ROSANELLA
Everybody
knows that though the fairies live hundreds of years they do sometimes die, and
especially as they are obliged to pass one day in every week under the form of
some animal, when of course they are liable to accident. It was in this way
that death once overtook the Queen of the Fairies, and it became necessary to
call a general assembly to elect a new sovereign. After much discussion, it
appeared that the choice lay between two fairies, one called Surcantine and the
other Paridamie; and their claims were so equal that it was impossible without
injustice to prefer one to the other. Under these circumstances it was
unanimously decided that whichever of the two could show to the world the
greatest wonder should be Queen; but it was to be a special kind of wonder, no
moving of mountains or any such common fairy tricks would do. Surcantine,
therefore, resolved that she would bring up a Prince whom nothing could make
constant. While Paridamie decided to display to admiring mortals a Princess so
charming that no one could see her without falling in love with her. They were
allowed to take their own time, and meanwhile the four oldest fairies were to
attend to the affairs of the kingdom.
Now
Paridamie had for a long time been very friendly with King Bardondon, who was a
most accomplished Prince, and whose court was the model of what a court should
be. His Queen, Balanice, was also charming; indeed it is rare to find a husband
and wife so perfectly of one mind about everything. They had one little
daughter, whom they had named 'Rosanella,' because she had a little pink rose
printed upon her white throat. From her earliest infancy she had shown the most
astonishing intelligence, and the courtiers knew her smart sayings by heart,
and repeated them on all occasions. In the middle of the night following the
assembly of fairies, Queen Balanice woke up with a shriek, and when her maids
of honour ran to see what was the matter, they found she had had a frightful dream.
'I
thought,' said she, 'that my little daughter had changed into a bouquet of
roses, and that as I held it in my hand a bird swooped down suddenly and
snatched it from me and carried it away.'
'Let
some one run and see that all is well with the Princess,' she added.
So
they ran; but what was their dismay when they found that the cradle was empty;
and though they sought high and low, not a trace of Rosanella could they
discover. The Queen was inconsolable, and so, indeed, was the King, only being
a man he did not say quite so much about his feelings. He presently proposed to
Balanice that they should spend a few days at one of their palaces in the
country; and to this she willingly agreed, since her grief made the gaiety of
the capital distasteful to her. One lovely summer evening, as they sat together
on a shady lawn shaped like a star, from which radiated twelve splendid avenues
of trees, the Queen looked round and saw a charming peasant-girl approaching by
each path, and what was still more singular was that everyone carried something
in a basket which appeared to occupy her whole attention. As each drew near she
laid her basket at Balanice's feet, saying:
'Charming
Queen, may this be some slight consolation to you in your unhappiness!'
The
Queen hastily opened the baskets, and found in each a lovely baby-girl, about
the same age as the little Princess for whom she sorrowed so deeply. At first
the sight of them renewed her grief; but presently their charms so gained upon
her that she forgot her melancholy in providing them with nursery-maids,
cradle-rockers, and ladies-in-waiting, and in sending hither and thither for
swings and dolls and tops, and bushels of the finest sweetmeats.
Oddly
enough, every baby had upon its throat a tiny pink rose. The Queen found it so
difficult to decide on suitable names for all of them, that until she could
settle the matter she chose a special colour for everyone, by which it was
known, so that when they were all together they looked like nothing so much as
a nosegay of gay flowers. As they grew older it became evident that though they
were all remarkably intelligent, and profited equally by the education they
received, yet they differed one from another in disposition, so much so that
they gradually ceased to be known as 'Pearl,' or 'Primrose,' or whatever might
have been their colour, and the Queen instead would say:
'Where
is my Sweet?' or 'my Beautiful,' or 'my Gay.'
Of
course, with all these charms they had lovers by the dozen. Not only in their own
court, but princes from afar, who were constantly arriving, attracted by the
reports which were spread abroad; but these lovely girls, the first Maids of
Honour, were as discreet as they were beautiful, and favoured no one.
But
let us return to Surcantine. She had fixed upon the son of a king who was
cousin to Bardondon, to bring up as her fickle Prince. She had before, at his
christening, given him all the graces of mind and body that a prince could
possibly require; but now she redoubled her efforts, and spared no pains in
adding every imaginable charm and fascination. So that whether he happened to
be cross or amiable, splendidly or simply attired, serious or frivolous, he was
always perfectly irresistible! In truth, he was a charming young fellow, since
the Fairy had given him the best heart in the world as well as the best head,
and had left nothing to be desired but--constancy. For it cannot be denied that
Prince Mirliflor was a desperate flirt, and as fickle as the wind; so much so,
that by the time he arrived at his eighteenth birthday there was not a heart
left for him to conquer in his father's kingdom--they were all his own, and he
was tired of everyone! Things were in this state when he was invited to visit
the court of his father's cousin, King Bardondon.
