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                              YELLOW-CAP
                               AND OTHER
                              FAIRY TALES

                                  BY

                           JULIAN HAWTHORNE




                              YELLOW-CAP
                                  &c.




                          LONDON: PRINTED BY
                SPOTTISWOODE AND CO., NEW-STREET SQUARE
                         AND PARLIAMENT STREET




                              YELLOW-CAP
                _AND OTHER FAIRY-STORIES FOR CHILDREN_

                                  BY
                           JULIAN HAWTHORNE


                                LONDON
                       LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO.
                                 1880

                        _All rights reserved_




CONTENTS.


_YELLOW-CAP._

  CHAPTER                                     PAGE
     I. AN APPANAGE OF ROYALTY                   3
    II. THE GOLDEN PLEDGE                       11
   III. THE GOLDEN DWARF                        23
    IV. THE TALISMAN                            35
     V. THE KING'S FAVOUR                       43
    VI. DONKEY-BACK                             51
   VII. THE DARK PASSAGE                        57
  VIII. THE MAGIC EYE                           65
    IX. ON THE STAGE                            83
     X. AN ABSOLUTE MONARCH                    102
    XI. THE GRAND TRANSFORMATION SCENE         113


_RUMPTY-DUDGET._

     I. THE PALACE AND THE TOWER               129
    II. THE AUNT, THE CAT, AND THE DWARF       134
   III. THE WAYS OF THE WIND                   145
    IV. NO TIME TO BE LOST                     154
     V. THE QUEEN OF THE AIR                   161
    VI. THE KING OF THE GNOMES                 170
   VII. THE ENCHANTED FIRE                     179
  VIII. THE GOLDEN IVY                         186


_CALLADON._

     I. ABRACADABRA                            197
    II. THE LAW OF THE LAMP                    204
   III. CALLIA AND THE MIRROR                  209
    IV. THE OUTER ROOMS                        214
     V. REGENERATION                           224


_THEEDA._

     I. THE BOOK AND THE VASE                  237
    II. OSCAR INSIDE OUT                       243
   III. THE PEARL-SHELL'S GIFT                 250
    IV. THE CRAB                               260
     V. A STRANGER                             267
    VI. THE SECRET OF THE WAVES                279




YELLOW-CAP.




CHAPTER I.

AN APPANAGE OF ROYALTY.


A good many years ago--before Julius Cæsar landed at Dover, in fact,
and while the architect's plans for Stonehenge were still under
consideration--England was inhabited by a civilised and prosperous
people, who did not care about travelling, and who were renowned for
their affability to strangers. The climate was warm and equable; there
were no fogs, no smoke, no railways, and no politics. The Government
was an absolute monarchy; one king, who was by birth and descent an
Englishman, lived in London all the year round; and as for London, it
was the cleanest, airiest, and most beautiful city in the whole world.

A few miles outside of the city walls lay a small village called
Honeymead. It had some fifteen or twenty thatched cottages, each with
its vegetable garden and its beehives, its hencoop and its cowshed.
Around this village fertile meadows spread down to the river banks,
bringing forth plenteous crops for the support of the honest and
thrifty husbandmen who tilled them. There was only one public-house in
the place, and the only drink to be had there was milk. A case of
drunkenness was, consequently, seldom heard of; though, on the other
hand, women, girls, and even small children might be seen lingering
about the place as well as men.

This public-house was called the Brindled Cow, and it was kept by a
young woman whose name was Rosamund. She was the prettiest maiden in
the village, as well as the most good-natured and the thriftiest;
though she had a keen tongue of her own when occasion demanded. As
might be supposed, all the young men in the neighbourhood were anxious
to marry her; but she gave them little or no encouragement. She used
to tell them that she was well able to take care of herself, so what
good would a husband be to her? She didn't want to support him, and
she didn't need his support. It was better as it was. As for falling
in love, that was a thing she couldn't pretend to understand; but her
maiden aunt had once told her that it was more bother than it was
worth, and she thought it very likely. Moreover, if by any accident
she should one day happen to fall in love, she would take great care
that it should not be suspected, because the man she loved would then
become so puffed up with conceit there'd be no bearing him!

Such was Rosamund's declared opinion upon matrimony; and it caused
gloom to dwell in the heart of many a love-sick swain. But (what was
strange) the more love-sick they grew the fatter and rosier they
became. The reason probably was that they were for ever going to the
Brindled Cow under pretence of being thirsty--but in reality to feast
their eyes on Rosamund's lovely face; and since, thirsty or not, she
insisted upon their drinking, as long as they stayed, at the rate of a
pint of rich unskimmed milk every ten minutes, you will easily
understand that it soon became possible to measure the ardour of their
affection in pounds avoirdupois. So that by-and-by, when the elders of
the village would see their sons waxing great of girth and blowzy of
visage, they would shake their heads and murmur sadly--

'Ah! poor lad, how healthy he's getting! 'Tis plain he's in love with
Mistress Rosamund!'

There was one young fellow, however, who was seldom seen among the
tipplers at the Brindled Cow. He was a slender youth, rather pale,
with straight black eyebrows and large thoughtful eyes, which always
seemed to be gazing at something far away. There was a romantic story
about him, which you shall hear. When he was a small child, only three
years old, his mother (who took in washing, and would be called a
laundress nowadays) was up to her elbows one Tuesday afternoon in
soapsuds and shirts; and Raymond--that was the child's name--was
sitting beside the washing-tub, blowing soap-bubbles. All of a sudden
the tramp of a horse was heard in the street without, and the woman,
looking up from her scrubbing-board had a glimpse through the window
of a magnificent horseman, in silk and velvet, with rosettes on his
shoulders, and wearing a gold cap with a tall peacock's feather in it.
He got off his horse; and in another moment he had opened the cottage
door and walked into the washing-room.

The poor woman was at first vastly frightened, for she thought this
must be the King, and that he was going to cut off her head because
she used chemicals in her washing--though she had never done such a
thing except when she was very much pressed for time, or when the
water was so hard that the soap would not make suds. However, like a
wise woman as she was, she made up her mind not to ask for mercy until
she had heard her accusation; so she dropped half a dozen curtseys,
and begged to know what his Gracious Royal Majesty's Highness wanted.

Meanwhile, the little boy, from his seat beside the wash-tub, stared
and stared at the magnificent stranger, and was sure he never could
stare at him enough. The stranger was tall, thin, and as straight as a
hop-pole; had a huge aquiline nose, with a pair of long moustachios
jutting out beneath it and curling up to his eyes; and on his chin was
a sharp-pointed beard. The steam from the wash-tub filled the little
room and swam in misty clouds round this singular figure; while the
last soap-bubble which the little boy had blown from his pipe rose in
the air and circled round and round the yellow cap like a planet
round the sun. Altogether he looked like an Eastern genie in an
English court-dress--an uncommon sight in the times I write of.

This personage now made two profound obeisances, one to the
washerwoman and one to the little boy. This done, he threw back his
silk-lined cloak, and taking from the pocket of his doublet a bundle
of something done up in gold paper, he opened his mouth and said--

'O yez! O yez! O yez! Whereas his Transparent Majesty King Ormund,
Emperor of Great Britain, France, and Ireland, Defender of the Faith,
and so forth, and so forth, did, while riding through this village
called Honeymead, splash with mud his left Transparent stocking: now,
therefore, O washerwoman, it is his gracious will and pleasure that
you do hereby wash the same, with all due and proper diligence and
despatch, and with the smallest possible amount of unnecessary
procrastination. Long live his Transparency King Ormund!'

In fact, the gold paper contained a fine pink silk stocking, with
embroidered clocks, a hole in the toe, and seven spots of mud
spattered over it. The washerwoman had understood very little of the
speech, but she could see that the stocking needed washing; so without
more ado she plunged it into the soapsuds, and in five minutes it was
as clean as the day it came out of the shop, and was dried before the
fire. All this time the stranger had stood bolt upright in the centre
of the little room, swathed in the steam, and with the soap-bubble
still revolving round his head like a planet; and the little boy still
stared up at him, as if he never could stare enough.

When the stocking was quite dry the washerwoman rolled it up again in
the gold paper and gave it to the stranger, who put it back in the
pocket of his doublet. Then he took from the purse that hung at his
belt a new spade guinea, gave it a fillip into the air, and down it
fell in the little boy's lap. Then, with a third profound obeisance,
he made a long step back towards the door.

Up jumped the little boy in a great hurry and excitement.

'If you please, sir,' he cried out, 'who are you?'

The stranger stopped; and as the steam from the wash-tub wound around
him more and more, and the soap-bubble burst on the bridge of his
aquiline nose, he replied--

'Little boy, I am an Appanage of Royalty!'

'Please will you give me your yellow cap?' asked Raymond again.

'Not to-day,' said the Appanage of Royalty, with a queer smile.

'To-morrow, then?' demanded Raymond.

'Some day--perhaps!' the other replied, still with that queer smile.
And then he disappeared; but whether he dissolved into steam, or
exploded like a soap-bubble, or went out by the door in the regular
way, the little boy could never be quite sure. It was enough for him
that an Appanage of Royalty had said that some day, perhaps, he would
give him his gold cap. And Raymond never forgot this adventure; and
as a kind of pledge of its reality he ever afterwards wore the spade
guinea round his neck by a silken string. He believed that sooner or
later it would be the means of bringing him fame and greatness.




CHAPTER II.

THE GOLDEN PLEDGE.


One fine May morning, while Rosamund was churning in the dairy-room of
the Brindled Cow, she heard some one walk into the bar. The step was
not that of any one of her familiar suitors. It was neither short
plump Armand, nor tall bulky Osmund, nor red-haired broad-cheeked
Phillimund, nor short-legged thick-necked Sigismund, who drank six
quarts of milk last Saturday; nor short-breathed apoplectic Dorimund,
who sang sentimental songs with a voice like a year-old heifer's.
No, none of these had a step like this step--sauntering, light, and
meditative. Nevertheless, it was a step which Rosamund loved to hear.

She stopped churning, and moved softly to where a brightly-polished
tin pan was set up on the shelf. It was Rosamund's looking-glass.
Before this she smoothed her rumpled hair, straightened the pink bow
at her throat, and snatched off her dirty apron. She was provoked to
see how red the churning had made her cheeks, and she wished she were
paler; but the wish only seemed to make her rosier than before. She
told herself that she was a coarse-looking ugly girl; and yet when,
only that morning, Dorimund had told her that she was as beautiful
as a fairy, she had taken it quite as a matter of course. It was
tiresome--the way people could grow ugly all in a moment--and in the
wrong moment too!

All this happened during the two or three minutes after the
light-stepping visitor had come into the bar; and now this person
tapped twice or thrice on the counter. Rosamund, on hearing the tap,
began to hum a little song, in an unconcerned sort of way, and walked
up and down the dairy a few times, as if she were putting things in
order; and when, at last, she came out to the bar, it was with the air
of a very busy young woman, who does not like to be disturbed at her
churning.

'Oh, is it you?' she said to the person who was leaning on the
counter. 'How do you do? I hope you're thirsty?'

The person smiled. He was a handsome young fellow, with dark hair and
a pale face, and he looked at Rosamund with a pair of thoughtful eyes.
His dress was plain and rather the worse for wear; but round his neck
a bright spade guinea was hung by a silken string. It did not seem
different from any other spade guinea, yet there must have been
something peculiar about it. For it gave a kind of dignity to the
young man's aspect, so that if you fixed your eyes upon the coin you
forgot the wearer's shabbiness, and almost fancied him to be a noble
and opulent personage. Whether the owner were aware of this or not is
another question; but, as a general thing, young people seldom know
what it is about them that makes them attractive.

'I hope you are thirsty?' Rosamund repeated, in a business-like tone,
as she leaned against the other side of the counter, and looked up at
the young man with her lovely blue eyes.

'I am not thirsty, Rosamund,' he replied, 'but I am tired.'

'I've always heard that doing nothing was tiresome. Perhaps you'd like
to take a chair and sit down? I really must go on with my churning.'

'It isn't that kind of tired that I mean,' said he; 'but if you'll let
me sit down in the dairy I don't mind.' Rosamund made no objection, so
he vaulted over the counter and they went into the dairy together.
'I'm so tired waiting!' he added, with a sigh.

'And what are you waiting for, may I ask?'

'For something great to happen!'

'Oh! Then why don't you make it happen?'

'I wish I could!' sighed the young man.

Rosamund tied her apron on again, and laid hold of the churn-handle.

'What do you call great?' she asked, beginning to work it up and down.

The young man took his gold coin meditatively between his thumb and
forefinger and twisted it on its silken string.

'Greatness is everything that I have not, and want to have,' he said.

'Such as what?'

'Oh, power and wealth, and to be above other men, and to have them
look up to me and obey me. That is greatness.'

'Pooh!' exclaimed Rosamund, working her churn vigorously. 'I shouldn't
care about such greatness as that.'

'Not care about it, Rosamund?'

'Not so much as a pat of butter, Raymond. What do you want of wealth?
Are you hungry, pray, or thirsty? I will give you as much of the best
milk, fresh from the cow, as you can drink; and all the wealth in the
world couldn't help you to drink more. As for power--however high it
brought you, it couldn't make you yourself higher by so much as a
single inch: you would still be the same Raymond you are now, even if
you were an emperor--yes, or that Appanage of Royalty you've been
thinking and talking about all these dozen years or more. Why do you
want people to look up to you and obey you, I should like to know?
Can't you see that it's not you they would look up to, but your ermine
robe and silk stockings----'

'Ah! my mother once washed one of the King's silk stockings--the left
one,' murmured Raymond; 'and the Appanage of Royalty said that some
day, perhaps, he would give me his yellow cap----'

'And golden crown,' continued Rosamund, not noticing the interruption.
'You silly boy! they would obey the crown, not you, though you might
happen to be wearing it. If you think it would be yourself they cared
for, just go to London as you are now and order them about! But if I
were you I'd rather be truly loved by one--person than be obeyed by
one hundred thousand.'

'But if you were I, Rosamund, you'd be a man; and men are different.'

'So it seems.'

'What a noise that churn makes! Rosamund, I've felt all my life long
that I was destined to be great. Why else did my mother wash the
King's stocking; or the Appanage of Royalty promise me the cap?'

'You've been dreaming, you silly boy!'

'But can a dream that I've been dreaming all my life fail to come
true? I don't say that to sit on a throne and rule a kingdom would be
the happiest lot in the world; but, just as an experience, it would be
good fun; and if one is predestined to it, you know----Besides----'

'Well, your majesty--besides what?'

'Well, for instance, how would you like to be a queen?'

Rosamund stopped churning, wiped her hands on her apron, and tossed up
her pretty chin with a saucy air.

'A queen, indeed! I beg to inform you, Master Raymond, that I am a
queen already, and I have reigned longer and more despotically than
ever you will, I fancy. Pray, has the Queen of England any subjects
more devoted to her than my Osmund and Dorimund and Phillimund and
Sigismund and Armand, and twenty others, are to me? Honeymead is my
kingdom, and I do really reign, because my power is in myself; and
fifty giants to march before me, and a hundred dwarfs to carry my
train, wouldn't make me a bit more of a queen than I am now. So--thank
you for nothing, Master Raymond!'

Raymond sat erect, with a great deal more animation in his look than
he had yet shown.

'Listen to me, Rosamund,' he cried. 'It is true you are Queen of
Honeymead. But what is Honeymead compared with London? And why should
not you be as much a queen in London as you are here? You would be
none the worse for a crown, and dwarfs and giants, though you might
not need them: because no man could look at you and not be your
faithful subject ever afterwards. And--Rosamund----'

He hesitated, and his cheeks were quite red. Rosamund glanced up at
him and thought, 'How handsome he is!'

'Rosamund, I ask you this: if I become king will you sit beside me on
the throne, and rule over Great Britain, France, and Ireland?'

Rosamund looked very grave.

'Do you mean to ask me to be your wife, Raymond?' she asked.

'I would have asked you long before, dearest Rosamund, but I waited
hoping to be able to offer you a kingdom along with my love.'

'Well, it is a very kind offer,' said she, with a little smile and a
sigh, 'and I thank you. But I must say no.'

'Rosamund!'

'If I were your wife I should have no time to attend to the duties of
the Court; and if I were your queen I should have no time to attend to
you. And I am so jealous that I could not let you neglect me for your
kingdom; and yet I'm so ambitious that I couldn't let you neglect your
kingdom for me. So it would not do either way; and, if you please, we
won't talk any more about it.'

But as she said this her voice trembled, and tears were in her eyes.
Then Raymond's heart overflowed with tenderness, and he went to her
and took her hand.

'I could not be happy on a throne without you, Rosamund,' said he;
'but I could be happy, if you would marry me, without a throne.'

And because it cost him a good deal to make this sacrifice (even of
something he had not got) his voice trembled a little too.

When Rosamund heard that she could resist no longer. She smiled such a
smile as Dorimund and the rest would have given their farms to win
from her; and said she--

'Oh, Raymond! I am a greater queen in having your love than----'

And then Raymond kissed her just on the place that the next word was
coming out of, so the rest of the sentence was lost.

'But are you quite sure, dear Raymond, that you will be content to
live here always?' she asked, when they had had a little more
conversation of this kind.

Raymond smiled down on her, but he said nothing. Perhaps, in his
secret heart, he was thinking that Destiny (which had appeared to him
in the shape of the Appanage of Royalty so long ago) might still have
some splendid gift in store for him and Rosamund, whereof the yellow
cap would be but the symbol. And, if so, it would be foolish in them
to bind themselves beforehand not to take advantage of it. So Raymond
smiled at Rosamund in a way to show that, at all events, he loved her.
And he did love her, no doubt.

'Poor boy!' said Rosamund, after another pause, smiling back rather
mischievously, 'to think that you have been wearing this spade guinea
all these years, and it has brought you nothing better than me at
last!'

'If guineas could buy girls like you, my dear,' replied Raymond, 'the
Mint would be kept working day and night. But I'll tell you what use
we will make of this--we'll chop it in two, and each of us will wear
a half, in token that we belong to one another. And then, no matter
how long we may be separated, or what changes come over us, we should
always recognise each other by these bits of gold.'

'But you don't think that changes will come over us, or that we shall
be separated, Raymond?'

'Certainly not; but we may as well be on the safe side. For instance,
if I were to go out and meet with an enchanter, and he were to turn me
into a dwarf, and then I were to come back to you, how would you know
me except by my half of the guinea?'

'I should trust my heart for that,' said Rosamund, softly. 'Still, we
will wear the halves, so that everyone may see that we are but half
ourselves when we are not together.'

This being settled, Rosamund fetched a hatchet, and Raymond put the
guinea on a stool, and, with one strong blow, made it fly into two
exact halves. Then he drilled a hole through Rosamund's half, and hung
it round her neck by a piece of pink ribbon; and as for his own half,
he strung it on the silken cord that he had always worn. So their
betrothal was confirmed.

Just at this moment half a dozen of Rosamund's old suitors came
trooping into the bar, and began calling for milk like a herd of
calves. Then the lovers looked in each other's faces and smiled, and
bade each other farewell very tenderly. Raymond went out through the
cowyard; and Rosamund returned to the bar, where she served out fresh
milk and thought about the half-guinea that was hidden in her bosom.




