when the stain was gone off from one side, it came again on
  • the other.
  • Blue Beard returned from his journey that same evening, and said he had
  • received letters upon the road, informing him that the business which
  • called him away was ended to his advantage. His wife did all she could
  • to convince him she was delighted at his speedy return.
  • Next morning he asked her for the keys, which she gave him, but with
  • such a trembling hand that he easily guessed what had happened.
  • "How is it," said he, "that the key of my closet is not among the rest?"
  • "I must certainly," said she, "have left it upstairs upon the table."
  • "Do not fail," said Blue Beard, "to bring it to me presently."
  • After having put off doing it several times, she was forced to bring him
  • the key. Blue Beard, having examined it, said to his wife:--
  • "How comes this stain upon the key?"
  • "I do not know," cried the poor woman, paler than death.
  • "You do not know!" replied Blue Beard. "I very well know. You wished to
  • go into the cabinet? Very well, madam; you shall go in, and take your
  • place among the ladies you saw there."
  • She threw herself weeping at her husband's feet, and begged his pardon
  • with all the signs of a true repentance for her disobedience. She would
  • have melted a rock, so beautiful and sorrowful was she; but Blue Beard
  • had a heart harder than any stone.
  • "You must die, madam," said he, "and that at once."
  • "Since I must die," answered she, looking upon him with her eyes all
  • bathed in tears, "give me some little time to say my prayers."
  • "I give you," replied Blue Beard, "half a quarter of an hour, but not
  • one moment more."
  • When she was alone she called out to her sister, and said to her:--
  • "Sister Anne,"--for that was her name,--"go up, I beg you, to the top of
  • the tower, and look if my brothers are not coming; they promised me they
  • would come to-day, and if you see them, give them a sign to make haste."
  • Her sister Anne went up to the top of the tower, and the poor afflicted
  • wife cried out from time to time:--
  • "Anne, sister Anne, do you see any one coming?"
  • And sister Anne said:--
  • "I see nothing but the sun, which makes a dust, and the grass, which
  • looks green."
  • In the meanwhile Blue Beard, holding a great sabre in his hand, cried to
  • his wife as loud as he could:--
  • "Come down instantly, or I shall come up to you."
  • "One moment longer, if you please," said his wife; and then she cried
  • out very softly, "Anne, sister Anne, dost thou see anybody coming?"
  • And sister Anne answered:--
  • "I see nothing but the sun, which makes a dust, and the grass, which is
  • green."
  • "Come down quickly," cried Blue Beard, "or I will come up to you."
  • "I am coming," answered his wife; and then she cried, "Anne, sister
  • Anne, dost thou not see any one coming?"
  • "I see," replied sister Anne, "a great dust, which comes from this
  • side."
  • "Are they my brothers?"
  • "Alas! no, my sister, I see a flock of sheep."
  • "Will you not come down?" cried Blue Beard.
  • "One moment longer," said his wife, and then she cried out, "Anne,
  • sister Anne, dost thou see nobody coming?"
  • "I see," said she, "two horsemen, but they are yet a great way off."
  • "God be praised," replied the poor wife, joyfully; "they are my
  • brothers; I will make them a sign, as well as I can, for them to make
  • haste."
  • Then Blue Beard bawled out so loud that he made the whole house tremble.
  • The distressed wife came down and threw herself at his feet, all in
  • tears, with her hair about her shoulders.
  • "All this is of no help to you," says Blue Beard: "you must die;" then,
  • taking hold of her hair with one hand, and lifting up his sword in the
  • air with the other, he was about to take off her head. The poor lady,
  • turning about to him, and looking at him with dying eyes, desired him to
  • afford her one little moment to her thoughts.
  • "No, no," said he, "commend thyself to God," and again lifting his arm--
  • At this moment there was such a loud knocking at the gate that Blue
  • Beard stopped suddenly. The gate was opened, and presently entered two
  • horsemen, who, with sword in hand, ran directly to Blue Beard. He knew
  • them to be his wife's brothers, one a dragoon, the other a musketeer. He
  • ran away immediately, but the two brothers pursued him so closely that
  • they overtook him before he could get to the steps of the porch. There
  • they ran their swords through his body, and left him dead. The poor wife
  • was almost as dead as her husband, and had not strength enough to arise
  • and welcome her brothers.