Imagine
his feelings when he arrived and was presented at once to twelve of the
loveliest creatures in the world, and his embarrassment was heightened by the
fact that they all liked him as much as he liked each one of them, so that
things came to such a pass that he was never happy a single instant without
them. For could he not whisper soft speeches to Sweet, and laugh with Joy,
while he looked at Beauty? And in his more serious moments what could be
pleasanter than to talk to Grave upon some shady lawn, while he held the hand
of Loving in his own, and all the others lingered near in sympathetic silence?
For the first time in his life he really loved, though the object of his
devotion was not one person, but twelve, to whom he was equally attached, and
even Surcantine was deceived into thinking that this was indeed the height of
inconstancy. But Paridamie said not a word.
In
vain did Prince Mirliflor's father write commanding him to return, and
proposing for him one good match after another. Nothing in the world could tear
him from his twelve enchantresses.
One
day the Queen gave a large garden-party, and just as the guests were all
assembled, and Prince Mirliflor was as usual dividing his attentions between
the twelve beauties, a humming of bees was heard. The Rose-maidens, fearing
their stings, uttered little shrieks, and fled all together to a distance from
the rest of the company. Immediately, to the horror of all who were looking on,
the bees pursued them, and, growing suddenly to an enormous size, pounced each
upon a maiden and carried her off into the air, and in an instant they were all
lost to view. This amazing occurrence plunged the whole court into the deepest
affliction, and Prince Mirliflor, after giving way to the most violent grief at
first, fell gradually into a state of such deep dejection that it was feared if
nothing could rouse him he would certainly die. Surcantine came in all haste to
see what she could do for her darling, but he rejected with scorn all the portraits
of lovely princesses which she offered him for his collection. In short, it was
evident that he was in a bad way, and the Fairy was at her wits' end. One day,
as he wandered about absorbed in melancholy reflections, he heard sudden shouts
and exclamations of amazement, and if he had taken the trouble to look up he
could not have helped being as astonished as everyone else, for through the air
a chariot of crystal was slowly approaching which glittered in the sunshine.
Six lovely maidens with shining wings drew it by rose-coloured ribbons, while a
whole flight of others, equally beautiful, were holding long garlands of roses
crossed above it, so as to form a complete canopy. In it sat the Fairy
Paridamie, and by her side a Princess whose beauty positively dazzled all who
saw her. At the foot of the great staircase they descended, and proceeded to
the Queen's apartments, though everyone had run together to see this marvel,
till it was quite difficult to make a way through the crowd; and exclamations
of wonder rose on all sides at the loveliness of the strange Princess. 'Great
Queen,' said Paridamie, 'permit me to restore to you your daughter Rosanella,
whom I stole out of her cradle.'
After
the first transports of joy were over the Queen said to Paridamie:
'But
my twelve lovely ones, are they lost to me for ever? Shall I never see them
again?'
But
Paridamie only said:
'Very
soon you will cease to miss them!' in a tone that evidently meant 'Don't ask me
any more questions.' And then mounting again into her chariot she swiftly
disappeared.
The
news of his beautiful cousin's arrival was soon carried to the Prince, but he
had hardly the heart to go and see her. However, it became absolutely necessary
that he should pay his respects, and he had scarcely been five minutes in her
presence before it seemed to him that she combined in her own charming person
all the gifts and graces which had so attracted him in the twelve Rose-maidens
whose loss he had so truly mourned; and after all it is really more satisfactory
to make love to one person at a time. So it came to pass that before he knew
where he was he was entreating his lovely cousin to marry him, and the moment
the words had left his lips, Paridamie appeared, smiling and triumphant, in the
chariot of the Queen of the Fairies, for by that time they had all heard of her
success, and declared her to have earned the kingdom. She had to give a full
account of how she had stolen Rosanella from her cradle, and divided her
character into twelve parts, that each might charm Prince Mirliflor, and when
once more united might cure him of his inconstancy once and for ever.
And
as one more proof of the fascination of the whole Rosanella, I may tell you
that even the defeated Surcantine sent her a wedding gift, and was present at
the ceremony which took place as soon as the guests could arrive. Prince
Mirliflor was constant for the rest of his life. And indeed who would not have
been in his place? As for Rosanella, she loved him as much as all the twelve
beauties put together, so they reigned in peace and happiness to the end of
their long lives.
By
the Comte de Caylus.
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