Page 405 - Child's own book
P. 405

short,  dear prince,”  continued  the lady,  “ my mother instantly
                          got out of bed, was dressed by her attendants, entered the palace,
                           and satisfied  her longing.  When the  queen had  eaten her fill,
                           she ordered  four thousand mules to be procured, and  loaded with
                          the fruit, which had the virtue  of continuing aJl the  year round
                          in a state of  perfection.  Thus  provided,  she  returned  to  the
                          king,  my father,  who,  with  the whole  court,  received  her with
                          rejoicings, as it was before imagined she wTould die of disappoint­
                          ment.  All  this time  the queen  said nothing to my father of the
                          promise  she  had  made  to  give her daughter to  the  fairies;  so
                          that  when the time was come that she expected  my  birth,  she
                          grew very melancholy;  till  at length being pressed  by the king,
                          she declared  to him the  truth.  Nothing could exceed his afflic­
                          tion,  when  he  heard  that  his only child,  svhen bom,  was  to be
                          given to  the  fairies:  he bore  it, however,  as  well as  lie could,
                          for  fear  of adding to my mother’s grief;  and also believing he
                          should  find  some  means  of  keeping  me  in  a  place  of safety,
                          which the fairies would not  be able to approach.  As soon, there­
                          fore, as I was born, he had me conveyed to a tower in the palace,
                          to which there  were twenty flights of stairs,  and a door to each,
                          of  which my father kept  the k ey ;  so that  none  came near  me
                          without his consent.  When the fairies heard of what had been
                          done, they sent first to demand m e;  and  on my father’s refusal,
                          they let  loose a monstrous dragon, which devoured men, women,
                          and children,  and which,  by the breath of its nostrils,  destroyed
                          everything it came  near,  so  that  the  trees  and  plants began to
                          die in great abundance.  The  grief  of  the  king at  seeing  this
                          could scarcely be equalled;  and finding that his whole kingdom
                          would in a short time be reduced to famine, he consented  to give
                          me  into  their  hands.  I  was  accordingly  laid  in  a  cradle  of
                          mothcr-o'-pearJj  ornamented  with gold  and jewels,  and carried
                          to  their  palace  ;  when  the  dragon,  immediately  disappeared.
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