CHAPTER III.

THE GOLDEN DWARF.


Raymond strolled away towards the river. He wanted to think it all
over. His betrothal was a sort of surprise to him. He had loved
Rosamund, in a meditative way, so long that he had got used to not
expecting anything more; but now, on the spur of the moment, he had
told his love and received the pledge of hers, and it was all settled.
He was happy, of course, for he believed Rosamund to be the prettiest
and the best girl in the world. Still, he did not wish quite to give
up the hope that something might happen to make their life more
splendid. He said to himself that it was only for Rosamund's sake he
hoped this. Perhaps that was the reason he hoped it so much.

The path down to the river was narrow and winding; it lay between
hawthorn hedges white with blossoms. It ended at the ford, where
willow trees bowed down over the current. One of these trees had been
cut down on the day Raymond was born. The stump made a sort of chair,
in which Raymond had spent many a summer hour, musing over the flowing
water, or lifting his eyes to gaze thoughtfully at the distant city.
He called the willow-stump his throne; and in the stream that hurried
beneath he imagined he saw the march of mighty nations passing before
his feet to do him homage. To-day all such imaginations must end; and
it was more habit than anything else that had brought him to the spot.
He did not come, as formerly, half in fear and half in delight, hoping
to meet with some beneficent fairy or other, who would grant him the
three wishes which all fairies have in their gift. No; he came to take
a last look at that world of dreams in which he had lived from
childhood, and to make up his mind to living henceforth in the
matter-of-fact world which common people inhabited.

It was afternoon when he came to the willow-stump throne and sat down
upon it. The sky was thronged with stately clouds--phantom mountains,
with castles on their tops--castles wherein Raymond's fancy had often
dwelt. The air was soft and warm, sweet with fragrance of lilac and
apple-blossoms, and bright with bird-songs. The bending willows swept
the river surface with slender green ringers, startling the trout and
grayling that quivered and darted in the pools and shallows. Life and
beauty and happiness were everywhere; and far to the eastward, piled
high against the horizon, rose the white marble walls and towers of
mighty London. They looked less real than the clouds. Sunlight
sparkled on the gilded domes, and cast afar the tender purple shadows
of royal palaces. And amidst green meadow-banks, and past gleaming
wharves populous with delicate masts and rainbow sails, swept the
azure curves of the translucent Thames towards the fair city. London
was, indeed, at this time, the most magnificent city in the world; and
Camelot, which was built hundreds of years afterwards, was never
anything to compare with it. What wonder, then, if Raymond eyed its
distant splendours with some regret, remembering that they were lost
to him for ever?

'But I have Rosamund,' he murmured to himself.

'So much the more fool you!' spoke a metallic voice close behind him.

Raymond looked round. Whence had come that grotesque figure which was
standing within a couple of yards of him, and which gazed at him with
an expression at once so quizzical and so penetrating? Had he ever
seen it before? No--and yet--had he?

The figure was that of a man about three feet high, with a body shaped
like a sack of potatoes, supported by short and crooked legs that bent
beneath its weight. The arms were so long that the hands (like great
curved claws) hung down nearly to the ground; and the fingers made a
continual movement as if clutching something. The head of this
creature was large, and had no neck; the nose was aquiline, the eyes
bright and sharp. On the chin was a pointed beard, and a pair of long
moustachios curled up over the cheekbones. The creature was dressed in
rich and costly clothes, which, however, bore an unaccountable
resemblance to Raymond's own threadbare attire. On the head was a
yellow cap, apparently made of woven gold, which glowed and sparkled
in the sunlight. Certainly there was something familiar about that cap
and those moustachios!

'Where did you come from?' Raymond asked.

'I was here before you,' replied the dwarf.

'I saw no one.'

'People do overlook me sometimes,' rejoined the other, with a chuckle;
'but they are more apt to spend their lives in trying to find me. Once
in a great while I appear without being asked--as I do now!'

'Where have I seen you before?'

'Ask yourself.'

'Who are you?'

The dwarf made a low bow. 'I am an Appanage of Royalty!' said he.

'Then it was you who brought the King's silk stocking to be washed!
But were you not a great deal taller then than now?'

'What of that? Were not you a great deal shorter?'

'That is true,' murmured Raymond, struck by the justness of the
remark.

'True as gold!' added the dwarf, with another chuckle. 'And so you
want to go to London?' he continued suddenly.

Raymond started. 'I have been thinking of it,' he said; 'but now----'

'Nonsense! You want to go now as much as before you went to the
Brindled Cow, and I am the only person in the world that can help you
do it.'

'But how did you know----'

'Pooh! I know everything. Weren't you thinking of me at the very
moment you kissed her? There--no more words! Are you ready to start?
Speak up.'

But Raymond drew back, startled and mystified. Seeing this, the dwarf
altered his tone, and from being abrupt and overbearing became
friendly and familiar.

'Come, my dear boy,' he said, laying his great claw on Raymond's arm.
'Men must be men; we mustn't let ourselves be ordered about by a
parcel of women. Would you let a few kisses and keepsakes stand in the
way of your ambition? How many years has she waited for you? Let her
wait twenty-four hours longer. Besides, if you don't go now you will
never go at all. Rosamond--trust me--will like you none the less when
she sees you the greatest man in England. Come, now. I can put in
your hands a power before which the whole world bows: will you take it
or not? I shan't offer it twice.'

Now, Raymond had a secret suspicion that something was wrong in all
this; for why should a stranger be so anxious to confer an inestimable
boon upon him? And yet London was but seven miles off. He could get
back that very night if need be. It would be a pity to lose this
chance after having waited for it so long. It could do no harm; it was
worth trying. 'I think I will,' passed through Raymond's mind.

'I knew you would!' exclaimed the dwarf at once, as if Raymond had
spoken aloud. 'But we must lose no time, for you must be in London by
five; that is the hour when the Seven Brethren assemble. So--off with
your doublet!'

'Why must I take my doublet off?'

'To exchange with me. Mine is the same as yours--the only difference
is in the lining. Try it.'

'But it's too small,' objected Raymond.

'It will fit whomsoever is lucky enough to get it,' said the dwarf,
wagging his big head confidently. 'Let me help you--first this
arm--then this--and there you are.' And there Raymond was, sure
enough, as neatly fitted as if he had been to the Court tailor.

'And now, my dear Raymond,' continued the dwarf affably, 'I must
trouble you to carry me across the ford. One--two--and there we are!'
And before the astonished young man had time to remonstrate his new
friend had sprang upon his shoulders, wound his long arms about his
neck, and was urging him into the water.

Well, it would not be so much of a job to carry over so small a
creature, Raymond thought. Besides, since putting on the dwarf's
doublet he had felt less his own master than before. If his soul were
still his own his doublet was not; and a very small compromise of
freedom sometimes goes a long way. So Raymond (like his contemporary
Sindbad the Sailor) set forth meekly with his burden on his back.

The River Thames was, in those days, very clear and transparent, with
a sandy bottom, and with frequent shallows or fords. The Honeymead
ford was reckoned an especially good one; and Raymond, expecting an
easy passage, stepped into the eddying current with confidence.

But before he had gone far he thought there must be a mistake
somewhere: either he was not so strong as he had supposed or else the
dwarf was uncommonly heavy. Twice or thrice he staggered and almost
lost his footing. By the time he had got to the middle of the stream
every muscle in his body ached, his legs trembled under him, and the
sweat stood on his forehead. The water, too, rose high above his
waist, and seemed to flow with unusual swiftness. If he had been
carrying a sack of gold on his shoulders, instead of a dwarf, it could
not have felt heavier.

'You're not tired?' asked the dwarf, as Raymond laid hold of a rock
that rose partly out of the water and panted as if his lungs would
burst.

'What on earth are you made of?' gasped the young man.

'Of all things conducive to worldly prosperity,' said the other, with
his odd metallic chuckle. 'But now, as we are at the middle of the
river, let us settle the terms of our bargain. I will give you my
cap--you have wanted it ever since that day in the washing-room--in
exchange for yours.' Having made this exchange (which Raymond was, of
course, powerless to prevent his doing, even had he been so inclined),
the dwarf continued: 'You now possess the most precious talisman in
the world. By making a proper use of that cap you may reach any height
of fortune. Does it fit you comfortably?'

'Not at all!' cried Raymond: 'it makes my head ache. Take it off
again.'

'Pooh! my good Raymond, is not unbounded wealth worth a headache?
Besides, you will get used to it after a while. Meantime listen to
this couplet, which contains much wisdom in small space:--

  Cap on--cap and knee!
  Cap off--who is he?

Can you remember that?'

'What if I can?' groaned Raymond, clinging to the rock. 'We shall both
be drowned in another minute!'

'Not at all,' answered the dwarf with composure. 'My left foot is a
trifle wet; but what of that? By-the-by, I shall be passing through
Honeymead again this evening; shall I drop in at the Brindled Cow and
tell Rosamund that you are all right?'

'I am not all right. I wish I were at the Brindled Cow myself.'

'Tut! tut! Ambition should not be so easily damped. Well, I'll make a
point of calling on the young lady. But, stay; I must carry some token
to prove that I am an authorised messenger. What shall it be? Ah! this
will do--this half of a spade guinea that you wear at your neck.
Permit me to remove it,' And he began to fumble with the silken
string.

'Stop! that is my betrothal pledge--you can't have that!' cried
Raymond, putting up his hand to withhold the dwarf's claw.

'And who was it gave it to you, in the first place, I should like to
know?' exclaimed the dwarf tartly. 'Fie! have you so little confidence
in your friends? It is for your own good that I must have the token.
Give it me at once.'

The place in which this discussion was carried on was so inconvenient
to Raymond, he was getting so exhausted, both in body and mind, and
the dwarf had spoken the last sentence so imperiously, that Raymond
thought he had better yield. Moreover, the yellow cap squeezed his
brain just in those places where the proper arguments lay, and thus
prevented his using them. The end of it was that he said--

'I suppose you'd better take it, but----'

He never finished his sentence. The dwarf whipped the silken string
over his head, and the golden pledge was gone. The next moment Raymond
was floundering headlong in the stream. How he reached the opposite
bank he never knew--he seemed to be under the water half the time. At
last he got his hands on a bush growing beside the margin and pulled
himself out.

Where was the dwarf? He had vanished. Had he fallen off and been
drowned? What was that echo of a metallic chuckle in the air? Raymond
groaned and pressed his hands to his aching head, on which the yellow
cap stuck fast.




CHAPTER IV.

THE TALISMAN.


After a while he got up and looked about him. The river was much
swollen, and was hurrying past its banks with such fury that it was
useless to think of returning as he had come. No, he must go on. His
head was confused, so that he could not think clearly about Honeymead,
and still less about Rosamund. She seemed far away and indistinct. Did
she love him? Did he love her? At all events, it was better to fix his
mind on London now. He looked thither, but the clouds had gathered
over the sky, and the sunlight no longer gleamed upon the golden
pinnacles. The city did not seem so alluring as from the other side of
the river. However, time was flying, and London was seven miles away.
Raymond set forth.

By and by he came to a milestone, on which he sat down to rest, and to
wonder how he was to make his fortune in London when he got there. It
was true that he had a talisman, but how was that to help him? A
yellow cap! It was, indeed, woven of golden thread, and might be sold
for a guinea; but a guinea was not a kingdom. Meanwhile the cap made
his head ache so that he pulled it off. It was certainly a fine cap.
It was lined with the best yellow satin, and a peacock's feather was
stuck in the band. On the band some letters were embroidered. Raymond
spelt them out, and found that they made the following couplet:--

  Cap on--cap and knee!
  Cap off--who is he?

It was the same that the dwarf had repeated to him in the river. What
did it mean? The dwarf had said it was full of wisdom; but Raymond had
never been much in the way of wisdom, and perhaps might fail to
recognise it when he saw it. He could not even be sure whether it were
better wisdom to put the cap on again or to keep it off. He was
inclined to keep it off. His head felt much clearer so; he was able to
think lovingly of Rosamund once more, and he longed to see her again.
What if some harm came to her in his absence? Might not that half of
the spade guinea give the dwarf some power over her? He rose to his
feet full of anxiety, and looked back towards Honeymead. Through a
break in the clouds the sun lit up the little village; the cottages
showed clearly in the warm light; and amongst them, with its thatched
and gabled roof, and with the great lime-trees standing over it, was
the Brindled Cow. Rosamund was there, no doubt, wondering where her
Raymond was. Now, perhaps, the dwarf was coming in, with the
half-guinea round his neck. What if he were to assert that he was the
true Raymond, showing the token in proof thereof? When this thought
came into Raymond's mind he started up from the milestone, resolved to
go back to Honeymead without the loss of an instant. How blind and
stupid he had been! Was not Rosamund more precious than a kingdom, or
than all the money in the Bank of England? Of course she was!

But just as Raymond's eyes were sparkling with good resolutions, and
one foot advanced on the way back to the Brindled Cow, he heard a
flourish of trumpets, hautboys, and cymbals, and, behold! a splendid
cavalcade advancing towards him on the way to London. In front rode a
company of knights in glittering armour; then came a long array of
men-at-arms, squires, and attendants, gorgeously attired; then more
knights, riding two-and-two; then a body of courtiers, and in the
midst of these, borne upon the shoulders of some of them, a platform
draped in cloth of gold. Upon the platform was a chair of carved
ivory, and in the chair sat a man with a long white beard falling over
his breast, and an ermine mantle on his shoulders. One foot rested on
a golden footstool, thereby showing a fine silk stocking with
embroidered clocks. The sight of that stocking made Raymond's heart
beat.

By this time the vanguard of knights had reached the milestone beside
which Raymond was standing. As they passed they glanced at him
contemptuously. This annoyed him, for he was used to think well of
himself, and the Honeymead people treated him with consideration. But
if the knights looked contemptuous, the men-at-arms and attendants
jeered and made mouths at him; and as for the pages they mocked and
bantered him unmercifully.

'Here's an odd fish!' cried one, pointing with his finger.

'He's lost his way trying to swim on land!' laughed another.

'A scaly fellow--let's skin him and clean him!' called out a third.

'How much are you a pound, fish?' asked a fourth.

'Bah! he's stale already!' shouted a fifth.

'What's that in his right fin?--a human cap and feather, I declare!'
exclaimed a sixth.

'Take it away from him!' cried several together; and one spurred his
horse towards the young man and reached forth the point of his lance,
as if to catch the cap from Raymond's hand.

But Raymond, though a minute ago he was almost ready to throw the cap
away, was not going to submit to being robbed of it. He caught the
lance by the shaft and jerked it from the page's grasp; then, putting
the cap firmly on his head, he stood on his guard boldly, with the
weapon advanced.

Why was the laugh with which the other pages had begun to greet their
companion's mishap checked so suddenly? Why was every eye bent upon
Raymond with an expression of respect and subservience? Why did all
salute him so profoundly, bowing to their saddles in silent homage?
What did this sudden change mean? It could not be that they were awed
by the bold front he had shown; it was more likely that this was but a
new way of making fun of him. And yet it was odd that all should have
joined in it unanimously and at an instant's notice. What did it all
mean?

The pages passed on, and the second company of knights followed.
Strange! they also seemed to have taken up the jest, for one and all
made deep obeisance to Raymond as they passed. And now came on the
courtiers, bearing aloft the platform on which sat the majestic figure
in the pink silk stockings. Raymond began to feel alarmed. If this
were (as he more than suspected) his Majesty King Ormund himself, what
punishment would be inflicted for the audacious crime of disarming one
of his Majesty's bodyguard? To lose his head was the least he might
expect. There could be no doubt that Raymond was alarmed, for he
actually forgot to uncover his head in the presence of his sovereign.
There he stood, upright and pale, with the spear in his hand, the
yellow cap on his head, and his eyes fixed upon the king.

The courtiers saw him. There was a flutter and a murmuring amongst
them; one of them said something to the King, at which he gave a
start.

'Now for it!' thought Raymond. He moved his head a little--perhaps he
would not have the power of moving it much longer. He wondered how it
would look when it was off his shoulders.

The King now leaned forward in his ivory chair and gazed at Raymond
intently. Then he gave an order to those about him, and the platform
was lowered to the ground by those who carried it. The King stepped
from it and came straight towards Raymond, the crowd falling back on
either side. How strange! instead of frowning his Majesty wore a very
cordial smile. He was close up to Raymond now; he was throwing his
royal arms about his neck; he was kissing him heartily on both
cheeks; he was saying, 'It delights our heart to see thee.
Welcome--welcome to England!'

'What, in the name of wonder, is the meaning of it all?' said Raymond
to himself.




CHAPTER V.

THE KING'S FAVOUR.


When it became evident that King Ormund, instead of cutting off
Raymond's head, was treating him like a younger brother, Raymond began
to pluck up spirit. 'Possibly I look like some friend of his,' he
thought; and he resolved to make the most of the mistake, keeping his
eyes open for the first chance of escape.

Meanwhile the King overwhelmed him with attentions, and even insisted
upon his sitting beside him in the ivory chair; and the courtiers who
had to carry this double weight, instead of looking discontented,
smiled as if Raymond had been loading them with benefits instead of
with himself. The procession now swept onward, and the King himself
had hardly more honour than the washerwoman's son. In his wildest
dreams Raymond had never anticipated making such a brilliant entry
into London as this.

And had he given up the idea of going back to Honeymead? Yes; and he
had almost forgotten that there was such a place. The Brindled Cow and
Rosamund were like visions of the past which did not much concern him.
His yellow cap was the thing that most troubled him, for it pained his
head badly. If he had been alone he would have taken it off; but in
such fine company he was unwilling to be seen without the handsomest
part of his attire.

All this time the King had been talking to him in the most
confidential and familiar way imaginable.

'My dear fellow,' he said, 'your arrival is most timely. To-morrow
would have been too late. It is most kind of you.'

'I rejoice to be of service----'

'Service, my friend! Such a word between you and me? Never!
Counsel--support--sympathy--such as one potentate may claim from
another--these I expect from you. But let me explain to you exactly
how the case stands. In the first place, I feel that I am getting
old.'

After saying this the King paused as if for a reply. Raymond had never
known what it was to pay a compliment in his life; but now something
prompted him to say, with a smile and a bow--

'Not at all. Your Majesty is, to all intents and purposes, as young as
I am.'

'Ah, it is very good of you to say that,' sighed his Majesty, looking
highly gratified. 'But I really am old--older than you would suppose;
and, if you can believe it, some of my scoundrelly subjects have said
(behind my back) that I am growing senile--that is the word the
villains use--and they are plotting to dethrone me at ten o'clock
to-morrow morning.'

'A conspiracy?'

'Nothing less. It is announced to take place at Drury Lane Theatre,
and the house is sold, from pit to gallery.'

'Oh! it is only a play, then?' said Raymond, in a relieved tone.

'I don't know what you mean by a play,' returned the King, looking
slightly hurt. 'It takes place on the stage, of course; but it is as
much earnest as anything that goes on in London.'

'Certainly--of course,' said Raymond, anxious not to seem ignorant of
fashionable customs. 'But whom do the conspirators mean to put on the
throne in your stead? Your son?'

