PRINCE
FEATHERHEAD AND THE PRINCESS CELANDINE
Once
upon a time there lived a King and Queen, who were the best creatures in the
world, and so kind-hearted that they could not bear to see their subjects want
for anything. The consequence was that they gradually gave away all their
treasures, till they positively had nothing left to live upon; and this coming
to the ears of their neighbour, King Bruin, he promptly raised a large army and
marched into their country. The poor King, having no means of defending his
kingdom, was forced to disguise himself with a false beard, and carrying his
only son, the little Prince Featherhead, in his arms, and accompanied only by
the Queen, to make the best of his way into the wild country. They were lucky
enough to escape the soldiers of King Bruin, and at last, after unheard-of
fatigues and adventures, they found themselves in a charming green valley,
through which flowed a stream clear as crystal and overshadowed by beautiful
trees. As they looked round them with delight, a voice said suddenly: 'Fish,
and see what you will catch.' Now the King had always loved fishing, and never
went anywhere without a fish-hook or two in his pocket, so he drew one out
hastily, and the Queen lent him her girdle to fasten it to, and it had hardly
touched the water before it caught a big fish, which made them an excellent
meal--and not before they needed it, for they had found nothing until then but
a few wild berries and roots. They thought that for the present they could not
do better than stay in this delightful place, and the King set to work, and
soon built a bower of branches to shelter them; and when it was finished the
Queen was so charmed with it that she declared nothing was lacking to complete
her happiness but a flock of sheep, which she and the little Prince might tend
while the King fished. They soon found that the fish were not only abundant and
easily caught, but also very beautiful, with glittering scales of every
imaginable hue; and before long the King discovered that he could teach them to
talk and whistle better than any parrot. Then he determined to carry some to
the nearest town and try to sell them; and as no one had ever before seen any
like them the people flocked about him eagerly and bought all he had caught, so
that presently not a house in the city was considered complete without a
crystal bowl full of fish, and the King's customers were very particular about
having them to match the rest of the furniture, and gave him a vast amount of
trouble in choosing them. However, the money he obtained in this way enabled
him to buy the Queen her flock of sheep, as well as many of the other things
which go to make life pleasant, so that they never once regretted their lost
kingdom. Now it happened that the Fairy of the Beech-Woods lived in the lovely
valley to which chance had led the poor fugitives, and it was she who had, in
pity for their forlorn condition, sent the King such good luck to his fishing,
and generally taken them under her protection. This she was all the more
inclined to do as she loved children, and little Prince Featherhead, who never
cried and grew prettier day by day, quite won her heart. She made the
acquaintance of the King and the Queen without at first letting them know that
she was a fairy, and they soon took a great fancy to her, and even trusted her
with the precious Prince, whom she carried off to her palace, where she regaled
him with cakes and tarts and every other good thing. This was the way she chose
of making him fond of her; but afterwards, as he grew older, she spared no
pains in educating and training him as a prince should be trained. But
unfortunately, in spite of all her care, he grew so vain and frivolous that he
quitted his peaceful country life in disgust, and rushed eagerly after all the
foolish gaieties of the neighbouring town, where his handsome face and charming
manners speedily made him popular. The King and Queen deeply regretted this alteration
in their son, but did not know how to mend matters, since the good old Fairy
had made him so self-willed.
Just
at this time the Fairy of the Beech-Woods received a visit from an old friend
of hers called Saradine, who rushed into her house so breathless with rage that
she could hardly speak.
'Dear,
dear! what is the matter?' said the Fairy of the Beech-Woods soothingly.
'The
matter!' cried Saradine. 'You shall soon hear all about it. You know that, not
content with endowing Celandine, Princess of the Summer Islands, with
everything she could desire to make her charming, I actually took the trouble
to bring her up myself; and now what does she do but come to me with more
coaxings and caresses than usual to beg a favour. And what do you suppose this
favour turns out to be--when I have been cajoled into promising to grant it?