  • Blue Beard had no heirs, and so his wife became mistress of all his
  • estate. She made use of one portion of it to marry her sister Anne to a
  • young gentleman who had loved her a long while; another portion to buy
  • captains' commissions for her brothers; and the rest to marry herself to
  • a very worthy gentleman, who made her forget the sorry time she had
  • passed with Blue Beard.
  • THE FAIRY.
  • Once upon a time there was a widow who had two daughters. The elder was
  • so much like her, both in looks and character, that whoever saw the
  • daughter saw the mother. They were both so disagreeable and so proud
  • that there was no living with them. The younger, who was the very
  • picture of her father for sweetness of temper and virtue, was withal one
  • of the most beautiful girls ever seen. As people naturally love their
  • own likeness, this mother doted on her elder daughter, and at the same
  • time had a great aversion for the younger. She made her eat in the
  • kitchen and work continually.
  • Among other things, this unfortunate child had to go twice a day to draw
  • water more than a mile and a half from the house, and bring home a
  • pitcherful of it. One day, as she was at this fountain, there came to
  • her a poor woman, who begged of her to let her drink.
  • "Oh, yes, with all my heart, Goody," said this pretty little girl.
  • Rinsing the pitcher at once, she took some of the clearest water from
  • the fountain, and gave it to her, holding up the pitcher all the while,
  • that she might drink the easier.
  • The good woman having drunk, said to her:--
  • "You are so pretty, so good and courteous, that I cannot help giving you
  • a gift." For this was a fairy, who had taken the form of a poor
  • country-woman, to see how far the civility and good manners of this
  • pretty girl would go. "I will give you for gift," continued the Fairy,
  • "that, at every word you speak, there shall come out of your mouth
  • either a flower or a jewel."
  • When this pretty girl returned, her mother scolded at her for staying so
  • long at the fountain.
  • "I beg your pardon, mamma," said the poor girl, "for not making more
  • haste."
  • And in speaking these words there came out of her mouth two roses, two
  • pearls, and two large diamonds.
  • "What is it I see there?" said her mother, quite astonished. "I think
  • pearls and diamonds come out of the girl's mouth! How happens this, my
  • child?"
  • This was the first time she had ever called her "my child."
  • The girl told her frankly all the matter, not without dropping out great
  • numbers of diamonds.
  • "Truly," cried the mother, "I must send my own dear child thither.
  • Fanny, look at what comes out of your sister's mouth when she speaks.
  • Would you not be glad, my dear, to have the same gift? You have only to
  • go and draw water out of the fountain, and when a poor woman asks you
  • to let her drink, to give it to her very civilly."
  • [Illustration: "WITH ALL MY HEART, GOODY." p. 75.]
  • "I should like to see myself going to the fountain to draw water," said
  • this ill-bred minx.
  • "I insist you shall go," said the mother, "and that instantly."
  • She went, but grumbled all the way, taking with her the best silver
  • tankard in the house.
  • She no sooner reached the fountain than she saw coming out of the wood,
  • a magnificently dressed lady, who came up to her, and asked to drink.
  • This was the same fairy who had appeared to her sister, but she had now
  • taken the air and dress of a princess, to see how far this girl's
  • rudeness would go.
  • "Am I come hither," said the proud, ill-bred girl, "to serve you with
  • water, pray? I suppose this silver tankard was brought purely for your
  • ladyship, was it? However, you may drink out of it, if you have a
  • fancy."
  • "You are scarcely polite," answered the fairy, without anger. "Well,
  • then, since you are so disobliging, I give you for gift that at every
  • word you speak there shall come out of your mouth a snake or a toad."
  • So soon as her mother saw her coming, she cried out:--
  • "Well, daughter?"
  • "Well, mother?" answered the unhappy girl, throwing out of her mouth a
  • viper and a toad.
  • "Oh, mercy!" cried the mother, "what is it I see? It is her sister who
  • has caused all this, but she shall pay for it," and immediately she ran
  • to beat her. The poor child fled away from her, and went to hide herself
  • in the forest nearby.
  • The King's son, who was returning from the chase, met her, and seeing
  • her so beautiful, asked her what she did there alone and why she cried.
  • "Alas! sir, my mother has turned me out of doors."