'My Assimund, you mean? Well, that is just the point. My son Assimund
is a perfectly harmless young fellow, but--in fact--he is rather too
much so.'

'Too much so?'

'Yes--he is--as I might say--hum!' And the King tapped his forehead
significantly.

'You don't mean------' And Raymond laid his forefinger between his
eyes and then shook it in the air.

'Fact, I assure you.'

'Dear me, how sad!'

'So now you see what I am driving at,' added the King more briskly.

'Well, I hardly--that is----'

'Briefly, then, the part of the usurper has not yet been given out.
But I have reigned fifty years, and, between you and me, I'm tired of
it. This crown of mine'--the King laid his hand upon the diadem he
wore--'often gives me a headache. Ah, I see you understand that.
You've felt the same yourself?'

'Why, something of the sort, I confess,' said Raymond, settling his
yellow cap on his brow.

'Bless you! what monarch has not? But you are young and hearty--you
can stand it. So here is my plan: I decline to submit to force,
because the precedent would be dangerous; but I am willing to
abdicate. That is my counter-move--my rival attraction, as the stage
manager would say. But, if it is to succeed, there is no time to be
lost; the posters must be got out at once.'

'Yes, I agree with you,' said Raymond, who was now quite bewildered.

'I was sure I might count on your aid. It is settled, then. As soon as
we reach town I will arrange with the advertising agent that your name
shall appear upon the bills as my successor in the largest type.'

'I?' cried Raymond, jumping up, and almost oversetting the ivory
chair.

'Bless me! what's the matter? Who else but you?'

Raymond sat down again quite dumb-foundered. He a king! It had been
the ambition of his life, but now that it was so near being realised
he found himself unprepared. Some kinds of good luck are better to
look forward to than to have. However, since it seemed inevitable,
Raymond was bound to put a good face upon it. Probably he would have a
prime minister to give him some hints at starting.

'I shall be happy to make myself of use,' he said politely. 'But I
must tell you that it is some time since I governed a kingdom, and I
may be a little out of practice.'

'Oh, never mind that,' returned the King, stroking his beard. 'In an
absolute monarchy like this the sovereign is responsible to no one. Do
as you like; it saves trouble and expense too.'

Raymond smiled, and tried to look at ease. But he resolved to make one
more effort to get time for looking about him.

'It will not be best, I suppose, to enter upon my duties at once?' he
said. 'The people will have to accustom themselves to the change,
and----'

'Nothing of the sort,' interrupted the King. 'I don't believe in too
much playing to the pit and gallery, especially when the stalls are
inclined to be disorderly. Make your hit with the executioner's axe,
if need be. Don't mince matters--it is better to mince _them_.'

'But are you really so willing to part with your crown? It looks quite
as comfortable as my cap feels,' sighed Raymond. They were now within
sight of the city gates, and he was feeling rather nervous.

'Do you think so? Suppose you try it on?' said the good-natured
monarch, taking his crown off. 'Come, off with your cap!'

Raymond doffed his cap, thrust it into the front of his doublet, and
put out his hands to take the crown which the King held towards him.

But as he did so he noticed a singular change come over his Majesty's
heretofore jolly visage. The eyes of the venerable potentate opened
wider and wider until they were broader than they were long; his
forehead wrinkled, and his nostrils expanded. His face from red became
crimson, and from crimson purple; and he shook all over.

'Who are you, fellow?' he roared out in a terrible voice. 'How did you
get up here? Ho! guards! seize this insolent varlet and cut off his
head this moment!'

There was no time to think twice. Raymond sprang to his feet,
overturning the ivory chair as he did so, so that his transparent
Majesty King Ormund fell off to the platform, which trembled at the
shock. The fifty courtiers who supported it staggered and lost their
footing, and the whole affair came to the ground with a tremendous
crash, landing the King in a mud-puddle, and splashing his transparent
stockings all over with mire.

Taking advantage of the dismay and confusion thus brought about,
Raymond dodged between the legs of a gigantic guard who was on the
point of clutching him, butted his head into the stomach of a second,
who in falling upset a third, over whom a fourth and fifth stumbled;
and, having by this time got to the brink of the broad and deep ditch
beside the road, he crossed it with a flying leap, plunged into the
bushes on the further side, and made such good use of his legs that in
two or three minutes he was beyond the reach of pursuit.




CHAPTER VI.

DONKEY-BACK.


Raymond ran on without paying attention to the way he was going so
long as it was away from King Ormund and his company. By and by he
came to another road, narrower than the one he had left, but leading
also towards the city. There was a heap of stones on the roadside, and
on this Raymond sat down to think over his adventure.

It was a puzzle, whichever way he looked at it. Had the King been
making game of him all along? No, his Majesty had without doubt looked
upon him as a person of consequence. But if so, what had so suddenly
undeceived him?

'The dwarf must be at the bottom of it,' said Raymond to himself.

But how? The dwarf had given him the cap and promised him the kingdom.
He had been very near getting the kingdom; but the cap had only given
him a headache. He pulled it out of his doublet and looked at it.

Yes, it was a fine cap. But Raymond had got to feel such a dislike of
it that, had he owned another, he would have thrown this away. But it
would never do to make his entrance into London bareheaded.

'But why should I go to London at all?' Raymond asked himself. 'I
don't really want to be a king: I only like to think about being one.
Shall I go back to the Brindled Cow and Rosamund? Yes, I will!' And
with that he got up, put on his cap, and took two or three steps in
the direction of Honeymead.

'But what an ass I should be,' he said, stopping short, 'to turn back
at the very gates of London! Besides, it is too late to get back to
Honeymead to-night. I won't return before to-morrow. Something may
happen after all.'

He faced about once more towards London.

'It is an odd thing,' he remarked to himself as he went along, 'how I
keep changing my mind first one way and then another. Why is it? It
used not to be so when I was in Honeymead. It almost seems as if I
were not the same fellow; or as if I were sometimes myself, and
sometimes somebody else. I believe there must be something of that
kind the matter with me,' he continued after a while. 'Look how those
courtiers treated me. They were all cap and knee to me one moment, and
the next they were all shouting out "Who is he? Cap and knee--who is
he?" Hullo! I have an idea! It is--it isn't--can it be--the cap?'

He snatched it off his head, and round the band he read again the
couplet that had mystified him before:--

  Cap on--cap and knee!
  Cap off--who is he?

The words began to have a meaning now. Fairies and magic spells were
at that time common-place matters in England. Fairy stories were not
written then, but the events they tell about used to happen. The dwarf
himself had called the cap a talisman. 'I will try the experiment with
the next person I see,' said Raymond to himself.

The words were scarcely out of his mouth when a noise of pattering
hoofs made him look round, and he saw a young fellow riding towards
him on the extreme end of a small donkey. Raymond stood in the middle
of the road, his cap in his hand.

'Get out of the way, you!' called out the rider as he drew near. 'I'm
going to the Seven Brethren. Now then, stupid!'

'I also am in a hurry to get to London,' said Raymond politely.
'Couldn't you give me a ride there?'

'Mind your eye, numskull!' cried the other; and he tried to drive his
donkey directly over Raymond. But Raymond caught the bridle, and at
the same time put on his cap. Everything depended on what the
donkey-rider did next.

Greatly to Raymond's gratification--though it half-frightened him
too--the fellow immediately slipped backwards over his donkey's tail;
and, having reached the ground, made an awkward but obsequious salute.

'Beg your Worship's pardon humbly!' said he, ducking his head and
scraping his foot at every few words. 'Didn't know your Worship at
first. Hope your Worship will pardon a poor lad whose intellects are
not quite right.'

Indeed, the fellow appeared only half-witted. He had round goggle
eyes, a silly mouth, and scarcely any forehead at all.

As for Raymond he felt more like hugging the fellow than merely
pardoning him; but he remembered that he must keep up his dignity.
Moreover, he now perceived that the wearing of the cap made almost as
much change in his own feelings as in other people's opinion of him.

'I will overlook your mistake,' he said condescendingly; 'and in proof
of it I will make use of your donkey as far as the city; for I am
weary, and there is not much time to lose.'

'Indeed, then, your Worship, he's not fit for a gentleman like your
Worship to be riding on,' replied the fellow, ducking again; 'but, if
your Worship doesn't mind, I should be proud to see your Worship
sitting on him; and he'll carry your Worship well.'

Raymond mounted accordingly, and the party proceeded on their way, the
fellow trotting behind, and occasionally persuading the donkey with
the oaken cudgel he carried. Meanwhile Raymond asked him some
questions.

'You are going to the Seven Brethren?'

'Yes, your Worship. There are good things there, as your Worship
knows.'

'How should I know?'

'La! as if I couldn't see that your Worship was one of them himself!'

'It must be the same Seven Brethren of which the dwarf spoke,' thought
Raymond; and he said aloud, 'They meet to-night at five o'clock, I
think?'

'Right, your Worship. And your Worship may trust me. "Yellow-cap" is
the password, "seven" the number, and "five" the time. Isn't it, your
Worship?'

Raymond felt much obliged by this information, though he was careful
not to say so. When they came to the city gates he slipped off the
donkey at a moment when the other was not looking, at the same time
removing his cap; when he had the pleasure of seeing the fellow turn
to him and ask him whether he had seen 'his Worship?' Raymond only
shook his head in reply; and then, following the donkey and its owner
at a distance, he presently saw them turn into a narrow archway.




CHAPTER VII.

THE DARK PASSAGE.


Raymond crossed over to the opposite side of the road, in order to
take a look at the house to which the archway belonged. It was a
little old-fashioned inn, squeezed in between two tall houses, like a
shabby dwarf between two respectable giants. Over the door hung a
sign--a painting of a man with seven heads. They were ugly faces, all
of them, each with its peculiar kind of ugliness, and Raymond felt a
separate kind of dislike towards each one. Nevertheless (as might have
been expected, seeing that there was but one body between them) they
bore a sort of family likeness one to another. 'That must be a very
wicked body,' Raymond thought; 'it must be capable of committing all
the seven deadly sins at once.' It was thick and shapeless, with short
crooked legs, and very long arms. Underneath was written, '_The Seven
Brethren_.'

As he stood in the shadow on the opposite side of the street, with his
cap under his arm, Raymond felt half-minded not to enter the inn which
hung out so uninviting a sign. How different were these faces from
those of Armand, Dorimund, Sigismund, and the rest of the rosy young
farmers who drank milk at the Brindled Cow! Should he go back there
even now? There he would be sure of a welcome: he was not sure of a
welcome here. Raymond hesitated. But before he could make up his mind
the barmaid of the Seven Brethren appeared at the door of the inn. She
soon espied him where he stood, and smiled and beckoned to him.

'Come over, come over, my lad,' she said; 'it's just upon supper-time,
and there's a chop on the gridiron, and a draught of brown ale I'll
draw for you. Come; you look right hungry.'

Her voice and look made Raymond's heart beat, for, in a certain way,
they were like Rosamund's. And yet they were unlike. She had eyes like
Rosamund's, but the expression in them was one which Rosamund never
wore. Her manner of speaking, too, resembled Rosamund's. Yet Rosamund
had never spoken in quite that tone. Raymond hardly knew whether to be
pleased or shocked. After a little hesitation he put on his cap and
came across the street to her.

'Oh! my Lord, I'm sure I crave your pardon!' exclaimed the girl,
dropping him a curtsey. But though her words were humble Raymond
fancied he saw a mischievous sparkle in her eye which made him suspect
that she might be making fun of him. 'I didn't recognise your Lordship
in the shadow over there,' she continued, in a still softer voice.
'They have been expecting your Lordship.'

Now that Raymond was close to the girl she seemed much prettier than
before. 'What is your name?' he asked her.

'Silvia, please your Lordship.'

'Silvia--not Rosamund?'

'Oh, no, please your Lordship. Rosamund is such a vulgar name.'

'You are very pretty, Silvia.'

'Your Lordship is very good to say so,' replied she, casting down her
sparkling eyes and curtseying again.

'What is that round your neck, Silvia?'

'That is the half of a brass farthing, please your Lordship, that I
and my lover split between us this afternoon.'

'I thought it was the half of a spade guinea.'

'I'd be glad to exchange it for that,' said Silvia, looking up, with a
smile.

'Would you exchange your lover at the same time?'

'If the other was a handsome man,' said she, with a coquettish glance.
'But won't your Lordship come in? It's past five, I'm sure.'

'I will follow you,' said he. And they went in.

'Will your Lordship take my hand?' she said. 'The passage is very dark
and winding.' She put her hand in his as she spoke.

'Why is there no light here?' he asked.

'This passage can never be lighted, please your Lordship: the goblins
pinch out the wick of the candle with their fingers.'

'Are there goblins here?' said Raymond, drawing back.

'Keep hold of my hand, and they will do your Lordship no harm.'

'Does this passage belong to them?'

'Mind the steps, please your Lordship,' said Silvia suddenly. 'If you
were to lose me here you would never see light again.'

'How strange your voice sounds! Are you Silvia?'

'I am not Rosamund, at any rate!' replied his conductor, with a low
laugh. 'It's the vault of the passage makes my voice sound hoarse.'

'We must be a long way underground. And this darkness is like a block
of black marble. And I feel as if creatures were walking around me who
can see me though I cannot see them.'

'Their eyes are more used to the darkness than your Lordship's.'

'How far have we still to go?'

'Not far. I shall leave your Lordship at the next corner.'

'What am I to do then?'

No reply was made to this question. But in a few moments Raymond lost
his hold of the hand that had guided him, and a voice said, in a
whining tone--

'Won't your Lordship spare me a trifle for coming so far?'

'I--I'm afraid I have nothing to give,' said Raymond, putting his
hand in his empty pocket.

'A kiss is all I want from your Lordship,' answered the voice; and
then a pair of lips met Raymond's in the darkness. The lips were cold
as ice, but the breath that came between them was hot as flame.

Then all was silence. Had Raymond kissed one of the invisible goblins
instead of Silvia? Or was Silvia herself a goblin?

Be that as it might Raymond was left in an awkward situation. For all
he knew he was in the middle of an underground labyrinth; and the next
step might land him at the bottom of some pitfall. Raymond remembered
that long ago, when he was a small boy, his mother had once shut him
up in the dark closet behind the kitchen chimney, because he had made
a mud-pie on the ironing-board. That closet had seemed black enough,
but what was it compared with this? Besides, Rosamund had come after a
while and secretly let him out, and they had spent the afternoon
together in the barn. But Rosamund could never come to him here; and
that goblin kiss upon his lips had taken away his right to hope for
her.

While these thoughts had been passing through his mind he had been
slowly feeling his way forward; but all at once he was brought to a
stand by a sharp prick on the breast as if from the point of a
levelled spear.

'Who comes?' said a harsh voice.

'Only me,' replied Raymond in his most conciliating tone.

'Have you the password?' demanded the voice again.

Recollecting what the donkey-driver had told him, Raymond answered at
a venture--

'Yellow-cap!'

'Pass on, Yellow-cap!' said the voice.

He passed on, hoping that his wanderings were now to end. But after a
few steps he felt against his throat the smooth sharp edge of a sword,
which caused him to start back with a cry.

'Who comes?' said a snarling voice.

'Yellow-cap!' Raymond replied.

'The number, Yellow-cap?'

'Seven!' hazarded Raymond.

'Pass on, Seven!' said the voice.

Raymond stepped forward nervously, stumbled down an unexpected pair of
steps, and all in a moment there was a brilliant dazzle of light
close to his eyes. It vanished as suddenly as it came; but it had
given him a fleeting impression of many grisly faces pressing around
him on all sides, with fire-lit eyes all fixed upon his. On the
succeeding darkness, which seemed more intense than ever, the image of
these faces was still somehow discernible; while from amidst them came
a hissing voice, which said--

'Who comes?'

'Yellow-cap!'

'The number?'

'Seven!'

'The time?'

'Five!'

'Pass!' said the voice.

And immediately (though how it happened he could not tell) Raymond
found himself in a square, low-ceilinged, comfortable room, with a
large lamp burning in the centre of the table, around which were
seated six men, each with a long pipe in his mouth and a tankard of
ale before him.




CHAPTER VIII.

THE MAGIC EYE.


The six men arose, and each in turn, and then all together, uttered
the words--

'Welcome, Yellow-cap!'

Then he among them who had the biggest nose and the most sweeping
moustachios came forward, made Raymond a grave salute, and, taking him
by the arm, led him to a chair at the head of the table.

'The tale of the Seven Brethren is at last complete,' said he.

'Hear! hear!' gruffly responded the others.

'Brother Yellow-cap,' continued the first speaker, 'let me introduce
you to our Brotherhood. I am the Prime Maniac. He on your right is the
Chancellor of the Jingle. Next to him is the Home Doggerel. At the
foot of the table is the First Lord of the Seesaw. The Foreign
Doggerel is next on the left. Next again the Lord Privy Gander. One
and all of us are bound to aid you, abet you, and obey you, so long as
you own and wear the yellow cap. Once more, welcome, Yellow-cap!'

'Welcome!' chimed in the Brethren; and they raised their tankards to
their lips and emptied them at a draught.

'We do not call one another by our titles,' said the Lord Privy
Gander.

'Nor by our names,' added the Chancellor of the Jingle.

'Nor by our surnames,' pursued the Home Doggerel.

'But by our nicknames,' observed the Foreign Doggerel.

'By the mystic syllables repeated,' said the First Lord of the Seesaw.

Hereupon a curious ceremony took place. Beginning with the Lord Privy
Gander, and so on in regular order to the First Lord of the Seesaw,
each brother in rapid succession spoke his own nickname, with the
following result.

'Ruba!' said the Lord Privy Gander.

'Dubb!' said the Chancellor of the Jingle.

'Dubsix!' said the Home Doggerel.

'Menin!' said the Foreign Doggerel.

'Atub!' said the First Lord of the Seesaw.

'Gyp is my nickname,' remarked the Prime Maniac, 'because the verse
had not feet enough to go all round. Did you ever hear anything like
this before?'

'I fancied at one moment that I had; but now I don't know,' Yellow-cap
answered.

'There is only one inconvenience about it,' observed Ruba.

'We must always speak in order,' added Dubb.

'On pain of spoiling our metre,' put in Dubsix.

'And our rhyme,' continued Menin.

'Except Gyp,' added Atub, 'who can talk when he likes, and that is his
chief advantage.'

'It is an advantage in more ways than one,' Gyp remarked. 'Not only
can I talk when I like, but none of the others can say anything unless
all the rest are willing; because his speaking makes it necessary that
all the rest should have something to say, and that Ruba should begin.
The only laws that we recognise are metrical laws, and they, as you
know, are the strictest in the world.'

Yellow-cap felt rather bewildered; but he was glad to find that he
himself was not included in the metrical system. Some error in either
rhyme or rhythm would, he felt sure, have been the consequence.

'Let me order you a pipe and tankard,' continued Gyp, ringing the
bell. Somewhat to Yellow-cap's surprise Silvia appeared at the door in
answer to the summons. The pipe and the tankard were soon brought; and
the new-comer's health having then been drunk in ceremonious silence,
the formal part of his reception seemed to be at an end.