Nothing more nor less than a request that I will take back all my
gifts--"since," says my young madam, "if I have the good fortune
to please you, how am I to know that it is really I, myself? And that's how it
will be all my life long, whenever I meet anybody. You see what a weariness my
life will be to me under these circumstances, and yet I assure you I am not
ungrateful to you for all your kindness!" I did all I could,' continued
Saradine, 'to make her think better of it, but in vain; so after going through
the usual ceremony for taking back my gifts, I'm come to you for a little peace
and quietness. But, after all, I have not taken anything of consequence from
this provoking Celandine. Nature had already made her so pretty, and given her
such a ready wit of her own, that she will do perfectly well without me.
However, I thought she deserved a little lesson, so to begin with I have
whisked her off into the desert, and there left her!'
'What!
all alone, and without any means of existence?' cried the kind-hearted old
Fairy. 'You had better hand her over to me. I don't think so very badly of her
after all. I'll just cure her vanity by making her love someone better than
herself. Really, when I come to consider of it, I declare the little minx has
shown more spirit and originality in the matter than one expects of a
princess.'
Saradine
willingly consented to this arrangement, and the old Fairy's first care was to
smooth away all the difficulties which surrounded the Princess, and lead her by
the mossy path overhung with trees to the bower of the King and Queen, who
still pursued their peaceful life in the valley.
They
were immensely surprised at her appearance, but her charming face, and the
deplorably ragged condition to which the thorns and briers had reduced her once
elegant attire, speedily won their compassion; they recognised her as a
companion in misfortune, and the Queen welcomed her heartily, and begged her to
share their simple repast. Celandine gracefully accepted their hospitality, and
soon told them what had happened to her. The King was charmed with her spirit,
while the Queen thought she had indeed been daring thus to go against the
Fairy's wishes.
'Since
it has ended in my meeting you,' said the Princess, 'I cannot regret the step I
have taken, and if you will let me stay with you, I shall be perfectly happy.'
The
King and Queen were only too delighted to have this charming Princess to supply
the place of Prince Featherhead, whom they saw but seldom, since the Fairy had
provided him with a palace in the neighbouring town, where he lived in the
greatest luxury, and did nothing but amuse himself from morning to night. So
Celandine stayed, and helped the Queen to keep house, and very soon they loved
her dearly. When the Fairy of the Beech-Woods came to them, they presented the
Princess to her, and told her story, little thinking that the Fairy knew more
about Celandine than they did. The old Fairy was equally delighted with her,
and often invited her to visit her Leafy Palace, which was the most enchanting
place that could be imagined, and full of treasures. Often she would say to the
Princess, when showing her some wonderful thing:
'This
will do for a wedding gift some day.' And Celandine could not help thinking
that it was to her that the Fairy meant to give the two blue wax-torches which
burned without ever getting smaller, or the diamond from which more diamonds
were continually growing, or the boat that sailed under water, or whatever
beautiful or wonderful thing they might happen to be looking at. It is true
that she never said so positively, but she certainly allowed the Princess to
believe it, because she thought a little disappointment would be good for her.
But the person she really relied upon for curing Celandine of her vanity was
Prince Featherhead. The old Fairy was not at all pleased with the way he had
been going on for some time, but her heart was so soft towards him that she was
unwilling to take him away from the pleasures he loved, except by offering him
something better, which is not the most effectual mode of correction, though it
is without doubt the most agreeable.
However,
she did not even hint to the Princess that Featherhead was anything but
absolutely perfect, and talked of him so much that when at last she announced
that he was coming to visit her, Celandine made up her mind that this
delightful Prince would be certain to fall in love with her at once, and was
quite pleased at the idea. The old Fairy thought so too, but as this was not at
all what she wished, she took care to throw such an enchantment over the
Princess that she appeared to Featherhead quite ugly and awkward, though to
every one else she looked just as usual. So when he arrived at the Leafy
Palace, more handsome and fascinating even than ever she had been led to
expect, he hardly so much as glanced at the Princess, but bestowed all his
attention upon the old Fairy, to whom he seemed to have a hundred things to say.