  • The King's son, who saw five or six pearls and as many diamonds come out
  • of her mouth, desired her to tell him how that happened. She told him
  • the whole story. The King's son fell in love with her, and, considering
  • that such a gift was worth more than any marriage portion another bride
  • could bring, conducted her to the palace of the King, his father, and
  • there married her.
  • As for her sister, she made herself so much hated that her own mother
  • turned her out of doors. The miserable girl, after wandering about and
  • finding no one to take her in, went to a corner of the wood, and there
  • died.
  • LITTLE RED RIDING-HOOD.
  • Once upon a time there lived in a certain village a little country girl,
  • the prettiest creature that ever was seen. Her mother was very fond of
  • her, and her grandmother loved her still more. This good woman made for
  • her a little red riding-hood, which became the girl so well that
  • everybody called her Little Red Riding-hood.
  • One day her mother, having made some custards, said to her:--
  • "Go, my dear, and see how your grandmother does, for I hear she has been
  • very ill; carry her a custard and this little pot of butter."
  • Little Red Riding-hood set out immediately to go to her grandmother's,
  • who lived in another village.
  • As she was going through the wood, she met Gaffer Wolf, who had a very
  • great mind to eat her up; but he dared not, because of some fagot-makers
  • hard by in the forest. He asked her whither she was going. The poor
  • child, who did not know that it was dangerous to stay and hear a wolf
  • talk, said to him:--
  • "I am going to see my grandmother, and carry her a custard and a little
  • pot of butter from my mamma."
  • "Does she live far off?" said the Wolf.
  • "Oh, yes," answered Little Red Riding-hood; "it is beyond that mill you
  • see there, the first house you come to in the village."
  • "Well," said the Wolf, "and I'll go and see her, too. I'll go this way,
  • and you go that, and we shall see who will be there first."
  • The Wolf began to run as fast as he could, taking the shortest way, and
  • the little girl went by the longest way, amusing herself by gathering
  • nuts, running after butterflies, and making nosegays of such little
  • flowers as she met with. The Wolf was not long before he reached the old
  • woman's house. He knocked at the door--tap, tap, tap.
  • "Who's there?" called the grandmother.
  • "Your grandchild, Little Red Riding-hood," replied the Wolf, imitating
  • her voice, "who has brought a custard and a little pot of butter sent to
  • you by mamma."
  • The good grandmother, who was in bed, because she was somewhat ill,
  • cried out:--
  • "Pull the bobbin, and the latch will go up."
  • The Wolf pulled the bobbin, and the door opened. He fell upon the good
  • woman and ate her up in no time, for he had not eaten anything for more
  • than three days. He then shut the door, went into the grandmother's
  • bed, and waited for Little Red Riding-hood, who came sometime afterward
  • and knocked at the door--tap, tap, tap.
  • "Who's there?" called the Wolf.
  • Little Red Riding-hood, hearing the big voice of the Wolf, was at first
  • afraid; but thinking her grandmother had a cold, answered:--
  • "'Tis your grandchild, Little Red Riding-hood, who has brought you a
  • custard and a little pot of butter sent to you by mamma."
  • The Wolf cried out to her, softening his voice a little:--
  • "Pull the bobbin, and the latch will go up."
  • Little Red Riding-hood pulled the bobbin, and the door opened.
  • The Wolf, seeing her come in, said to her, hiding himself under the
  • bedclothes:--
  • "Put the custard and the little pot of butter upon the stool, and come
  • and lie down with me."
  • Little Red Riding-hood undressed herself and went into bed, where she
  • was much surprised to see how her grandmother looked in her
  • night-clothes.
  • She said to her:--
  • "Grandmamma, what great arms you have got!"
  • "That is the better to hug thee, my dear."
  • "Grandmamma, what great legs you have got!"
  • [Illustration: "HE FELL UPON THE GOOD WOMAN." p. 81.]
  • "That is to run the better, my child."
  • "Grandmamma, what great ears you have got!"
  • "That is to hear the better, my child."
  • "Grandmamma, what great eyes you have got!"
  • "It is to see the better, my child."
  • "Grandmamma, what great teeth you have got!"
  • "That is to eat thee up."
  • And, saying these words, this wicked Wolf fell upon Little Red
  • Riding-hood, and ate her all up.
  • NOTE.