Meanwhile he had improved such opportunity as he had had for examining
the faces about him, and was not altogether astonished to find that
they were the originals of the many-headed portrait on the inn
signboard. Only the seventh (and central) head, the ugliest of all,
was missing; the Brethren, exclusive of himself, being only six in
number. Beer-drinking and tobacco-smoking seemed to be the business of
the meeting. Yellow-cap had never until this evening drunk anything
stronger than milk or smoked anything more dangerous than sweet-fern;
but the beer gave him courage for the tobacco, and he soon began to
feel at home.

'But can you tell me how I got here?' he inquired of Gyp, who sat
nearest him, and who, moreover, could answer without setting all the
feet running. 'The way was long and perilous and as black as pitch;
and yet, when the door was open just now, I could see right through
the house into the street, and it did not seem more than twelve
paces.'

'Did you come alone?' asked Gyp, puffing a long whiff of smoke up
towards the ceiling.

'Alone with Silvia.'

'Ah-h-h! Silvia sometimes leads the best of men astray. But you got
here at last, and that is more than many do. And you were but just in
time. The King prints his placards to-night.'

'What placards?' asked Yellow-cap innocently.

'Announcing his "successor"--a farce in one act.'

'And who is his successor?'

'Who would you like him to be?' inquired Gyp, smiling.

At this all the Brethren looked at one another and winked
mysteriously. Yellow-cap, who was fast becoming wise, and who knew
more about this matter than he cared to admit, could not help
wondering at his queer position--the Head of a Secret Society hostile
to the very monarch who had offered him his kingdom that same
afternoon. The thought of it made him feel quite hot; and he was so
far forgetting himself as to be on the point of taking off his cap to
cool his forehead, when Gyp caught his arm, and a murmur of horror ran
through the assembly.

'Forbear! as you value your credit!' cried Ruba.

'And your gentility!' exclaimed Dubb.

'And your influence!' called out Dubsix.

'And your success!' shouted Menin.

'And your reputation!' bawled Atub.

'It is against the first law of the Brotherhood,' added Ruba.

'We all have headaches,' asserted Dubb.

'We couldn't live without them,' declared Dubsix.

'Would you commit suicide?' demanded Menin.

'Be guilty of treason?' hiccoughed Atub, who had swallowed some smoke
the wrong way.

'Good gracious!' was all that poor Yellow-cap was able to reply.

'Allow me to explain,' interposed Gyp courteously. 'The Seven Brethren
are the outcome of an artificial civilisation. It is our strength and
also our weakness that we never seem to be what we are. Our laws are
binding because they are irrational. Our power is great because it is
an imposition. Our respectability is perfect because it is a fraud. We
gain our ends because our ends are ourselves. Our union is strong
because it depends on mutual distrust. In a word, we are the
Everlasting Unreality! Have you understood me?'

'Not in the least,' replied Yellow-cap.

''Tis well. No one of us understands either himself or his brother. He
who understands or is understood is anathema.'

'Dear me!' ejaculated Yellow-cap.

'You have heard of the cap of invisibility?'

'I believe so.'

'The yellow cap is more wondrous yet--it is only when you put it on
that you can be seen--at all events by the world.'

'Dear me!' ejaculated Yellow-cap again.

Hereupon all the Brethren twisted their moustachios, knocked the ashes
out of their pipes, refilled them, lighted them, and smoked in
silence.

'By the way,' said Yellow-cap at length, 'about the signboard outside
the inn-door. I recognise six of the portraits, but where is the
seventh? He was the one whose face was the most ugly and disagreeable
of all; but I don't see him here.'

'He is here,' said Ruba.

Yellow-cap was going to ask, 'Where?' but Gyp laid his hand upon his
arm and whispered in his ear that he must not interrupt until the
whole verse had run itself out.

'We have seen him,' continued Dubb.

'The likeness is good,' pronounced Dubsix.

'Flattering,' affirmed Menin.

'I can think of nothing to say,' confessed Atub.

'Come and look in our mirror,' said Gyp, taking Yellow-cap by the arm
and leading him to the end of the room.

Now, against the wall at this end hung a very odd specimen of a
looking-glass. Its surface was convex, and in shape it was neither
square, nor round, nor exactly oval, for it was pointed at both ends.
Its length was divided into three parts, of which the central one was
black, and those at the sides of a dull white like china. Altogether
it looked like a gigantic eye plucked from the forehead of some
Polyphemus; and hung up in the old inn-parlour, where, if it could no
longer see anything itself, it might at least give those who gazed
into it a distorted image of themselves.

When Yellow-cap, however, first fixed his eyes upon this curious
mirror he could see nothing but a profound depth of blackness; but in
the midst of this obscure movements were presently visible. By and by
the many wavering shapes grew clearer and drew near to one another
and, as it were, melted together, until at last a definite image stood
forth against the dark background.

A strange figure it was--of a short-legged, shapeless man, with no
less than seven heads upon his shoulders. Six of these Yellow-cap knew
at once; but the seventh--the central and most important one of
all--was unknown to him. And what an unpleasant set of features it
had, to be sure!

The whole company had gathered behind Yellow-cap, who was standing
directly in front of the mirror.

'You don't know him?' spoke the voice of Ruba.

'He knows you,' said Dubb.

'He is an old friend of yours,' remarked Dubsix.

'And a very dear one,' added Menin.

'And a very false one,' observed Atub.

'What does it all mean?' inquired Yellow-cap.

'If you will give yourself the trouble to lay your left finger beside
your nose it might inform you,' said Gyp courteously.

Yellow-cap did as he was desired. The reflection in the glass lifted
the corresponding finger and laid it beside the nose of no other than
the central head.

'Would you mind winking your left eye?' continued Gyp.

Yellow-cap did so. The central head alone winked back.

'Now you might stick out your tongue,' suggested Gyp.

Yellow-cap tried this experiment also: the seventh head was the only
one that imitated the gesture.

'This is absurd,' exclaimed Yellow-cap indignantly. 'The central head
imitates everything I do; it even pretends to look like me, which is
ridiculous, for it is ugly, while I am----'

'Perhaps you have never looked in a mirror before?' said Gyp gently.

'Yes, I have--in tin pans,' returned Yellow-cap warmly.

'Tin pans are untrustworthy,' said Gyp. 'This is the best mirror in
the world, and that is the reason why it is in the shape of an eye,
without any face belonging to it.'

'I should think you would be the last people in the world to want a
good mirror, or any mirror at all!' exclaimed Yellow-cap testily.

'We don't want it--and that is why we have it. We call it our eyesore;
and it is the eye of our destiny. Look again.'

'What is this?' muttered Yellow-cap. 'All the heads are melting into
one another; now they are all swallowed up in the central head; and
now that head looks more like me than ever, and yet uglier; and
now--why, it looks like the old dwarf I carried across the river,
and--which am I?'

He turned round, and, behold! the six Brethren were seated each one in
his place at the table, smoking and drinking as gravely as ever, and
looking as if they had never once stirred from their chairs. Glancing
back at the mirror, he saw that it had returned to its former
unreflecting condition, only a few vanishing shadows being yet visible
in its black depths.

'It certainly is different from a tin pan,' thought he as he went back
to his chair at the head of the table.

'Nothing more than an optical illusion,' said Gyp, filling
Yellow-cap's pipe from his own tobacco-pouch, and handing it to him
courteously. 'There is no harm in it--none at all.'

'Especially as it makes you our Head,' observed Ruba.

'I move we suspend the rules,' said Dubb.

'I second that motion,' said Dubsix.

'We mustn't put our feet into our business,' remarked Menin in an
explanatory way.

'The only rule we never suspend is the rule that no rule shall not
sometimes be suspended,' added Atub.

'So be it,' said Gyp agreeably. 'The metrical system is hereby
suspended for the rest of the evening. Have another tankard of ale,
Brother Yellow-cap?'

'I don't care if I do--with a Head on it,' returned Yellow-cap,
putting an emphasis on the 'Head.' And when the ale was brought he
arose, with a frown on his brow, and spoke to them in a bold voice as
follows:--

'Yes, I am your Head, for no one of you is so unreal as I. When I was
a little boy I sat blowing soap-bubbles, and saw the Appanage of
Royalty appear amidst the clouds of the wash-tub. He promised me this
cap, and now the cap is mine. I have paid for it all I had in the
world, and now I mean to get my profit out of it. You have waited for
me: I have never waited for you; for I could succeed without you; but,
without me, you would be nothing!'

'Hear! hear!' exclaimed the Brethren in chorus, seeming much pleased
with Yellow-cap's eloquence.

'Now, Brother Gyp, you may state the object of this meeting,' said
Yellow-cap, resuming his seat.

Gyp bowed and pulled a roll of parchment out of Brother Dubsix's
pocket, which was written all over with musical notes in the bass and
treble clefs.

'The object is a twofold one,' he began.

'I object to that expression,' interrupted Dubb.

'Why?' demanded Gyp in a mortified tone.

'Only for the sake of speaking out of metre,' replied Dubb; at which
the Brethren looked at one another and lifted their eyebrows.

'Well, at all events,' said Gyp, recovering his good-humour, 'we want
to get the King out and put the usurper in his place.'

'Has anything been done to prepare the people for this change?'
inquired Yellow-cap. 'Are they on our side?'

'We've got fifty paid _claqueurs_--I know that,' said Atub.

'And we have suspended the rule about full-dress in the stalls,' added
Dubsix.

'Ah!' exclaimed Menin, nodding his head and crossing his feet on the
table in republican style, 'there is a great deal in that.'

'How are you going to depose him?' Yellow-cap asked.

'In the usual way,' said Gyp: 'by finding a rhyme to him, and then
putting him under foot.'

'But suppose he won't be deposed?'

'Ah, it will be our turn then,' said Ruba gloomily. 'He will appoint a
successor, and we shall be repeated backwards.'

At this all the Brethren curled their moustachios and sighed deeply.

'Who is to find the rhyme to "King Ormund?"' inquired Yellow-cap, to
whom this affair began to look rather irregular.

'Who but the usurper?' cried all the Brethren together.

'And who is he?' said Yellow-cap.

Hereupon the Brethren one and all took their pipes out of their mouths
and deliberately pointed at Yellow-cap with their pipe-stems. At the
same time they puffed out a vast cloud of tobacco-smoke, which rose
to the ceiling of the room and collected there.

'Do you mean me?' cried Yellow-cap, recoiling. 'I never made a rhyme
in my life.'

'You have said it!' they answered with one voice; 'so let it be!'

At this moment they all arose and solemnly emptied their tankards;
then they piled the tankards together in the centre of the table; and
Dubsix and Atub, taking each an arm of Yellow-cap, raised him from the
floor and seated him upon the pile as upon a throne.

The six Brethren now joined hands and began to dance round and round
the table, puffing volumes of smoke from their pipes as they went.
Faster and wilder moved the dance, thicker and yellower whirled the
smoke-wreaths, and the six faces sped dizzily round the table, until
it seemed to Yellow-cap as if he were encircled by a great ring of
face, with one broad nose, one endless grinning mouth, and a single
leering eye in the forehead.

By and by the room began to spin round also--such, at least, was
Yellow-cap's impression. Round and round it spun like a teetotum,
moving as fast as the dancers did, but in the opposite direction. The
smoke, driven together by these contrary motions, was whirled into a
sort of hollow dome over Yellow-cap's head. The yellow light from the
lamp shone upon that smoky dome, and its shape became defined more and
more distinctly, until at last it hung poised in air--a gigantic image
of the very yellow cap which Yellow-cap wore.

Gradually it settled down lower and lower, as if to shut him in. He
tried to rise from his tankard throne, but a heavy weight from above
seemed to prevent him. And now, glaring upon him through the maze of
flying phantoms, he saw the mirror of the Brethren, no longer black
and lifeless, but fierce and flaming as the eye of a giant demon. And
through the centre of that fiery pupil he saw the Brethren, one after
another, take a flying leap; not vanishing suddenly, but dwindling
away, smaller and smaller, until they could be seen no more. Each as
he leaped threw back at Yellow-cap a malicious leer and beckoned to
him mockingly to follow. Gyp was the last; and as he sprang Yellow-cap
wrenched himself from his throne--which fell behind him with a
crash--and strove to follow.

But the yellow cap of stifling smoke came down upon him and shut him
in. He sank downwards, choking and gasping; and he heard, ringing
through the heated air, a sound of laughter that reminded him of
Silvia.




CHAPTER IX.

ON THE STAGE.


Yellow-cap opened his eyes, which felt dry and hot. It was indeed
Silvia, who was laughing, and bidding him wake up, for it was past
eight o'clock in the morning. And where had Yellow-cap passed the
night? Underneath the table in the inn parlour, where that
extraordinary meeting of the Seven Brethren had taken place. As
Yellow-cap got slowly to his feet he pressed both hands to his head,
which felt like a newly-roasted chestnut, with the kernel loose
inside; but the yellow cap was still fast about his brows. He longed
to take it off and put his head under the pump; but that luxury, he
knew, was now and hereafter forbidden him.

'Where are the other fellows?' he asked, turning to Silvia. 'They
jumped through the fiery eye----'

'Through what, your Lordship?' cried Silvia, opening her eyes very
wide.

'Through that,' said Yellow-cap, pointing to the end of the room where
the mysterious mirror hung. But, to his great perplexity, there was to
be seen there only a very common-place old looking-glass, made in
three compartments, and mounted in a tarnished frame. In the light of
the morning sun, which was pouring through the dusty window-panes, it
looked not at all like an eye, and it was absurd to suppose that
anybody could have jumped through it.

'Things always look so different in the morning,' remarked Silvia
good-humouredly. 'But, if it please your Lordship, I am sent by the
Brethren to say that they are waiting for you in the front room.'

Yellow-cap felt not at all in the mood to lead a conspiracy; but still
he tried to put a good face upon the matter. 'Lead on!' said he; and
Silvia opened the door and went before him across a small enclosed
yard to another door, on which she tapped; and Yellow-cap, passing in,
found himself once more in the presence of his six friends. They were
eating devilled bones, and were dressed in long white dominoes. Each
had a playbook beside his plate, and they were apparently studying
their parts for the morning performance.

'Good morning! Fine day for the deposition,' said Gyp, acting as
spokesman for the rest. 'Have a bone?'

'I have no appetite,' replied Yellow-cap. 'Why are you all dressed in
white?'

'So that we may be the blacker inside,' said Ruba, looking up from his
book.

'It is the court-dress of conspirators,' added Dubb.

'We are clothed in the unwritten pages of history,' continued Dubsix.

'We shall be red hereafter,' said Menin, archly.

'Because we rose against the tyrant,' concluded Atub, with a sigh.

'They are apt to be rather stupid at this hour in the morning,'
remarked Gyp, turning to Yellow-cap, 'but they will get warmed to it
presently. May I ask whether you are perfect in your part?'

'I have not thought of any rhyme to "Ormund,"' said Yellow-cap.

'Any rhyme will do,' Gyp went on; 'and perhaps the Home or the
Foreign Doggerel will be able to help you to one when the time comes.'

'Brethren,' said Yellow-cap, clearing his throat, 'I propose we put
off this affair until to-morrow. I don't feel at all well this
morning; and besides, a thing like this ought to be done after dark,
not in broad daylight.'

Hereupon the six Brethren looked at one another and gave a low
whistle; and after a pause Gyp said--

'This day is the only day in the year on which conspiracies are
allowed to take place, and they are not permitted later than ten
o'clock in the forenoon. But I may mention that the theatre is always
darkened, and is lighted by artificial means.'

'I do not understand,' said Yellow-cap, 'how a conspiracy can succeed,
if the people who are conspired against fix the time when it is to
come off.'

'What sort of an audience should we get,' replied Gyp, 'if the date of
the performance was not advertised beforehand? We should find
ourselves playing to empty boxes. Besides, conspiracies are costly;
and if----'

'If you please,' said Silvia, opening the door, 'it is just upon nine
o'clock, and the donkey waits.'

'We come!' said all the Brethren together, They rose up, put their
play-books in their pockets, and joining hands so as to form a circle,
with Gyp and Yellow-cap in the middle of it, they rapidly repeated
five times over the following mystic chant, Gyp beating time for them
with the forefinger of his right hand on the five fingers of his
left:--

  Ruba--Dubb--Dubsix--Menin--Atub--Chorus--Gyp!

This having been duly performed, Gyp, with an air of great respect,
took Yellow-cap by the arm and led him out to the street, the other
five Brethren following behind. Yellow-cap, who had by this time
almost ceased feeling surprised at anything, did not find it
especially wonderful that the donkey which was in waiting was the same
on which he had ridden the evening before, and that its driver was the
same half-witted youth who had given him such useful information about
the passwords. This youth grinned and ducked his head when he saw
Yellow-cap, and held the stirrup for him to mount.

As Yellow-cap did so the thought occurred to him that perhaps he might
get a chance to gallop away down some side-street, and so make his
escape even at the last moment; for it must be confessed that he did
not feel much courage for this adventure. Much to his disappointment,
however, no sooner was he in the saddle than the donkey-driver took
hold of the donkey's bridle on one side and Silvia on the other; and
in this way they set out.

'Why are you coming with us, Silvia?' Yellow-cap asked, after they had
gone a little way. 'Are you one of the conspirators?'

'No, your Lordship, not exactly,' she replied; 'but I usually take the
part of Columbine, and sometimes lead the ballet.'

'So it's to be a pantomime, is it?' thought Yellow-cap. 'I wonder what
the grand transformation scene will be like?'

Then he turned to the donkey-driver, who was plodding along with a
vacant grin upon his features, and asked him what part he had to play.

'Oh, please your Worship,' he replied, 'I'm to be the Clown; and that
young woman,' pointing to Silvia, 'is to be my sweetheart, if I can
catch her.'

'And I'm to be Harlequin, I suppose,' said Yellow-cap to himself.
'Well, I'm sure I begin to feel like one.'

Meanwhile they had entered the chief street of the town, which led to
the Drury Lane Theatre. This was a handsome building of white marble,
with columns and a sculptured frieze; it was the model which the
Greeks long afterwards followed when they built their Parthenon. A
great multitude of people were collected in front of the pit and
gallery entrances; and when they caught sight of Yellow-cap they set
up a great buzzing and murmuring, mingled with shouts and huzzas and
waving of hats and handkerchiefs.

'There he is! that's him!' cried the people one to another. 'That's
him on the grey charger, with the captive prince and princess
a-leading of him along. Oh, ain't he a swell!'

'Hurry up, guv'nor, or you'll be late!' shouted others; and indeed as
Yellow-cap looked up at the clock which was placed in the pediment of
the theatre he saw that it marked five minutes to ten.

'Hadn't we better move a little faster?' he said anxiously to Silvia.
'And how are we ever to get through all this crowd?'

'Oh, we have time enough,' she answered very unconcernedly. 'And,
since we must go in by the stage-door, the crowd won't hinder us.'

As she spoke they turned down a narrow alley to the left, and soon
came to a small entrance in the side of the building. Through this the
donkey quietly walked, and up a flight of steps to an inner
passageway. Before he knew where he was Yellow-cap found himself on an
immense stage, at the further side of which was standing King Ormund
himself, surrounded by a group of courtiers. The courtiers were all
enveloped in long white dominoes, the sight of which caused Yellow-cap
to look behind him with a sudden misgiving. He had supposed until this
moment that the six Brethren were following behind him; but he now
discovered that, except for Silvia and the half-witted donkey-driver,
he was quite alone.