The Princess was immensely astonished at his indifference, and put on a cold
and offended air, which, however, he did not seem to observe. Then as a last
resource she exerted all her wit and gaiety to amuse him, but with no better
success, for he was of an age to be more attracted by beauty than by anything
else, and though he responded politely enough, it was evident that his thoughts
were elsewhere. Celandine was deeply mortified, since for her part the Prince
pleased her very well, and for the first time she bitterly regretted the fairy
gifts she had been anxious to get rid of. Prince Featherhead was almost equally
puzzled, for he had heard nothing from the King and Queen but the praises of
this charming Princess, and the fact that they had spoken of her as so very
beautiful only confirmed his opinion that people who live in the country have
no taste. He talked to them of his charming acquaintances in the town, the
beauties he had admired, did admire, or thought he was going to admire, until
Celandine, who heard it all, was ready to cry with vexation. The Fairy too was
quite shocked at his conceit, and hit upon a plan for curing him of it. She
sent to him by an unknown messenger a portrait of Princess Celandine as she
really was, with this inscription: 'All this beauty and sweetness, with a
loving heart and a great kingdom, might have been yours but for your well-known
fickleness.'
This
message made a great impression upon the Prince, but not so much as the
portrait. He positively could not tear his eyes away from it, and exclaimed
aloud that never, never had he seen anything so lovely and so graceful. Then he
began to think that it was too absurd that he, the fascinating Featherhead,
should fall in love with a portrait; and, to drive away the recollections of
its haunting eyes, he rushed back to the town; but somehow everything seemed
changed. The beauties no longer pleased him, their witty speeches had ceased to
amuse; and indeed, for their parts, they found the Prince far less amiable than
of yore, and were not sorry when he declared that, after all, a country life
suited him best, and went back to the Leafy Palace. Meanwhile, the Princess
Celandine had been finding the time pass but slowly with the King and Queen,
and was only too pleased when Featherhead reappeared. She at once noticed the
change in him, and was deeply curious to find the reason of it. Far from
avoiding her, he now sought her company and seemed to take pleasure in talking
to her, and yet the Princess did not for a moment flatter herself with the idea
that he was in love with her, though it did not take her long to decide that he
certainly loved someone. But one day the Princess, wandering sadly by the
river, spied Prince Featherhead fast asleep in the shade of a tree, and stole
nearer to enjoy the delight of gazing at his dear face unobserved. Judge of her
astonishment when she saw that he was holding in his hand a portrait of
herself! In vain did she puzzle over the apparent contradictoriness of his
behaviour. Why did he cherish her portrait while he was so fatally indifferent
to herself? At last she found an opportunity of asking him the name of the
Princess whose picture he carried about with him always.
'Alas!
how can I tell you?' replied he.
'Why
should you not?' said the Princess timidly. 'Surely there is nothing to prevent
you.'
'Nothing
to prevent me!' repeated he, 'when my utmost efforts have failed to discover
the lovely original. Should I be so sad if I could but find her? But I do not
even know her name.'
More
surprised than ever, the Princess asked to be allowed to see the portrait, and
after examining it for a few minutes returned it, remarking shyly that at least
the original had every cause to be satisfied with it.
'That
means that you consider it flattered,' said the Prince severely. 'Really,
Celandine, I thought better of you, and should have expected you to be above
such contemptible jealousy. But all women are alike!'
'Indeed,
I meant only that it was a good likeness,' said the Princess meekly.
'Then
you know the original,' cried the Prince, throwing himself on his knees beside
her. 'Pray tell me at once who it is, and don't keep me in suspense!'
'Oh!
don't you see that it is meant for me?' cried Celandine.
The
Prince sprang to his feet, hardly able to refrain from telling her that she
must be blinded by vanity to suppose she resembled the lovely portrait even in
the slightest degree; and after gazing at her for an instant with icy surprise,
turned and left her without another word, and in a few hours quitted the Leafy
Palace altogether.