  • The eight stories contained in this volume are first found in print in
  • French in a magazine entitled, _Receuil de pièces curieuses et nouvelles
  • tant en prose qu'en vers_, which was published by Adrian Moetjens at The
  • Hague in 1696-1697. They were immediately afterward published at Paris
  • in a volume entitled, _Histoires ou Contes du Temps Passé, avec des
  • Moralites--Contes de ma mère l'Oie_.
  • The earliest translation into English has been found in a little book
  • containing both the English and French, entitled, "Tales of Passed
  • Times, by Mother Goose. With Morals. Written in French by M. (Charles)
  • Perrault, and Englished by R.S. Gent."
  • Who R.S. was and when he made his translation we can only conjecture.
  • Mr. Andrew Lang, in his "Perrault's Popular Tales" (p. xxxiv), writes:
  • "An English version translated by Mr. Samber, printed for J. Pote, was
  • advertised, Mr. Austin Dobson tells me, in the _Monthly Chronicle_,
  • March, 1729."
  • These stories which may be said to be as old as the race
  • itself--certainly their germs are to be found in the oldest literature
  • and among the oldest folk-tales in the world--were orally current in
  • France and the neighboring countries in nearly the form in which
  • Perrault wrote them for very many years; and an interesting account of
  • the various forms in which they are found in the literature and
  • folklore of other nations before Perrault's time is given in _Les Contes
  • de ma mère l'Oie avant Perrault_, by Charles Deulin, Paris, E. Dentu,
  • 1878.
  • In this book Mr. Deulin inclines to the view that the stories as first
  • published by Perrault were not really written by him, but by his little
  • son of ten or eleven, to whom Perrault told the stories as he had
  • gathered them up with the intention of rendering them in verse after the
  • manner of La Fontaine. The lad had an excellent memory, much natural
  • wit, and a great gift of expression. He loved the stories his father
  • told him and thoroughly enjoyed the task his father set him of rewriting
  • them from memory, as an exercise. This was so happily done, in such a
  • fresh, artless, and engaging style, exactly befitting the subjects of
  • the stories, that the father found the son's version better than the one
  • he had contemplated and gave that to the world instead.
  • These stories made their way slowly in England at first, but in the end
  • they nearly eclipsed the native fairy tales and legends, which, owing to
  • Puritan influence, had been frowned upon and discouraged until they were
  • remembered only in the remoter districts, and told only by the few who
  • had not come under its sway. Indeed, the Puritanical objection to
  • nursery lore of all kinds still lingers in some corners of England.
  • The stories of Perrault came in just when the severer manifestations of
  • Puritanism were beginning to decline, and they have since become as much
  • a part of English fairy lore as the old English folk and fairy tales
  • themselves. These latter, thanks to Mr. Joseph Jacob, Mr. Andrew Lang,
  • Mr. E.S. Hartland, and others, have been unearthed and revived, and
  • prove to have lost nothing of their power of taking hold upon the minds
  • of the little folk.
  • Perrault says of his collection that it is certain these stories excite
  • in the children who read them the desire to resemble those characters
  • who become happy, and at the same time they inspire them with the fear
  • of the consequences which happen to those who do ill deeds; and he
  • claims that they all contain a very distinct moral which is more or less
  • evident to all who read them.
  • Emerson says: "What Nature at one time provides for use, she afterwards
  • turns to ornament," and Herbert Spencer, following out this idea,
  • remarks that "the fairy lore, which in times past was matter of grave
  • belief and held sway over people's conduct, has since been transformed
  • into ornament for _The Midsummer Night's Dream_, _The Tempest_, _The
  • Fairy Queen_, and endless small tales and poems; and still affords
  • subjects for children's story books, amuses boys and girls, and becomes
  • matter for jocose allusion."
  • Thus, also, Sir Walter Scott, in a note to "The Lady of the Lake," says:
  • "The mythology of one period would appear to pass into the romance of
  • the next, and that into the nursery tales of subsequent ages," and Max
  • Müller, in his "Chips from a German Workshop," says: "The gods of
  • ancient mythology were changed into the demigods and heroes of ancient
  • epic poetry, and these demigods again became at a later age the
  • principal characters of our nursery tales."
  • These thoughts may help to a better understanding of some of the uses of
  • such stories and of their proper place in children's reading.
  • C.W.
  • End of Project Gutenberg's The Tales of Mother Goose, by Charles Perrault
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