'What has become of them?' he cried in dismay.

'There they are,' said Silvia coolly, pointing to the group of
courtiers. 'Where else should they be?'

'They have deserted me, then?'

'Not at all; but as the conspiracy is all on your account it is only
fair that you should take all the risks. If the conspiracy were to
fail, and they were to have their heads cut off, there could be no
conspiracy next year; but if only you are executed your cap would be
saved, and there would be no difficulty about finding some one else to
wear it.'

'Upon my word,' muttered Yellow-cap to himself rather angrily,
'however this matter goes I am resolved that I will not lose my head
before making those six rascals shake in their shoes. Courtiers
indeed! We shall see.'

At this moment the curtain drew up and showed the vast audience
crowding every part of the theatre. A great clapping of hands and
stamping of feet followed, and there were several catcalls and
whistlings from the pit and gallery. Almost every member of the
audience was provided with a programme headed, '_Grand Annual
Pantomime: the Conspiracy_,' and containing a list of the performers.
Attendants were also moving about hawking librettos of the dialogue.
Familiar though Yellow-cap had become with marvels, he could not help
wondering how anybody could know what he was going to say. He
certainly did not know himself.

The audience had now become silent--not a sound was to be heard in the
theatre except the occasional rustle of a programme. Yellow-cap
dismounted from his donkey, which remained on the stage in the care of
the driver, and walked towards the King. His Majesty was eyeing him
very closely. The great clock outside the building struck ten. The
King and Yellow-cap saluted each other, and Yellow-cap said--

'I hope I have not kept your Majesty waiting.'

'Not at all,' the monarch replied. 'But, stay! surely I cannot be
mistaken. Are not you the gallant prince whom I had the pleasure of
meeting yesterday, and who vanished so strangely just when we were
about to exchange hats?'

'Your Majesty's memory is not at fault,' Yellow-cap answered.

'Bless my soul! my dear fellow,' the King exclaimed with much
heartiness, 'allow me to give you a hug!'

At this there was a great outburst of applause from the audience,
which his Majesty acknowledged by bowing and smiling. After it was
over he continued--

'And now tell me, where on earth did you vanish to? I could have sworn
you were beside me--when, almost while I was looking at you, you were
gone; and in your place was a dirty, impertinent varlet who tried to
snatch my crown out of my very hands.'

'Indeed. An audacious fellow, truly!'

'Ah, but he got his deserts. Ha! I flatter myself he will never again
try _that_ game. No, by my faith!'

'What did you do to him?'

'I grappled with him, and, after a tremendous struggle, I managed to
get him by the throat and bowed him backwards to the earth. I say "to
the earth," because the villains who should have upheld my platform
had let it fall. Never mind--I had all their heads before
supper-time.'

'And the robber?'

'There was not much left of him,' replied his Majesty, with a hearty
laugh. 'After I had strangled him I flung his carcass to my retainers,
who made mincemeat of it in no time. But all this is by the way. You
have not told me what became of you.'

Now, Yellow-cap had a good imagination; and seeing that the King had
made up a clever story, he resolved to do his best to tell another as
good.

'Your Majesty must know,' he said, 'that among my other modest gifts I
include that of making myself invisible at pleasure and transporting
myself to distant places by the force of a wish. Just at the moment
when we were about to exchange hats I happened to remember that I had
important business elsewhere; and since I had a long way to go, and
very little time to go in, I was obliged to leave your Majesty without
ceremony. But, as you see, I have lost no time in again presenting
myself before you.'

There was a round of applause at this speech, but neither so long nor
so loud as at that of the King.

'I hope we may not again be parted,' said his Majesty graciously. 'In
fact, I really don't know what I should have done without you.'

Here Yellow-cap felt a gentle pull at his sleeve, and looking round he
saw that Silvia was holding out to him a small slip of paper. He took
it from her, and read the following words which had been written upon
it:--

'A rhyme to King Ormund.'

The King had noticed this transaction, and immediately asked--

'What have you got there?'

'A rhyme to King Ormund,' replied Yellow-cap, repeating the words
which he had read without thinking of the effect they might have upon
his hearer. But the audience took the point immediately, and the
clapping of hands and stamping were this time both loud and long.

And now something happened which Yellow-cap could not at first
understand. The King hummed-and-hah'ed and looked rather embarrassed,
but said nothing, and by and by began searching in his pockets as if
he had mislaid something. The audience saw that something was wrong,
and catcalls and whistling and impertinent remarks were heard from all
parts of the house. The King turned red, and stood first on one foot
and then on another; and at last he muttered between his teeth--

'I'll have that prompter's head cut off!'

'If your Majesty will allow me,' said Silvia, coming forward, 'I can
tell you what comes next.' And she whispered a few words in his ear.

'Ah! of course--of course!' exclaimed the King, looking much relieved.
'I have had hardly any time to study my part; and I hope,' he added,
turning to the audience, 'that you will excuse me.' 'Go it, old boy!'
sang out somebody from the gallery. The King pulled down his ruffles
and went on.

'"A rhyme to King Ormund, eh?" Dear me! Then you are one of the
conspirators?'

'I have that honour,' replied Yellow-cap. 'In fact, I am the chief of
them; and I can, if you like, tell you the names of the others,' he
added, glancing at the Prime Maniac and his companions.

'You must not say that,' said Silvia in a low voice, twitching his
sleeve again; 'it isn't in your part.'

'I shall take my own part,' returned Yellow-cap, loud enough to be
heard all over the theatre, 'and do what I like with it.'

'That's the talk!' called out a man from the pit. 'Give it 'em,
youngster, and we'll see fair play.'

'Well, you have got the best of me,' said the King, shrugging his
shoulders good-humouredly, 'and I have only one regret.'

'What may that be?' Yellow-cap inquired.

'Only that, since you _have_ got the best of me, I am prevented from
enjoying the pleasure I had looked forward to of making you my
successor. But, after all, it comes to the same thing in the end--for
you, at any rate. And things being as they are, of course they could
not be otherwise. Come--despatch!' And so saying the venerable monarch
wrapped his mantle round his head and struck an heroic attitude.

'What are you waiting for? Let him have it!' whispered Silvia at
Yellow-cap's elbow.

But Yellow-cap thought there was no need of hurrying; so he put the
bit of paper in his pocket and said, gently pulling the King's mantle
from before his face--

'My dear King, pray let us understand each other. I am sure that we
can manage this thing without any trouble to either of us. As you
yourself say, what need is there for me to be a usurper, if I can be a
successor?'

'Ah, it's very kind of you to think of that,' replied the King,
shaking his head; 'but I couldn't be guilty of such inhospitality as
to hinder a stranger from carrying out so capital a plot. No--say no
more. I see how it is. You have taken a great deal of trouble about
this conspiracy, and so far you have managed it very well. I shall not
interfere with your triumph for the sake of a selfish whim of my own.
Never, my dear boy, never! My spirit is too royal to stoop to such
meanness. And I think it unkind of you to expect such a thing of me;
and if you don't stop it I shall have to tell the executioner to cut
off your head.'

'That last argument of yours is a strong one, and rather than drive
you to such extremities I would let you have it your own way,' said
Yellow-cap. 'But still I think this affair can be arranged. All I
want, you see, is to sit on your throne; to make a rhyme to your name,
and to trample you under the feet of the metrical system. Have nothing
to do with that. Come, oblige me this once, and I will do as much for
you the next time.'

The King stroked his long white beard thoughtfully.

'The fact is,' he said at length, 'I am rather in a muddle about the
whole business. If it had been a simple pantomime I could have seen
through it; but this combination of two rival performances in one is
beyond me. Let me consider. Hum! Ha! I have it. Let us draw lots from
the donkey!'

'Draw lots from the donkey?' repeated Yellow-cap, puzzled in his turn.

'To be sure--the way we always do it--draw lots of hair, you know,
from the donkey's tail,' continued his Majesty, brightening up, and
turning back the ruffles from his wrists. 'The way it is done is this:
we each of us in turn pull out a handful; and the one that makes the
donkey kick first wins the match.'

'Very well,' said Yellow-cap, 'I agree, on condition that you take the
first pull.'

'Such courtesy shows the true prince,' replied the King, with a
pleased smile. 'I accept the favour as frankly as it was offered. Ho!
fellows, back the animal round there--give him plenty of room to
kick--so. Now, then, my lords and gentlemen, make a circle round us,
and mark his tail with care. And do you, Mr. Chancellor of the
Jingle, act as umpire.'

Everything having been thus arranged, and amidst a pause of breathless
interest, his Transparent Majesty King Ormund, Emperor of Great
Britain, France, and Ireland, and Defender of the Faith, advanced on
tiptoe towards the donkey, who, not suspecting what was to come, stood
with its hind quarters turned to him, its head being held fast by the
half-witted driver.

When within about two feet of the donkey's heels the monarch stopped,
and stretching out his arm, he grasped with his hand the long tuft of
hair which grew at the end of the animal's tail. Then by a sudden
motion he gave it such a tug as might almost have fetched the tail
itself out by the roots.

Without an instant's delay the donkey kicked out as if it wanted to
put its hoofs through the skylight in the roof of the theatre; but,
King Ormund's stomach happening to be in the way, that potentate was
lifted from the ground and made to pass through the air in a graceful
curve. He came down upon the upturned face of the Chancellor of the
Jingle (who was too busy with his duties as umpire to notice his
danger) and flattened him out upon the stage in such a way as to make
it quite impossible for him to give his decision.




CHAPTER X.

AN ABSOLUTE MONARCH.


Upon this tableau the curtain came down; but the applause was really
so deafening that all the performers--including, of course, the King
and the donkey--had to come out and pass before the footlights: when
the donkey got a bouquet, and the King a bunch of turniptops. They
then returned to the stage and took their places as before, and the
curtain went up again.

During several seconds the King lay quite still, with the Chancellor
underneath him; and Yellow-cap began to feel uneasy, for he reflected
that if the King should lie still permanently his own position might
become awkward. He spoke of this in a low tone to Silvia, who was
coquetting with her sweetheart the donkey-driver across the donkey's
back.

'No need to be alarmed, your Lordship,' replied she composedly. 'His
Majesty is only a little out of breath. The stomach of an hereditary
monarch is, you know, the strongest thing about him. He will be all
right directly.'

In fact, hardly had she done speaking when the King gave a cough and
raised himself to a sitting posture. He really seemed none the worse
for what had happened; in spite of which Yellow-cap could not help
feeling glad that he had not been in the King's place.

'Where is the Chancellor of the Jingle?' demanded the King as soon as
he could speak. 'Why does he not come forward and give his judgment as
umpire? Where is he, I say? By my crown and sceptre if he does not
appear and answer this instant I will have his head cut off!'

'Pardon me, my dear sir,' said Yellow-cap, 'if I say that the
Chancellor would probably have given his judgment before now, if you
had not yourself put difficulties in the way of his doing so. You are
at this moment sitting upon the man's face, and it would therefore be
impossible if not disrespectful for him to say anything until your
Majesty has arisen. If you will let me pull you up he will be ready
to obey your commands--unless,' he added aside to Silvia, 'he is
actually crushed to death.'

'No fear of that,' Silvia replied cheerfully. 'The face of a real
Chancellor of the Jingle is the most impenetrable thing about him; and
I have no doubt that he is smiling at this very minute.'

And in fact hardly had the King raised himself erect than the
Chancellor jumped to his feet, with a most charming smile; and having
bowed to the King, to Yellow-cap, and to the audience, he spoke
thus:--

'In the drawing of lots his Transparent Majesty King Ormund has been
successful; and therefore his Royal Highness Prince Yellow-cap has won
the wager.'

'Capital--capital!' exclaimed the King, rubbing his hands and stamping
about the stage gleefully. 'But you,' he added, turning to the
Chancellor of the Jingle, 'must, of course, have your head cut off
just the same.'

At this a couple of halberdiers approached and laid their hands on the
culprit's shoulders.

Yellow-cap had at first thought that to lose his head would serve the
Chancellor only right; but, as he was averse to bloodshed, and as his
own affairs seemed to be going on so prosperously, he resolved to be
merciful.

'Allow me a word,' he said. 'Since I have won the wager I thereby
succeed to King Ormund's throne and sceptre, and by virtue of the
power in me vested I do hereby extend to the Chancellor my royal
clemency. Loose him, halberdiers, on your allegiance!'

The halberdiers hesitated; and King Ormund, stroking his beard
meditatively, said, 'I'm not sure about this. You haven't been crowned
yet, you know.'

'At all events I am as much king as anybody here,' Yellow-cap replied
firmly. 'And meanwhile I advise anybody who cares to keep his head on
his shoulders to obey my commands.'

'I'll tell you what we might do,' exclaimed the King brightly: 'we
might draw lots----'

'No; I refuse to leave affairs of State to chance. But, in order to
oblige you in every way I can, I will appoint the Chancellor of the
Jingle referee. He shall decide whether or not his head is to be cut
off; and I promise to abide by his decision.'

'Hum!' said the King. 'Ha! well, that certainly does seem fair.
Besides, one must have some consideration for the poor donkey. I
agree, then. Now, Mr. Chancellor, what is your decision?'

'My head stays where it is, please your Majesty,' replied the
Chancellor promptly.

'It's astonishing what a run of luck you are having!' exclaimed the
King, turning to Yellow-cap, with a sigh of admiration. 'Pray, are you
as fortunate in love as you seem to be in everything else?'

At this question there rose in Yellow-cap's mind the picture of a
little square room, with bright walls and clean sanded floor; a churn
in one corner, and a brightly polished tin pan upon the dresser in
place of a looking-glass. In this room stood a lovely young girl, with
tears in her eyes, but a smile dimpling her rosy cheeks. She was
looking up with a loving glance at a young man, who was fastening
round her neck, by a bit of ribbon, the half of a spade guinea.
Yellow-cap passed his hand over his eyes: the picture had vanished.

'What are you dreaming about?' said the voice of Silvia in his ear.
'The half of a brass farthing is just as good, if you will only think
so. And you have not yet answered his Majesty's question.'

'Ah! I beg pardon,' muttered Yellow-cap. 'I--what did you say?
I--yes--that is--no! No, I am not so fortunate in love as I seem to be
in other things. Ah me! Rosamund!'

'Well, well,' said the King, with a particularly arch look, 'I dare
say we shall be able to do you a good turn in that way too.'

'Is this the place where kings are crowned?' demanded Yellow-cap.

'Certainly; where else could it be?' returned the King.

'Then I will be crowned this moment,' said Yellow-cap in the
commanding tone which he had found it best to use towards these London
people. 'Is there an Archbishop present? And let somebody fetch a
throne!'

'Here is the throne, please your Worship,' said the half-witted youth,
leading forward the donkey.

'And here is the Archbishop, at your service,' said one of the persons
in the white dominoes, making a bow.

'That won't do,' said Yellow-cap sharply. 'You are the Prime
Maniac--only you have shaved your moustachios.'

'That makes all the difference, please your Highness,' replied the
other humbly.

'And now I look at you again,' continued Yellow-cap, 'I think I
remember you before you were a Prime Maniac. I remember you when you
were only three feet high.'

'It is all the same,' answered the other again. 'I rise to the
occasion.'

'Well, it makes no difference, I suppose,' said Yellow-cap, after a
pause, bestriding the donkey's back. 'Now for the crown!'

King Ormund took the crown from his brow and handed it to the
Archbishop, who put it on Yellow-cap's head, over the yellow cap. Then
all the courtiers round about murmured their congratulations, the
audience that filled the theatre shouted 'Hooray!' and 'Encore!' the
ex-King clapped him on the shoulder and said, 'Bless you, my boy!' and
Silvia whispered in his ear, 'Now you are King!'

'Long live King Yellow-cap!' roared everybody.

'How do you like it?' asked Ormund pleasantly.

'I feel about as I did before,' replied the new King, in a slightly
disappointed tone. 'How much does this crown weigh? Haven't you a
lighter one?'

'No; and you won't find that one grow any lighter,' said Ormund, with
a chuckle. 'But if you don't feel any difference I do! I am ten years
younger already. I am positively light-headed.'

'Well, at all events I am a King!' said Yellow-cap.

'And now,' observed Ormund, rubbing his hands and glancing at Silvia,
'since the coronation is over, what do you say to our having the
wedding?'

'Yes--yes; the wedding!' echoed all the courtiers.

Silvia arranged the ribbon at her throat, looked coquettishly at King
Yellow-cap, and murmured in his ear--

'What says your Majesty? There is no time like the present.'

'Wedding!' repeated King Yellow-cap, turning from one to another.
'Whose wedding?'

'Whose but your own, gracious liege!' replied the courtiers.

'My own! Nonsense! Whom should I marry?'

'Whom but Silvia, most puissant prince?' said the courtiers again.

'Silvia? Why, she is barmaid at the inn! And besides, she is engaged
to marry somebody else.'

'Ah, you mean the Prince of Sprats,' remarked the ex-King. 'But that
match is broken off. Since you are on the throne he is in opposition,
and can only be considered a pretender; but Silvia is a princess of
the blood, cousin-german of the dynasty, and Columbine into the
bargain; so she can marry nobody but you.'

'That fellow who owns the donkey the Prince of Sprats?' cried
Yellow-cap. 'He the son of King Ormund?'

'Prince Assimund--yes. I spoke to you of him yesterday. A little queer
in the head, you know, but that is only a sign of his royalty.'

'All this may be so,' replied Yellow-cap, stroking his chin; 'but as
to my marrying Silvia--that seems rather sudden.'

'Not more sudden than agreeable, if I were in your place,' observed
the ex-King, with a twinkle in his eye which made the pit laugh.

'Besides,' continued Yellow-cap, 'I have an indistinct notion that
once--somewhere--I loved--but, no! What with the cap and crown
together I can remember nothing. And perhaps Silvia may be she, after
all; she looks something like her; but yet----'

'If your Majesty will let me hang this half of a brass farthing round
your neck,' interrupted Silvia, 'you will have no more doubts about
the matter.' And as she spoke she held the farthing towards him, with
a mischievous smile.

'But don't you care at all for Assimund?' he asked her.

'The interests of the State are supreme,' returned Silvia with a grand
air.

'Well, if I must, I must,' said King Yellow-cap rather ungraciously.
'But I thought the Kings of England could do what they pleased.'

'Oh, dear, no,' exclaimed the Archbishop, 'Magna Charta forbid!'

'Then I wish----' began Yellow-cap.

But he paused. What had he left to wish? He stretched out his hand to
take the half of the brass farthing.

At that moment there was a great noise and confusion at the back of
the stage, and half the audience sprang to their feet, supposing that
the theatre had caught fire. But out of the confusion was dragged
forward a sort of cart, in which a number of persons were seated, with
veils over their faces, and their hands tied behind their backs.
Yellow-cap saw that one of these persons was a woman.




CHAPTER XI.

THE GRAND TRANSFORMATION SCENE.


'What is that? What people are those in the cart?' demanded
Yellow-cap, rising in his stirrups to get a better view.