Now
the Princess was indeed unhappy, and could no longer bear to stay in a place
where she had been so cruelly disdained. So, without even bidding farewell to
the King and Queen, she left the valley behind her, and wandered sadly away,
not caring whither. After walking until she was weary, she saw before her a
tiny house, and turned her slow steps towards it. The nearer she approached the
more miserable it appeared, and at length she saw a little old woman sitting upon
the door-step, who said grimly:
'Here
comes one of these fine beggars who are too idle to do anything but run about
the country!'
'Alas!
madam,' said Celandine, with tears in her pretty eyes, 'a sad fate forces me to
ask you for shelter.'
'Didn't
I tell you what it would be?' growled the old hag. 'From shelter we shall
proceed to demand supper, and from supper money to take us on our way. Upon my
word, if I could be sure of finding some one every day whose head was as soft
as his heart, I wouldn't wish for a more agreeable life myself! But I have
worked hard to build my house and secure a morsel to eat, and I suppose you
think that I am to give away everything to the first passer-by who chooses to
ask for it. Not at all! I wager that a fine lady like you has more money than I
have. I must search her, and see if it is not so,' she added, hobbling towards
Celandine with the aid of her stick.
'Alas!
madam,' replied the Princess, 'I only wish I had. I would give it to you with
all the pleasure in life.'
'But
you are very smartly dressed for the kind of life you lead,' continued the old
woman.
'What!'
cried the Princess, 'do you think I am come to beg of you?'
'I
don't know about that,' answered she; 'but at any rate you don't seem to have
come to bring me anything. But what is it that you do want? Shelter? Well, that
does not cost much; but after that comes supper, and that I can't hear of. Oh
dear no! Why, at your age one is always ready to eat; and now you have been
walking, and I suppose you are ravenous?'
'Indeed
no, madam,' answered the poor Princess, 'I am too sad to be hungry.'
'Oh,
well! if you will promise to go on being sad, you may stay for the night,' said
the old woman mockingly.
Thereupon
she made the Princess sit down beside her, and began fingering her silken robe,
while she muttered 'Lace on top, lace underneath! This must have cost you a
pretty penny! It would have been better to save enough to feed yourself, and
not come begging to those who want all they have for themselves. Pray, what may
you have paid for these fine clothes?'
'Alas!
madam,' answered the Princess, 'I did not buy them, and I know nothing about
money.'
'What
do you know, if I may ask?' said the old dame.
'Not
much; but indeed I am very unhappy,' cried Celandine, bursting into tears, 'and
if my services are any good to you--'
'Services!'
interrupted the hag crossly. 'One has to pay for services, and I am not above
doing my own work.'
'Madam,
I will serve you for nothing,' said the poor Princess, whose spirits were
sinking lower and lower. 'I will do anything you please; all I wish is to live
quietly in this lonely spot.'
'Oh!
I know you are only trying to take me in,' answered she; 'and if I do let you
serve me, is it fitting that you should be so much better dressed I am? If I
keep you, will you give me your clothes and wear some that I will provide you
with? It is true that I am getting old and may want someone to take care of me
some day.'
'Oh!
for pity's sake, do what you please with my clothes,' cried poor Celandine
miserably.
And
the old woman hobbled off with great alacrity, and fetched a little bundle
containing a wretched dress, such as the Princess had never even seen before,
and nimbly skipped round, helping her to put it on instead of her own rich
robe, with many exclamations of:
'Saints!--what
a magnificent lining! And the width of it! It will make me four dresses at
least. Why, child, I wonder you could walk under such a weight, and certainly
in my house you would not have had room to turn round.'
So
saying, she folded up the robe, and put it by with great care, while she
remarked to Celandine:
'That
dress of mine certainly suits you to a marvel; be sure you take great care of
it.'