'Please your Majesty they are prisoners of State,' said the Home
Doggerel, who had turned rather pale. 'It is quite a mistake their
coming here; they should have been taken to another theatre. However,
since they are here your Majesty cannot do better than sign their
death-warrant. I have a pen and ink here; or, if your Majesty happens
not to know how to sign your name, I can----'

'Hold your tongue,' interrupted Yellow-cap sharply. He was looking
very hard at the veiled figure of the woman. After a pause he said--

'Before signing my name (which I am perfectly able to do) to the
death-warrant I will know what crime these persons have committed.
Tell them to come nearer, that I may question them.'

'Sire,' exclaimed the Home Doggerel, in evident dismay, 'the law of
England does not permit an accused person to be questioned.'

'Why not?'

'Because it might lead to a discovery.'

'What discovery?'

'The discovery of the truth, Sire; and where would you and all of us
be then?'

At this a man in the pit began to hiss, and the police tried to take
him into custody; but they could not find out his address, and
therefore let him alone.

'Where would we be indeed!' murmured King Yellow-cap thoughtfully.
'Nevertheless,' he continued, again fixing his eyes upon the veiled
woman, 'I am resolved to question these people; and this pantomime
shall not go on until I have done so.'

'I humbly beg your Majesty to think what you are about,' said the Lord
Privy Gander in an agitated tone; 'you are in danger not only of
hearing the truth but of violating etiquette.'

'It might bring about a reform,' added the First Lord of the Seesaw,
with a shudder.

'At all events let the woman be condemned unheard,' said Silvia. 'She
looks dangerous, and may intend to do your Majesty some harm.'

'Be silent, everyone!' thundered King Yellow-cap at the top of his
voice. 'I say I will hear these persons, and I will hear the woman
first. Stop--where is the Headsman?'

'Here I be, your Majesty, quite at your service,' said the Headsman,
shouldering through the crowd, and saluting the young King with his
axe. He was an immensely strong man, seven feet high, with short red
hair standing up over his head, and a butcher's apron tied on in front
of him.

'Headsman,' said the King, 'if anyone stirs or says a word except by
my leave, off with his head! Do you understand?'

For answer the Headsman tossed his terrible axe high up in the air,
caught it lightly as it came down, and then, swinging it round his
head, he cut off the tall feather that was fastened in the cap of the
Chancellor of the Jingle. An inch more would have buried the blade in
his skull.

'Very good,' said King Yellow-cap; 'I see you know your business. Now,
then, bring me hither that cart. Let the woman come down.'

Amidst a total silence, during which the Headsman was seen to feel the
edge of his axe with his thumb--keeping his right eye upon King
Yellow-cap the while, and the left upon the Home Doggerel--the veiled
woman got down from the cart and came forward to the donkey which
served the King as a throne. Here she dropped a curtsey.

King Yellow-cap gazed steadfastly upon her for several moments. The
black veil still hung before her face, but round her neck was visible
a bit of pink ribbon.

'Who are you?' he asked at last.

'I am a village maiden, Sire,' she answered in a voice so sweet and
clear that it was heard all over the theatre.

'Of what crime are you accused?'

'Of high treason, Sire.'

'In what way did you commit it?'

At this question the Home Doggerel and the other members of the
Cabinet made a movement as if they wished to step behind the scenes;
but King Yellow-cap noticed it, and in an awful voice he cried out--

'Headsman!'

'Ready, your Majesty,' said that officer, poising his axe to strike.

'One step more,' said the King, turning to the six courtiers, 'and
your heads fly into the pit. Keep your axe poised,' he added to the
Headsman.

'Right you are, young man!' said the person in the pit whom the police
had tried to arrest for hissing. 'Right you are, Master Yellow-cap;
you're just about the sort of king I goes in for, and so I tells you.'

'And now go on with your story,' said the King to the veiled woman.

'May it please your Majesty,' she replied, 'the way it happened was
this. As I was taking the butter out of my churn yesterday afternoon
there came into my dairy-room an ugly little long-armed man, with a
hook nose and a great pair of moustachios. I asked him what he wanted,
and he said that he wanted me, and that I had promised to marry him.'

'Ha!' said King Yellow-cap. 'And what did you say to that?'

'I was very indignant, Sire,' said the maiden, 'because I had that
very day promised to wed a young man of our own village, whom I had
known and loved for many years. But this ugly dwarf said, "You belong
to me; and to prove it, here is the other half of the spade guinea
that is hanging round your neck!" Now, Sire, when I parted with the
young man whom I love he had cut his spade guinea in two, and each of
us had kept half, for a sign by which, as he said, we might know each
other when we met, no matter what changes had come over us in the
meantime. So, when I saw the token in this dwarf's hand, I feared my
lover was dead, because I knew that no enchantment could make him look
like the dwarf, and I could not believe that he would have given up
his half of our spade guinea while he had life enough left to guard
it.'

'Might your lover not have given it up for something that seemed to
him more precious?' asked the young King in a tremulous voice.

'No,' said the maiden firmly, 'for he loved me, and nothing in this
world is so precious as love.'

'Go on with your story,' said the King.

'There is little more to tell, please your Majesty. I told the dwarf
to be gone; but he threw his arms round me and tried to carry me away.
Then I screamed out, and all the young men in the village ran up, and
there was a great fight. Then the dwarf said that he was the Lord High
Sheepstealer of England, and that he arrested us all for high treason.
So he bound us and tied veils over our faces, and brought us prisoners
to London; and this morning we were carried hither in this cart.'

'And what do you wish me to do for you?' asked the King.

'I do not much care what becomes of me, Sire,' replied the maiden,
'for I fear my lover is dead, and if he is, then all the love I had
for the world is dead with him. But if your Majesty would find out
whether he still lives and loves me I will thank you more than for my
life, and I will be content to die.'

'You shall have your wish,' said the King, 'though I fear your lover
is not worthy of you. But first your eyes shall be unveiled, and you
shall tell me whether, amidst this assembly, you can find the man who
called himself the Lord High Sheepstealer of England.'

And now a wonderful thing happened.

When the six courtiers, in their white dominoes, heard the command of
the King that the maiden's eyes should be unveiled they all got behind
one another, and cowered down, shaking in their shoes. And when the
maiden's glance rested on them they cowered down still more, as if
they were trying to hide their heads in their necks and their necks in
their shoulders. Still they shrivelled and shrunk, until they no
longer appeared like six tall courtiers, but like half a dozen ugly
little dwarfs, barely three feet high. And when they saw how small
they had become they uttered a cry of terror, and seemed to rush into
one another's arms. And with that--though how it came about would be
impossible to say--there stood only a single dwarf, a great deal
stouter and uglier than the six, but with precisely the same cast of
features and general appearance.

'That is the creature that called itself the Lord High Sheepstealer
of England,' said the maiden.

'What have you to say for yourself, sirrah?' said the King sternly.

'Mercy! spare my life!' cried the dwarf, falling on his knees. 'And
bethink yourself that we are brothers, and that in destroying me you
would unmake yourself.'

'That is the very thing that decides me to show you no mercy,'
answered King Yellow-cap. 'I am sick of all this stage-play.'

'Have a care what you do, Sire,' said Silvia, with a frown on her
face, which looked much older and less pretty than it had done
hitherto. 'He is your brother, and you are bound to him by the vows of
the Order.'

'I shall know how to break those bonds,' Yellow-cap replied. 'In the
first place, let my guards loose all the prisoners who are in the cart
and let them go free.'

When this had been done he turned to the village maiden.

'Get up behind me on the donkey,' he said, 'and put your arms round my
waist.'

The maiden obeyed, the donkey standing quite still, and not so much as
moving the end of its tail.

'Now let Assimund, Prince of Sprats, approach,' said the King.

'People of England,' he then continued, facing the audience, 'I have
been King over you for half an hour, and I have had enough of it. But,
before abdicating, I will place the crown on brows worthier to wear it
than mine. Behold Prince Assimund, no longer a pretender, but to be
hereafter your absolute and legitimate monarch. And behold Silvia, his
fitting queen and consort, whose hand I place in his.' He suited the
action to the word, and then, removing the crown, he set it upon
Assimund's head.

But the audience murmured, and seemed dissatisfied; and Silvia smiled
maliciously; and even the dwarf, over whom the Headsman was standing
with uplifted axe, showed his teeth in an ugly grin.

'Silence!' shouted Yellow-cap. 'I have not yet done.
Headsman--strike!'

Down came the heavy axe; and everyone thought that the dwarf must be
cloven asunder from head to foot. But before the axe could reach him
there was no dwarf there. Whether he melted into nothing, or whether
he disappeared down one of those trap-doors which are to be found in
every stage, or what else became of him, will probably never be known.
At all events the blade of the axe came down upon the bare boards and
buried itself six inches deep in the wood, and no dwarf was there, but
only the glittering half of a spade guinea, strung on a broken thread
of silk. This the Headsman placed in Yellow-cap's hand, and he hid it
in his bosom.

'He lives still!' said Silvia, smiling again.

'But he will never again cross my path,' replied Yellow-cap. 'King
Assimund,' he added, 'accept my parting gift before I go. With this
and with your crown, and with Silvia to whisper worldly wisdom in your
ear, it will be your own fault if you are not the mightiest sovereign
in Christendom.'

So saying he snatched off the yellow cap from his own black locks and
clapped it down upon Assimund's foolish poll. At the same moment he
felt the arms of the village maiden tighten round his waist.

He struck his heels into the donkey's sides and shook the rein. The
donkey kicked up its heels, and seemed to spring bodily off the stage.
Yellow-cap (but he was now Yellow-cap no longer) had a momentary
glimpse of Assimund, now wearing an aspect of imperial magnificence,
of Silvia, frowning and biting her lip, and of the whole great
audience standing up and shouting; and then he had a feeling of
passing rapidly through the air he knew not whither....

He came down very softly.

It was high noon. They were in the meadow beside the river. The donkey
was feeding quietly near at hand; Raymond had fallen on his knees in
the grass, and Rosamund was standing before him.

'Oh, Rosamund,' he said, 'you are my kingdom! Will you take me back?'

'You have been a very naughty boy,' she replied, 'and you deserve a
scolding. But come home first and have some milk, for you must be
hungry.'

Raymond looked up at her. She was more lovely than ever. There was a
sparkle of laughter in her eyes and a beautiful blush in her cheeks.
Beyond her rose the thatched roofs of Honeymead, overshadowed by the
great lime-trees; the birds were singing, and the sky was blue.

'Come--do get up!' exclaimed Rosamund. 'Now that you belong to me you
must give up these mooning dreamy ways of yours and behave sensibly.
Come--make haste! Armand, and Dorimund, and all the rest of them have
been invited, and our betrothal is to be formally announced.'

'How strange all this sounds!' said Raymond, getting to his feet in a
bewildered way. 'You almost make me think that I have been----'

Before he could finish his sentence the donkey lifted its head and
tail in the air and sent forth a long-drawn reproachful bray.

'Ah! no, it was real--I have not been dreaming,' Raymond said. 'If it
had not been for that donkey where should we be now?'

'How stupid you are to-day--muttering to yourself like that!' cried
Rosamund, briskly. 'Anyone would think you had a headache.'

'And so I had--a very bad one,' said Raymond.

Rosamund became tender immediately.

'Oh, my poor love!' murmured she. 'And what a horrid red mark that is
round your forehead, as if you had been wearing a cap that was too
tight for you. Stoop down a little--let me kiss it. There, does that
feel better?'

'A great deal better,' Raymond answered, with a long sigh.

So they went back, hand in hand, through the meadow. The breeze came
fresh and sweet upon their faces; they smelt the fragrance of the
breath of cows. As they approached their home they walked more and
more slowly. Rosamund was humming a little song to herself; she was as
happy as a bird.

But Raymond was silent, and pondered many things.




RUMPTY-DUDGET.




CHAPTER I.

THE PALACE AND THE TOWER.


In the days before the sun caught fire, before the moon froze up, and
before you were born, a great queen had three children, whose names
were Hilda, Harold, and Hector. Princess Hilda, who was the eldest,
had blue eyes and golden hair; Prince Hector, who was the youngest,
had black eyes and black hair; and Prince Harold, who was neither the
youngest nor the eldest, had, of course, brown eyes and brown hair.
There was nothing else specially remarkable about them, except that
they were (at the time I write of) the best children in the world, as
well as the prettiest and the cleverest for their age; that they lived
in the most beautiful palace ever built, and that the garden they
played in was the loveliest ever seen.

The palace stood on the borders of a mighty forest, on the further
side of which lay Fairyland. But there was only one window in the
palace that looked out upon this forest, and that was the round window
of the room in which Hilda, Harold, and Hector slept. And since the
round window was never open except at night, after the three children
had been put to bed, they knew very little about how the forest
looked, or what kind of flowers grew there, or what sort of birds sang
in the dark branches of the lofty trees. Sometimes, however, as they
lay with their three heads on their three pillows, and with all their
eyes open, waiting for the Spirit of Forgetfulness to come and fasten
down their eyelids, they would see stars, white, blue, and red,
twinkling in the sky overhead; and below, amongst the gloomy shadows
of the trees, other yellow stars which danced about and flitted to and
fro. These flitting stars were supposed by grown-up people to be
will-o'-the-wisp, jack-o'-lanterns, fire-flies, and glow-worms. But
the three children knew them to be the torches borne by the elves as
they capered hither and thither about their affairs. For although the
Forest of Mystery (as it was named) was not, strictly speaking, in
Fairyland, but formed the boundary between that and the rest of the
world, yet many fairies held nightly revels there. The children wished
that a few of these tiny people would come in through the round window
some evening and pay them a visit. But if such a thing ever happened
it was not until after the children had fallen asleep; and then, when
they woke up in the morning, they had forgotten all about it.

The garden was on the side of the palace opposite to the Forest of
Mystery; it was called the Garden of Delight. It was full of flowers,
pink, white, and blue; and there were birds, and fountains, in the
marble basins of which gold-fishes glowed and swam. In the centre of
the garden was a round green lawn for the children to play on; but at
the end of the garden was a tall thick hedge, on which no blossoms
ever grew, and which was prickly with sharp-pointed leaves and thorns.
This hedge also had a name, but the children did not know what it was.
It was impossible either to get round the hedge, or to get over it, or
to get through it--except in one place, where a small opening had been
made. But through that opening no one might pass, for the land on the
other side belonged to a dwarf, whose name was Rumpty-Dudget, and
whose only pleasure lay in doing mischief. An ugly little dwarf he
was, all grey from head to foot. He wore a broad-brimmed grey hat, a
thick grey beard, and a grey cloak that was so much too long for him
that it trailed on the ground like a grey tail as he walked. On his
back was a grey hump, which made him look even shorter than he
was--and he was not much over a foot high at his tallest. He lived in
a large grey tower, whose battlements the three children could see
rising above the hedge as they played on the round lawn; and over the
tower there hung, even in the brightest weather, a dull grey cloud.

Inside the tower was a vast room with a hundred and one corners to it;
and in each of the corners stood a little child, with its face to the
wall and its hands behind its back. Who were the children, and how
came they there? They were children, whom Rumpty-Dudget had caught
trespassing on his grounds, and had therefore carried away with him to
his tower. In this way he had filled up one corner after another,
until only one corner was left unfilled; and that one, curiously
enough, was the one-hundred-and-first. Now, it was a well-known fact
that if Rumpty-Dudget could but catch a child to put it in that one
empty corner he would become master of all the country round about.
And since he loved nothing that was not of the same colour and temper
as himself, the noble palace would in that case disappear, the garden
would be changed into a desert covered with grey stones and brambles,
and the dull grey cloud that now hung above the tower would sullenly
spread itself over all the heavens. The mighty Forest of Mystery, too,
would be cut down and sold for firewood; and the elves and fairies
would fly westward in pursuit of the flying sun. You may be sure,
therefore, that Rumpty-Dudget tried with all his might to get hold of
a child to put into that hundred-and-first corner. But by this time
the inhabitants of the country had begun to realise their danger; and
all the mothers were so careful, and all the children were so
obedient, that, for a long time, the hundred-and-first corner remained
empty.




CHAPTER II.

THE AUNT, THE CAT, AND THE DWARF.


When Hilda, Harold, and Hector were still very young indeed the Queen,
their mother, was obliged to make a long journey to a far-off country,
and to leave her children behind her. But before going she took them
in her arms and said, 'My darlings, though I must leave you, you will
not be left alone, either by night or by day. While you are awake you
will be protected by a beautiful white cat that I shall send to you,
named Tom; and while you are asleep your fairy aunt will keep watch
over you; you will not see her, but you will know that she is with you
by your pleasant dreams. Only at one hour of the day will you be left
unguarded, and that is the hour before sunset. At that hour Tom will
have to be away, and your fairy aunt will not yet have arrived, so you
must be very careful of yourselves. You will, I hope, try always to
be good children; but in the hour before sunset you must try
twenty-four times harder than ever. Nobody knows what may happen when
a little child does wrong; but there is great danger that the sun
might catch fire and the moon freeze up. So, once more, my darlings,
be very careful; for every hour is as long as it is short, but the
hour before sunset is the longest and the shortest of all.'

The children promised to remember; and their mother kissed them and
went away. The same day Tom the Cat arrived. A beautiful big cat he
was, with deep soft fur, round yellow eyes, and a tail as thick as a
feather duster. He was also the sweetest-tempered cat in the world, so
that the children lived with him several years without even so much as
suspecting that he had such a thing as a claw about him. He could purr
as comfortably as the hopper of a windmill; and he took care of the
children better than a dozen nurses would have done. But an hour
before sunset every day he always disappeared, and only came back
again when the last bit of the sun had gone out of sight. Then he put
the children to bed, and purred outside their window until they fell
asleep; and as soon as that happened in floated the Fairy Aunt, to
kiss their closed eyelids, and to hover beside their beds and whisper
in their ears all manner of charming stories about Fairyland, and the
wonderful things that were to be seen and done there. But early in the
morning, just before they awoke, she would kiss their eyelids once
more and flit away out of the round window; and the white cat, with
his yellow eyes and his thick tail, would come purring comfortably in
at the door.

One day, however (the unluckiest day in the whole year), Hilda,
Harold, and Hector went out to play as usual on the round lawn in the
centre of the garden. It was Rumpty-Dudget's birthday--the only day in
the whole year on which he had power to creep through the hole in the
hedge and prowl about the Queen's grounds. Nevertheless, all went well
until the last hour before sunset, when Tom the Cat was forced to be
away. Before he went he warned the children to look out for the grey
rat; but before he had time to explain what he meant by the grey rat
the hour struck, and he could not help vanishing. The children were
left to themselves; but they were not at all frightened. They had
never heard of Rumpty-Dudget; and this is not so strange as it might
at first seem; for it often happens in the world that our worst
enemies live so close to us that we are not aware of them until after
we have fallen into their power. Hilda, Harold, and Hector, at all
events, went on playing together very kindly; for up to this time they
had never had a quarrel. The only thing that troubled them was, that
Tom the Cat was not there to play with them; they all longed to see
his yellow eyes and his thick tail, and to stroke his soft back, and
hear his comfortable purr. But it was now very near sunset, and he
must soon return. The sun, like a great red ball, hung a little way
above the edge of the world; though he had not caught fire as yet, he
was evidently very hot, and it was quite time for him to be at rest.

All at once Princess Hilda, who had been gazing at the sun with her
blue eyes wide open, heard a little croaking laugh, and looking down,
she saw a strange little creature standing close beside her, all grey
from head to foot. He wore a grey hat and beard, and a long grey cloak
that dragged on the ground like a tail, and on his back was a grey
hump that made him seem even shorter than he was, though at the most
he was hardly over a foot high. Hilda was surprised, but not in the
least frightened, for nobody had ever yet done her any harm; and
besides, this odd little grey man, though he was as ugly as a rent in
a new pinafore, grinned at her from one ear to the other, and seemed
to be the most good-natured dwarf in the world. So Princess Hilda
called to Prince Harold and Prince Hector, who, when they saw what had
come to them, were no more frightened than Hilda, and a good deal more
amused; and as the dwarf kept on grinning from one ear to the other
the three children began to smile back at him. Meanwhile the great red
ball of the sun was slowly dropping downwards; and now his lower rim
was just resting on the edge of the world.

Since you have already heard about Rumpty-Dudget you will have guessed
that this grey dwarf was none other than he, and that although he
grinned so broadly from one ear to the other he wished in reality to
do the three children harm; and even (if he could manage it) to carry
one of them off to his tower, to stand in the hundred-and-first
corner, with his face to the wall and his hands behind his back. But
Rumpty-Dudget had no power to do this so long as the children stayed
on their side of the prickly hedge; he must first tempt them to creep
through the opening, and then, when they were upon his own grounds, he
could do with them what he pleased. Now, the children had often been
warned not to creep through the hedge, both by their Queen-mother,
before she went away, and by their Fairy Aunt in dreams, and by Tom
the Cat in the daytime; and as they had never had reason to suppose
that there was anything prettier on the other side of the hedge than
on their own, they had never thought of going thither. Rumpty-Dudget
knew this; and as he was even more cunning than he was ugly he had
made up his mind to profit by it.

'My dear young people,' he said, holding out his hands, 'I am very
glad to meet you. It has grieved me to see you all playing here on
this ugly lawn, when there is a garden so much more beautiful just on
the other side of the hedge. I am very fond of children, and I make it
my business to amuse them. If you will just give yourselves the
trouble to step through that opening in the hedge you shall see
something that you never saw before.'

The three children thought this sounded very pleasant; but, after a
pause, Princess Hilda, who generally took the lead, said:

'We were told not to go on the other side of the hedge.'

'Who could have been so unkind as to tell you that?' cried
Rumpty-Dudget, as if he was very much shocked. 'Besides, one side of
the hedge is just the same as another; and if it is wrong to go on the
other side, how much more wrong it must be to stay on this!'

Hilda thought awhile before answering, for what Rumpty-Dudget had said
certainly sounded reasonable. 'But why,' she asked at last, 'should
there be any hedge at all?'

'It is all on account of the hole through it,' the dwarf replied, with
his most charming grin. 'There could have been no hole, you see, if
there hadn't been a hedge; and that is why the hedge was planted.'

Princess Hilda could not deny that this was true; and, moreover, since
she had begun to talk with the dwarf she had felt a strong desire to
see whether the garden on the other side of the hedge was so very much
prettier than their own, as he declared. 'What do you say, boys?' she
asked, turning to the two little princes. 'Shall we take just one
peep?'

'That is right! Come, my dears, at once!' put in Rumpty-Dudget
eagerly, taking Hilda and Harold each by the hand, and letting little
Hector trot on before. 'It is already late, and I want you to see my
garden before the sun goes down.' So they all came to the opening in
the hedge; and, if the truth must be told, the three children were
almost as anxious to get through it as Rumpty-Dudget was to have them
do so. And the great red ball of the sun kept going down further and
further, and now all his lower half was out of sight beneath the edge
of the world.

'Now, my dear,' said Rumpty-Dudget to Princess Hilda, 'will you step
through first? Ladies always go first, you know.'

'Not through holes in the hedges,' replied Hilda, drawing back. 'It is
always the men who go first then.'

All but the last quarter of the sun was now hidden behind the edge of
the world, and there was no time to be lost, for (as Rumpty-Dudget
well knew) as soon as the sun was quite gone Tom the Cat would appear.
So he said, as amiably as he could, though in reality he felt very
angry:

'Well, then, Prince Harold, my fine fellow, you are the next eldest;
take my hand, and in we go.'

'No,' said Prince Harold, drawing back; 'I think I am too big to get
through that little hole. Somebody else must go first.'

Rumpty-Dudget trembled with rage and fear; and there was only the
smallest bit of the sun yet visible. However, he managed to say, in a
tolerably smooth voice:

'Little Prince Hector, there, is my man after all! He will come
through the hole, and see the pretty things, won't he?'

Now, Prince Hector was a sturdy little fellow, and afraid of nothing;
so he put his hand in Rumpty-Dudget's and said boldly:

'Yes, I'll go; but if your garden isn't any prettier than you are I
shan't want to stay long.'

'Let me lift you in, my little hero,' said Rumpty-Dudget, taking
Hector round the waist with his little bony hands; 'and I'll warrant
you won't come back in a hurry. Now, then--jump!'

But just at that moment the last scrap of the sun vanished beneath the
edge of the world; and instantly, with a tremendous hissing and
caterwauling, Tom the Cat came springing across the lawn like a
white-hot snowball. His yellow eyes flashed, his back bristled, and
every hair upon his tail stood out so straight that the tail looked as
thick as an old-fashioned muff. He flew straight at Rumpty-Dudget and
leaped upon his hump, and bit and scratched him soundly. Rumpty-Dudget
yelled with pain, and dropping Prince Hector, he vanished through the
hole in the hedge like a hot chestnut into a hungry boy.

But from the other side of the hedge he flung at the three children a
handful of black mud; a bit of it hit Princess Hilda on the forehead,
and another bit fell upon Prince Harold's nose, and another upon
little Prince Hector's chin. And there those three black spots stayed;
and all the washing and scrubbing in the world would not make them go
away. It is always so with the mud that Rumpty-Dudget throws; it
seems to grow down into you until it fastens a root in your heart. And
this, probably, was the reason why Princess Hilda (who had until then
been the best little girl in the world) began from that time to wish
to rule things; and Prince Harold (who had until then been one of the
two best little boys in the world) began from that time to wish to
have things; and little Prince Hector (who had until then been the
other of the two best little boys in the world) began from that time
to wish to do things which he was told not to do.

Such was the effect of Rumpty-Dudget's three mud-spots.




CHAPTER III.

THE WAYS OF THE WIND.


But, although Hilda, Harold, and Hector were no longer quite the best
children in the world, they were pretty good children as the world
goes, and if it had not been for the north wind they would have got on
together very well. But whenever that wind blew everything began to go
wrong. Hilda wanted everything her own way; Harold wanted everything
in his own pockets; and Hector wanted everything at cross-purposes.
Then, too, the spots on Hilda's forehead, on Harold's nose, and on
Hector's chin became blacker and blacker, and hotter and hotter, until
the children were ready to cry from pain and vexation. But tears could
do no more than soap and water to wash the spots away.

As soon as the wind began to blow from the south, however, the spots
began to lose their blackness, and the pricking to lessen, until at
last the children almost forgot their trouble. Yet it never altogether
disappeared; and neither Tom the Cat nor the Fairy Aunt had the power
to cure it. But Tom used to say that, unless Hilda and her two
brothers would agree always to make the wind blow from the south, the
hundred-and-first corner in Rumpty-Dudget's tower would sooner or
later be filled.

'How can we make the wind blow one way or the other?' Hilda would ask.

'It all depends upon you, nevertheless,' Tom would reply. 'Winds do
not move of themselves, but people pull them.'

'Well, I don't understand it,' Hilda would answer, after a little
thinking; 'and if I don't, of course the boys don't either.'

At night, when the Fairy Aunt came in through the round window, and
sat on their bedside to whisper stories about Fairyland into their
ears, the children would sometimes ask her to take them all three up
in her arms and carry them over the tops of the trees of the Forest of
Mystery to her home far away on the other side. Then she would shake
her head and say:

'While those spots are on your faces you cannot come with me.'

'Why not?' the children asked in their dream.

'Because they are a sign that a part of each of you belongs to
Rumpty-Dudget; and he will not let go of that part, in spite of all
that I can do.'

'Shall we never be able to go with you, then?' dreamed the children
piteously.

'Not until the wind blows from the south every day in the week. When
that happens the spots will vanish, and I will take you all three in
my arms, and fly with you over the tops of the trees to Fairyland.'

'And what shall we see there?' the children asked.

'You will see the Queen, your mother.'

'And shall we see you too?'

'Yes, I shall be with you.'

'And Tom the Cat too?'

'What you have loved in Tom the Cat will be there too,' answered the
fairy, smiling.

'But how shall we make the wind blow from the south every day in the
week?'

At that the fairy smiled and shook her head, and touched each one of
them on the heart; and no other answer would she give. So the
children were no wiser on that point than before.

Thus time went on steadily, to-morrow always going before to-day, and
yesterday invariably bringing up the rear, until a year was past; and
what should come round again but Rumpty-Dudget's birthday, the most
unlucky day of all the three hundred and sixty five! An hour and
twenty seconds before sunset Tom the Cat said to the children:

'Now, you must be very careful, while I am away, to do as I tell you.
Do not go out into the garden, do not touch the black ball that lies
on the nursery table, and do not jump against the north wind; for if
you do----'

But at this moment the hour struck, and Tom the Cat sprang into the
air and disappeared like a soap bubble.

For a while the three children remembered what had been said to them;
they played quietly in the palace, and did not touch the black ball on
the nursery table. But towards sunset it so happened that they were
all leaning against the table, with their elbows resting on it, and
their heads between their hands. There lay the black ball mysterious
and quiet. The longer the children looked at it the more mysterious it
appeared. At last Hilda said:

'I wonder where it came from?'

'I wonder what it's made of?' said Harold.

'I wonder why we mustn't touch it?' said Hector.

Then all three looked at it steadily for another minute. Then Hilda
exclaimed suddenly:

'I believe it moved!'

'So do I!' cried Harold.

'I don't!' said Hector. 'But I can make it move.' And with that he
gave the table a tip, and the black ball rolled off, bounced on to the
floor, and jumped out of the window into the garden.

'You have disobeyed Tom the Cat,' said Hilda, after a pause.

'How shall we ever get it back again?' cried Harold, running to the
window and looking out. 'Oh, I can see it! there, in the middle of the
lawn.'

'Yes, but we are not to go into the garden,' said Hilda.

'It is all Hector's fault,' said Harold.

'I am going into the garden to play with the ball,' said Hector
boldly; and he walked off.

'What a naughty boy he is!' said Harold to Hilda.

'Yes; but the wind blows from the south,' she answered. 'You may stay
here if you like; I think I shall go and play with Hector.' And she
walked off.

'What naughty children they are!' said Harold to himself. 'But Hilda
is older than I, and Hector is younger, so I think I will go out too.'
So he ran after the others, and came up with them just as Hector had
picked up the black ball and was tossing it to Hilda.

'Let us play in a triangle,' said Harold. So they stood at the three
corners, and tossed the ball from one to another.

But, strange to say, the wind, which had been blowing all day from the
south, had suddenly changed to the north; and the spots on the
children's faces began to get blacker than ink and hotter than pepper.
And, as they had to keep rubbing the spots first with one hand and
then with another, they were continually missing the ball when it was
thrown to them; and they did not notice that every time it fell to the
ground it struck nearer and nearer to the tall hedge which divided
Rumpty-Dudget's land from the Queen's. At last Harold got the ball to
himself, and kept tossing it up and down without letting the others
have their turn. Hereupon Hilda and Hector began to run after him to
take the ball away from him; but just as they caught up with him he
gave the ball a great throw, and it flew clear over the high hedge,
and came down with a bounce in Rumpty-Dudget's garden. It wanted three
minutes to sunset.

The three children were a good deal frightened at this, and looked at
one another in dismay. But they did not yet know how much reason for
fright there was.

'It is your fault!' said Hector to Harold.

'It is your fault!' said Harold to Hilda.

'It is your fault!' said Hilda to Hector.

'Let us look through the hole in the hedge,' said Hector, putting his
finger on his chin, where the black spot was. Hilda put her finger
upon the spot on her forehead and followed him; and Harold followed
them both, with his finger on his nose. They came to the hole in the
hedge, and looked through it.

'I can see it!' exclaimed Hilda.

'It is not far off,' said Harold. 'If the north wind did not blow so
hard through this hole we might jump through and get it.'

'I don't mind jumping against the north wind,' said Hector boldly; and
with that he jumped through the hole: and the sun set.

'It is too late!' said Tom the Cat, who appeared between Harold and
Hilda at that moment. 'I cannot save him now. Look!'

Hector, after jumping through the hedge, had run up to the black ball
and stooped to pick it up. But the ball moved and unfolded itself, and
a little cackling laugh came out of it, and it stood up on its legs.
It was no other than Rumpty-Dudget himself.

'Now, my young prince, you will come with me and stand in my
hundred-and-first corner!' said he, with a malignant grin.

'No, I won't!' said Hector.

At that Rumpty-Dudget took a piece of black string from his pocket and
held one end of it to the black spot on Hector's chin; and it stuck to
it so fast that all the pulling in the world could not pull it off.
Then Rumpty-Dudget put the string over his shoulder, and so dragged
Hector into his tower, and put him in the hundred-and-first corner.

As soon as this was done the north wind increased to a hurricane; the
beautiful palace was blown away, the Garden of Delight was destroyed,
and nothing was left but a desert covered with grey stones and
brambles. The dull grey cloud covered all the sky, and Rumpty-Dudget
was master of the whole country.




CHAPTER IV.

NO TIME TO BE LOST.


Princess Hilda and Prince Harold sat down on a heap of rubbish that
happened to be near them, and cried heartily. Tom the Cat sat before
them, moving the end of his tail first one way and then the other, and
looking very sorrowful out of his yellow eyes. But presently he said:

'Crying will not get poor Hector back again.'

'Can we ever get him back?' sobbed Harold.

'I would do anything!' whimpered Hilda.

'If our Fairy Aunt were only here,' said Harold, 'perhaps she could
tell us what we ought to do.'

'You will not see the Fairy Aunt again,' Tom replied, 'until you have
got Hector out of the grey tower, where he is at this moment standing,
with his face to the wall and his hands behind his back, in the
one-hundred-and-first corner.'

'But what can we do?' cried Hilda, beginning to weep afresh. 'We are
nothing but little children.'

'Perhaps you may be able to do more than if you were grown up,' Tom
replied. 'It depends a good deal upon how much you love Hector.'

'Oh!' exclaimed both the children at once; and as they could not think
of anything big enough to compare their love for Hector to, they said
nothing more.

'Listen to me, then,' said Tom, 'and all may yet be well. But in the
first place get on my back, so that I may take you out of this desert
and into the great forest, where we can lay our plans without being
interrupted.'

So saying Tom rose and curved his back: the two children jumped upon
it; off they all went, and, in less time than it takes to tell it,
they were in the midst of that great Forest of Mystery which they had
so often seen from the window of their chamber, but which, until now,
they had never entered. It was quite still, except a faint chopping
noise that seemed to come from a long way off.

'What makes that noise?' Hilda asked.

'That is Rumpty-Dudget cutting down the trees,' Tom replied; 'and
unless we can stop him he will cut down every one of them. However, he
will hardly get so far as this to-night. Now, children, sit down and
listen.'

The children accordingly seated themselves on a cushion of moss at the
foot of one of the tallest pine-trees in the forest, and the cat sat
down in front of them, with his thick tail curled round his toes.

'The first thing to be done,' said Tom, looking at the children with
his yellow eyes, which burned as brightly as lamps in the gloom of the
forest, 'the first thing to be done is, of course, to get the Golden
Ivy-seed and the Diamond Waterdrop. After that the rest is easy.'

'And where are the Golden Ivy-seed and the Diamond Waterdrop to be
found?' inquired the two children hopefully.

'The Golden Ivy-seed must be sought in the centre of the earth, where
the King of the Gnomes reigns,' replied the cat; 'and the Diamond
Waterdrop is to be asked for in the kingdom of the Air Spirits, above
the clouds.'

'But how are we to get up to the Air Spirits and down to the Gnomes?'
asked the children disconsolately.

'We will see about that,' replied the cat. 'But before starting we
must build the enchanted bonfire.'

'What good will that do?' demanded the children.

'We could never get on without it,' replied Tom. 'For since Hector has
been put into the one-hundred-and-first corner the sun has caught fire
and the moon has frozen up, and this fire will be all we can have to
warm and light us on our journey.'

'But what if it should go out while we are away?' said the children.

'In order to prevent that one of you must stay by it, while the other
goes with me on the journey,' said Tom. 'Harold, you shall be the one
to stay. Be sure and not let the fire go out whatever happens; for if
it does, Rumpty-Dudget will take the blackened logs and rub Hector's
face all over with them, and then we should never be able to get him
out of the tower at all. Now do you two run about and pick up all the
dried sticks you can find, and pile them together in a heap, while I
get the touchwood ready.'

In a few minutes--so diligently did Hilda and Harold work--a heap of
faggots had been gathered together as high as the top of Hilda's head.
Meanwhile Tom the Cat had not been idle. He had drawn on the ground
with the tip of his tail a large circle, in the centre of which was
the heap of faggots. It had now become quite dark, and the children
could not have seen their way about had it not been for Tom's yellow
eyes, which burned as brightly as two carriage-lamps.

'Come inside the circle, children,' said he at length. 'I am now going
to light the touchwood.'

In they came accordingly, and sat down again on the moss cushion at
the foot of the tall pine-tree. The cat then put the touchwood on the
ground and crouched down in front of it, with his nose resting against
it; and he stared and stared at it with his flaming yellow eyes, and
by and by it began to smoke and smoulder, and at last it caught fire
and burned away famously.

'That will do nicely,' said the cat; 'now put on some sticks.'

Hilda and Harold heaped on the dry sticks in handfuls; and so the
enchanted fire was fairly started, and it burned blue, red, and
yellow.

'And now there is no time to be lost,' said Tom the Cat. 'Harold, you
will stay beside this fire, and keep it burning until I come back with
Hilda from the kingdoms of the Air Spirits and of the Gnomes.
Remember, that if you let the fire go out it can never again be
lighted, and all will be lost. Nevertheless, you must on no account go
outside the circle to gather more faggots, if those which are already
inside get used up before we return. You may, perhaps, be tempted to
do so; but if you yield to the temptation all will go wrong. Your
brother Hector will then be in greater danger than ever, and the only
way you can save him will be to get into the fire yourself and burn!'

Prince Harold did not much like the idea of being left alone in the
woods all night, with the sound of Rumpty-Dudget's axe coming ever
nearer and nearer. Still, since it was for his little brother Hector's
sake, he never dreamed of refusing. But he made up his mind to be
particularly careful not to use up the faggots too fast, so that he
would not be tempted to go outside the ring.

Hilda and Tom kissed him, and bade him farewell; then Hilda got on the
cat's back, and nestled down amidst the warm white fur. Tom sprang on
to the trunk of the tall pine-tree, and away! straight upwards they
went, and were out of sight in the twinkling of an eye.