When
supper-time came she went into the house, declining all the Princess's offers
of assistance, and shortly afterwards brought out a very small dish, saying:
'Now
let us sup.'
Whereupon
she handed Celandine a small piece of black bread and uncovered the dish, which
contained two dried plums.
'We
will have one between us,' continued the old dame; 'and as you are the visitor,
you shall have the half which contains the stone; but be very careful that you
don't swallow it, for I keep them against the winter, and you have no idea what
a good fire they make. Now, you take my advice--which won't cost you
anything--and remember that it is always more economical to buy fruit with
stones on this account.'
Celandine,
absorbed in her own sad thoughts, did not even hear this prudent counsel, and
quite forgot to eat her share of the plum, which delighted the old woman, who
put it by carefully for her breakfast, saying:
'I
am very much pleased with you, and if you go on as you have begun, we shall do
very well, and I can teach you many useful things which people don't generally
know. For instance, look at my house! It is built entirely of the seeds of all
the pears I have eaten in my life. Now, most people throw them away, and that
only shows what a number of things are wasted for want of a little patience and
ingenuity.'
But
Celandine did not find it possible to be interested in this and similar pieces
of advice. And the old woman soon sent her to bed, for fear the night air might
give her an appetite. She passed a sleepless night; but in the morning the old
dame remarked:
'I
heard how well you slept. After such a night you cannot want any breakfast; so
while I do my household tasks you had better stay in bed, since the more one
sleeps the less one need eat; and as it is market-day I will go to town and buy
a pennyworth of bread for the week's eating.'
And
so she chattered on, but poor Celandine did not hear or heed her; she wandered
out into the desolate country to think over her sad fate. However, the good
Fairy of the Beech-Woods did not want her to be starved, so she sent her an
unlooked for relief in the shape of a beautiful white cow, which followed her
back to the tiny house. When the old woman saw it her joy knew no bounds.
'Now
we can have milk and cheese and butter!' cried she. 'Ah! how good milk is! What
a pity it is so ruinously expensive!' So they made a little shelter of branches
for the beautiful creature which was quite gentle, and followed Celandine about
like a dog when she took it out every day to graze. One morning as she sat by a
little brook, thinking sadly, she suddenly saw a young stranger approaching,
and got up quickly, intending to avoid him. But Prince Featherhead, for it was
he, perceiving her at the same moment, rushed towards her with every demonstration
of joy: for he had recognised her, not as the Celandine whom he had slighted,
but as the lovely Princess whom he had sought vainly for so long. The fact was
that the Fairy of the Beech-Woods, thinking she had been punished enough, had
withdrawn the enchantment from her, and transferred it to Featherhead, thereby
in an instant depriving him of the good looks which had done so much towards
making him the fickle creature he was. Throwing himself down at the Princess's
feet, he implored her to stay, and at least speak to him, and she at last
consented, but only because he seemed to wish it so very much. After that he
came every day in the hope of meeting her again, and often expressed his
delight at being with her. But one day, when he had been begging Celandine to
love him, she confided to him that it was quite impossible, since her heart was
already entirely occupied by another.
'I
have,' said she, 'the unhappiness of loving a Prince who is fickle, frivolous,
proud, incapable of caring for anyone but himself, who has been spoilt by
flattery, and, to crown all, who does not love me.'
'But,'
cried Prince Featherhead, 'surely you cannot care for so contemptible and
worthless a creature as that.'
'Alas!
but I do care,' answered the Princess, weeping.
'But
where can his eyes be,' said the Prince, 'that your beauty makes no impression
upon him? As for me, since I have possessed your portrait I have wandered over
the whole world to find you, and, now we have met, I see that you are ten times
lovelier than I could have imagined, and I would give all I own to win your
love.'
'My
portrait?' cried Celandine with sudden interest. 'Is it possible that Prince
Featherhead can have parted with it?'
'He
would part with his life sooner, lovely Princess,' answered he; 'I can assure
you of that, for I am Prince Featherhead.'
At
the same moment the Fairy of the Beech-Woods took away the enchantment, and the
happy Princess recognised her lover, now truly hers, for the trials they had
both undergone had so changed and improved them that they were capable of a
real love for each other. You may imagine how perfectly happy they were, and
how much they had to hear and to tell. But at length it was time to go back to
the little house, and as they went along Celandine remembered for the first
time what a ragged old dress she was wearing, and what an odd appearance she
must present. But the Prince declared that it became her vastly, and that he
thought it most picturesque. When they reached the house the old woman received
them very crossly.
'I
declare,' said she, 'that it's perfectly true: wherever there is a girl you may
be sure that a young man will appear before long! But don't imagine that I'm
going to have you here--not a bit of it, be off with you, my fine fellow!'
Prince
Featherhead was inclined to be angry at this uncivil reception, but he was
really too happy to care much, so he only demanded, on Celandine's behalf, that
the old dame should give her back her own attire, that she might go away
suitably dressed.
This
request roused her to fury, since she had counted upon the Princess's fine
robes to clothe her for the rest of her life, so that it was some time before
the Prince could make himself heard to explain that he was willing to pay for
them. The sight of a handful of gold pieces somewhat mollified her, however,
and after making them both promise faithfully that on no consideration would
they ask for the gold back again, she took the Princess into the house and
grudgingly doled out to her just enough of her gay attire to make her
presentable, while the rest she pretended to have lost. After this they found
that they were very hungry, for one cannot live on love, any more than on air,
and then the old woman's lamentations were louder than before. 'What!' she
cried, 'feed people who were as happy as all that! Why, it was simply ruinous!'
But
as the Prince began to look angry, she, with many sighs and mutterings, brought
out a morsel of bread, a bowl of milk, and six plums, with which the lovers were
well content: for as long as they could look at one another they really did not
know what they were eating. It seemed as if they would go on for ever with
their reminiscences, the Prince telling how he had wandered all over the world
from beauty to beauty, always to be disappointed when he found that no one
resembled the portrait; the Princess wondering how it was he could have been so
long with her and yet never have recognised her, and over and over again
pardoning him for his cold and haughty behaviour to her.
'For,'
she said, 'you see, Featherhead, I love you, and love makes everything right!
But we cannot stay here,' she added; 'what are we to do?'
The
Prince thought they had better find their way to the Fairy of the Beech-Woods
and put themselves once more under her protection, and they had hardly agreed
upon this course when two little chariots wreathed with jasmine and honeysuckle
suddenly appeared, and, stepping into them, they were whirled away to the Leafy
Palace. Just before they lost sight of the little house they heard loud cries
and lamentations from the miserly old dame, and, looking round, perceived that
the beautiful cow was vanishing in spite of her frantic efforts to hold it
fast. And they afterwards heard that she spent the rest of her life in trying
to put the handful of gold the Prince had thrown to her into her money-bag. For
the Fairy, as a punishment for her avarice, caused it to slip out again as fast
as she dropped it in.
The
Fairy of the Beech-Woods ran to welcome the Prince and Princess with open arms,
only too delighted to find them so much improved that she could, with a clear
conscience, begin to spoil them again. Very soon the Fairy Saradine also
arrived, bringing the King and Queen with her. Princess Celandine implored her
pardon, which she graciously gave; indeed the Princess was so charming she
could refuse her nothing. She also restored to her the Summer Islands, and
promised her protection in all things. The Fairy of the Beech-Woods then
informed the King and Queen that their subjects had chased King Bruin from the
throne, and were waiting to welcome them back again; but they at once abdicated
in favour of Prince Featherhead, declaring that nothing could induce them to
forsake their peaceful life, and the Fairies undertook to see the Prince and
Princess established in their beautiful kingdoms. Their marriage took place the
next day, and they lived happily ever afterwards, for Celandine was never vain
and Featherhead was never fickle any more.
Le
Prince Muguet et la Princesse Zaza.
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