CHAPTER V.

THE QUEEN OF THE AIR.


After climbing upwards for a long time they came at last to the very
tiptop of the pine-tree, which was just on a level with the upper
surface of the clouds.

'We are now above the reach of the north wind,' remarked the cat; 'and
this is the only tree in the forest tall enough for our purpose. All
the clouds hereabouts, as you see, are blown by the south wind and by
the west. If we rode on one blown by the north we should be driven
straight into Rumpty-Dudget's power.'

'Are we going to ride on a cloud, then?' asked Hilda, feeling a little
nervous; for it was a terrible distance if they should fall.

'Hold tight to me, and you will be safe,' replied Tom. 'Here comes the
cloud we want--it will pass within two yards of us. As we make the
jump do you look down to the foot of the tree and see whether Harold
is in his place and the fire still burning.'

Hardly had Tom done speaking, when the cloud sailed by, passing, as he
had said, within two yards of the top of the pine-tree to which they
were clinging. The cat jumped, and alighted very cleverly on the
cloud's edge, and a moment's scramble brought them to the top.
Meanwhile, Hilda had looked downward to the foot of the tree as they
took their leap; and she had caught a glimpse of Harold sitting within
the ring, beside the enchanted fire, and seeming rather disconsolate.
But the fire was burning brightly, yellow, red, and blue.

The cloud sailed away, and took them to a part of the sky which Hilda
had never seen before. It was full of a strange white light, and no
darkness ever came there. On went the cloud, moving slowly but
steadily, like a great ship steering its way amidst the sky. The
kingdom of the Air Spirits soon loomed in sight. Rainbow bridges
spanned its shining rivers; its forests were like the tracery of the
Northern Lights; and the houses and palaces in which the people lived
were stars of different sizes, along whose rays was the only path to
get to them.

At length the cloud entered the harbour, and, letting down an anchor
of raindrops, its motion ceased.

'You must go the rest of the way alone, Hilda,' said the cat. 'I shall
wait for you, and you will find me here on your return.'

'But which way am I to go, and what am I to do?' asked Hilda in a
tremulous tone; for being so high above the earth almost took her
breath away.

'You must ask the first Air Spirit you meet to show you the star where
the Queen lives, and then you must get there the best way you can,'
Tom replied. 'When you have found her you must ask her for the Diamond
Waterdrop. But be very careful not to sit down, however much you may
be tempted to do so; for if you do, your little brother Hector never
can be saved.'

Hilda did not much like the idea of making so perilous a journey as
this promised to be, without even the cat to go with her; but since it
was for Hector's sake she never dreamed of refusing: only she made up
her mind on no account to sit down, no matter what happened. She bade
Tom farewell, therefore, and walked off.

She had not gone far when she met an Air Spirit, carrying its nose in
the air--as, of course, all Air Spirits do.

'Can you tell me which star the Queen sits in?' Hilda asked.

'What do you want of the Queen?' inquired the Air Spirit
superciliously.

'I want to ask her where the Diamond Waterdrop is,' answered Hilda.

'You will never get on in this country unless you carry your nose more
in the air than you do,' observed the Air Spirit. 'As for her Majesty,
she sits in the large star up yonder with the white ray. Mind you
don't break your neck. Ta-ta!'

Hilda went onward very disconsolately. As to carrying her nose in the
air she had never in her life felt less inclined to do such a thing.
By and by she came to the spot where the white ray of light from the
Queen's star touched the solid air. A number of Air Spirits were
walking up and down it like so many tight-rope dancers.

'Look at that absurd child!' they said to one another. 'See how she
hangs her head! Why doesn't she put on airs? She will never come to
anything.'

Hilda began to climb up the long white ray; and though at first she
was very much frightened, by degrees she gained courage, and at last
she was able to walk along tolerably fast. But it was a long distance
to the top, and by the time she got there she was almost ready to drop
with fatigue.

The star, when she entered it, was a glorious place indeed; and the
Queen of the Air Spirits was dazzlingly beautiful, though Hilda
fancied that she looked upon her rather haughtily. She was seated upon
a throne of fretted sunshine; and as soon as Hilda was within hearing
she said:

'I have been expecting you. You have come a long way, and you look
very tired. Come here and sit down.'

'No, your Majesty,' replied Hilda faintly, 'I have no time to sit down
or to stay. I have come to ask you for the Diamond Waterdrop.'

'For the Diamond Waterdrop indeed!' exclaimed the Queen, laughing.
'And pray what made you suppose that you would find the Diamond
Waterdrop here? However, sit down here beside me, and let us talk
about it. Such a question as you ask cannot be answered in a moment.'

But Hilda shook her head.

'Listen to me, my dear Princess,' said the Queen again, more
courteously than she had yet spoken. 'I know that you like to have
everything your own way; and, as you are perhaps aware, there is no
one who can have things so entirely her own way as can the Queen of
the Air Spirits. Now, Princess Hilda, if you will sit down here on my
throne I will let you be Queen of the Air Spirits instead of me. You
shall have everything your own way, and you shall put on as many airs
as you please. Come!'

When Hilda heard this she certainly felt for a moment very much
tempted to do as the Queen asked her. But the next moment the thought
came to her of her poor little brother Hector, standing in the
hundred-and-first corner of Rumpty-Dudget's tower, with his face to
the wall and his hands behind his back. So she answered, with tears in
her eyes:

'Oh, Queen of the Air Spirits, I am so sorry for my little brother
that I do not any longer care to have everything my own way, or to
put on airs, or to do anything except find the Diamond Waterdrop, so
that Hector may be saved. Can you tell me where it is?'

But the Queen shook her beautiful head and frowned.

'I have no Diamond Waterdrop,' said she. 'Ask yourself where it is.'

Then poor Hilda felt as if her heart would break, and she sobbed out:

'Oh, what shall I do to save my poor little brother?'

There was no answer, and Hilda turned away. But, as she did so, the
Queen suddenly said:

'I see the Diamond Waterdrop now, Hilda!'

'Oh, where?' cried Hilda, turning again eagerly.

The Queen was smiling upon her now with a very kind expression.

'It is on your own cheek!' said she.

Hilda was so bewildered that, at first, she could only gaze at the
Queen without moving or speaking.

'Yes,' the Queen continued, in a gentle tone, 'you might have searched
through all the kingdoms of the earth and air, and yet never have
found that precious Diamond, had you not loved your brother Hector
more than you loved to be Queen. That tear upon your cheek, Hilda,
which you shed for love of him, is the Diamond Waterdrop that you have
sought. Keep it in this crystal phial; be prudent, patient, and
resolute, and sooner or later Hector will be free.'

As the Queen spoke she held out a small crystal phial, and the tear
from Hilda's cheek fell into it. Then the Queen hung the phial about
Hilda's neck by a chain of moon-sparkles, and kissed her tenderly and
bade her farewell. And away went Hilda, light of foot, for the
weariness had left her. But as she went she kept fancying that she had
somewhere heard a voice like this Queen's before; but where or when
she could not tell.

She now reached the solid air again, and hastening her steps, she
presently arrived at the harbour in which the cloud was anchored; and
there she found Tom the Cat awaiting her. He got up and stretched
himself as she approached; and when he saw the crystal phial hanging
at her neck by its chain of moon-sparkles he said:

'So far all has gone well. But the hardest part is yet to come: we
have to find the Golden Ivy-seed. There is no time to be lost, so jump
on my back, and let us be off!'

With that he curved his back, Hilda put her arms round his neck and
nestled down in the soft white fur, and Tom gave a great leap off the
edge of the cloud, and away! down they went through the empty air like
a live snowball, and it seemed to Hilda that they never would have
done falling. At length, however, they alighted safely on the top of a
haystack, and the next moment they were standing in the hayfield.




CHAPTER VI.

THE KING OF THE GNOMES.


Just beside the haystack was a field-mouse's hole, or what looked like
one; and something that looked like a little brown mouse, but which
might have been something else for all Hilda could tell, was sitting
at the entrance of it. But when it saw the cat it rose up on its
little hind legs, turned a complete somersault, and then darted away
down the hole; and Hilda noticed that it had no tail.

'What a curious mouse!' she said to Tom.

'It was a Gnome,' he replied: 'they are often mistaken for mice when
they appear on the surface of the ground.'

'Where has he gone to?' inquired Hilda.

'Down to the centre of the earth, to be sure,' said Tom, 'to tell the
others that we are coming.'

'But we can never get into such a little hole as that,' Hilda said.

'Get on my back, and hold fast!' was all Tom's answer; and when Hilda
had nestled down in his soft white fur and clasped her arms round his
neck he began scratching at the hole with both his fore-paws, and
throwing up the dirt in a mighty heap behind; till in a wonderfully
short time a large passage was made, opening towards the centre of the
earth.

'Hold fast!' said Tom again, and into the passage they went.

If it had not been for the cat's eyes, which shone like two yellow
carriage-lamps, they might more than once have missed their way, for
it was as dark as pitch during the first part of the journey. Hilda,
as she clung close to the cat's back, could see that they were passing
rapidly through what seemed to be a series of caves, one opening into
another, and growing always higher and broader as they went on. At
first the air felt damp and cold; but as they sped onwards it grew
warmer and drier; and now the wall of the caverns began to throw back
gleams of many-coloured light, as if from gigantic jewels sticking
there; and presently the light increased, without seeming to come
from anywhere in particular; and the great vault overhead seemed to
soar aloft, until only a misty brightness was visible, like the sky at
sunset-time, when it is feathered with gorgeous clouds. It was a new
and marvellous country, with gold and silver filagree instead of
foliage, and fields of emerald, and rivers of sapphires, and distant
mountains of amethyst. By and by the cat came to two lofty pillars of
plain white alabaster, and there he stopped.

'Now, Hilda,' he said, 'you must go the rest of the way alone. Pass
between those pillars, and then you will be in the kingdom of the
Gnomes. Ask the first Gnome you meet to show you the place where the
King ploughs; and when you have found him, ask him where the Golden
Ivy-seed is. But be very careful to do everything that he bids you, no
matter how strange or disagreeable it may be; for, if you disobey him,
your brother Hector cannot be saved.'

Though Hilda did not much like the idea of going on through this
strange land all by herself, still, since it was for Hector's sake,
she never dreamed of refusing; only she made up her mind to do
everything the King bade her, whatever happened. So off she started,
and after passing between the alabaster pillars she came to a road on
which the gold-dust lay an inch thick; for it seldom rains in the
centre of the earth. Pretty soon she met a little brown Gnome, running
along on all-fours, and turning somersaults, as all Gnomes do.

'Will you show me the place where the King ploughs?' asked Hilda.

'What do you want of him?' asked the Gnome.

'I want to ask him to tell me where the Golden Ivy-seed is,' Hilda
replied.

'He ploughs in the emerald field on the other side of the mountain of
amethyst,' said the Gnome; 'but, unless you can go on all-fours and
turn somersaults better than you seem able to do, you will never get
on in this country.'

But Hilda had never walked on all-fours, much less turned somersaults,
since she was a baby a year old; so she trudged along the dusty golden
road just as she was, and all the Gnomes who met her threw somersaults
and said:

'See how upright she walks! She will never come to anything!'

The road was very long, the amethyst mountain was very far away, and
Hilda was very tired by the time she arrived at the emerald field. But
there was the field at last, and there was the King of the Gnomes on
all-fours in the midst of it. He was a strange little being, with
piercing black eyes, immensely broad shoulders, and a beard of white
asbestos woven together like a woman's braid. As soon as he caught
sight of Hilda he shouted out to her:

'Get down on all-fours this instant! How dare you come into my kingdom
walking upright?'

Hilda was a good deal frightened at the way the King spoke; but she
answered resolutely, 'Your Majesty, I walked upright because there was
no time to lose, and I have come to ask you for the Golden Ivy-seed.'

'The Golden Ivy-seed, forsooth!' exclaimed the King, with a deep
laugh. 'What made you suppose, I should like to know, that there was
any Golden Ivy-seed to be got here? The Golden Ivy-seed is not given
to people with stiff necks, I can assure you; so get down on all-fours
at once, or else go about your business.'

Then Hilda remembered what Tom the Cat had told her, and down she
dropped on all-fours without a word.

'Now, listen to me,' said the King sternly. 'I shall harness you to
that plough in the place of my horses, and you must drag it up and
down over this field until the whole of it is ploughed, while I follow
behind with the whip. Hitch yourself to the shaft immediately. Come!'

When Hilda heard this command it seemed to her at first as if it was
impossible that she could obey it. For she was weary with her long
journey along the golden road and over the mountain of amethyst, and
the King's plough looked very heavy, and his whip very long; and,
besides, she thought it was much beneath the dignity of a princess
such as she was to be driven on all-fours through a ploughed field.
But the next moment the thought came to her of her poor little brother
Hector, standing in the hundred-and-first corner of Rumpty-Dudget's
tower, with his face to the wall and his hands behind his back. So she
said humbly:

'Oh, King of the Gnomes! I am so sorry for my brother Hector that for
his sake I will do as you bid me, in the hope that afterwards you
will tell me where the Golden Ivy-seed is to be found, so that Hector
may be saved from Rumpty-Dudget's tower.'

The King made no reply whatever, but he harnessed Hilda to the plough,
and she dragged it back and forth across the emerald field until the
whole of it was ploughed, while the King followed behind with the
whip. At last he unharnessed her.

'Now begone about your business!' he said roughly.

'But you have not told me where the Golden Ivy-seed is,' said Hilda,
with a piteous throb in her heart.

'I have no Golden Ivy-seed!' returned the King, with his deep laugh.
'Why don't you ask yourself where it is?'

At this poor Hilda's heart felt as if it were broken, and she sank
down on the ground and sobbed out:

'Oh! what shall I do to save my little brother?'

But hereupon the King of the Gnomes smiled upon her, and he said, in a
gentler voice than he had yet used:

'Put your hand to your heart, Hilda, and see what you find there.'

Hilda did not understand what he meant; but she had by this time got
so used to obeying him that she put her hand to her heart, and felt
something fall into the palm of her hand; and when in astonishment she
looked at it, behold, it was a tiny golden seed!

'Yes,' said the King kindly, 'you might have searched through all the
kingdoms of the earth and air, and yet never have found that precious
seed, had not your heart been broken like this field for love of your
brother Hector. Keep the Golden Ivy-seed in this hollow pearl; be
humble, patient, and gentle, and sooner or later Hector will be free.'

As he said these words he fastened the pearl to her girdle with a
jewelled clasp, and kissed her on the forehead and bade her farewell.
And as Hilda trudged back along the golden road and over the mountain
of amethyst she kept thinking that somewhere she had heard a voice
like this King's before; but where or when she could not tell.

In course of time she arrived at the alabaster pillars, and, passing
out between them, she found Tom the Cat awaiting her. He got up and
stretched himself as she approached; and when he saw the hollow pearl
at her girdle he said:

'So far all has gone well. But now we must see whether or not Harold
has kept the enchanted fire going. There is no time to be lost; so
jump on my back and hold fast, and let us be off.'

With that he curved his back; Hilda clasped her arms round his neck as
before, and away they went, through the gleaming caverns, and up the
sombre passages, and through the cold damp tunnels, until at last out
they popped beside the haystack in the field; and after they had come
out the little brown creature which had been sitting waiting at the
entrance threw a somersault into the great pit and disappeared. And
immediately the whole heap of earth which Tom had dug up fell back
into its place, and nothing was left but a small round crevice in the
ground, like a field-mouse's hole.




CHAPTER VII.

THE ENCHANTED FIRE.


Now, Harold--after he had seen Hilda and the cat vanish up the trunk
of the tall pine-tree--had sat himself down rather disconsolately
beside the fire, which was blazing away famously, yellow, red, and
blue. He rested his back against the trunk of the tree, and fixed his
eyes upon the fire; it made a slight rustling and crackling noise as
it burned. There was also another noise, but that did not come from
the fire; it was a chopping noise, sounding far away in the forest,
and Harold knew that it was Rumpty-Dudget cutting down the trees. Each
time he heard this sound it seemed to be a little nearer. Then he
would wonder to himself what he should do if Rumpty-Dudget were
suddenly to appear. He must not, at all events, let the fire go out;
and every once in a while he took a faggot from the pile that he and
Hilda had heaped up and put it in the leaping flame; but he was very
careful to avoid stepping outside the circle which Tom the Cat had
drawn with the tip of his tail.

In this manner a very long time passed away, and Harold, who had never
sat up so late before in his life, began to get uncommonly sleepy. But
still Hilda and Tom did not return; and Harold knew that, if he were
to lie down and take a nap, the enchanted fire might go out before he
waked up again; and, as Tom had warned him, once out it could never be
rekindled. Moreover, Rumpty-Dudget would then be able to steal the
fire-blackened logs and blacken poor Hector's face all over with them,
so that he never could be saved. Therefore Harold kept himself awake,
partly by sitting on a pine-needle which he had found stuck in the
moss cushion, and partly by putting fresh faggots into the flame,
which went on burning blue, yellow, and red.

But another very long time passed away, and the sound of
Rumpty-Dudget's axe sounded nearer, and the forest was dark and full
of mystery, and there was no sign yet of Hilda and the cat. 'I never
knew before,' said Harold to himself, 'that a night was so much
longer than a day. I always thought they were a great deal shorter,
But then I have no Fairy Aunt now to come and whisper pleasant stories
into my ear. Heigho! well, I suppose I must put on another faggot.'
And he got up to fetch one.

Much to his consternation, however, he found that there was now only a
single faggot left of all those that he and Hilda had gathered
together.

He was really frightened at this, and knew not what to do; for this
last faggot would soon be burnt up, and then what was to be done to
keep the enchanted fire going? He made a careful search inside the
ring, and satisfied himself that there was not so much as another chip
to be found there; and Tom had told him that if he went outside the
ring all would be lost.

However, the last faggot was not gone yet, and in order to make it
last as long as possible Harold took it apart and put only one stick
at a time on the fire; but it was alarming to see how quickly the
flame ate up one after another, and seemed hungrier than ever. After a
while all but the last stick was gone. A little while more and that
had to be put in too. And then Prince Harold sat down quite in despair
and cried with all his might. He was at the end of everything, and at
his wit's end too.

At that moment he heard a voice calling to him; and looking up he saw
an odd little man standing just outside the circle, carrying a great
bundle of faggots on his shoulder. Harold's eyes were so full of tears
that he did not see that this odd little man was Rumpty-Dudget
himself; or else (what is quite as likely) the dwarf had some spell by
means of which he could make himself appear different from what he
was.

'What are you crying for, my poor dear little boy?' asked
Rumpty-Dudget of Prince Harold in his most coaxing voice.

'Because I have used up all my faggots,' he answered.

'Used them all up! But surely there are plenty more in the forest
where those came from?' the dwarf answered in pretended surprise.
'Besides, what harm if the fire does go out? It isn't a cold night,
and the moon will be up presently.'

'But if the fire goes out,' said Harold, 'my poor little brother
Hector cannot be saved.'

'Oh, that is the trouble, is it?' exclaimed the dwarf. 'Well, now, it
is lucky I happened to come along this way; you could not have met
with a better adviser than I am. For I know all about this
Rumpty-Dudget, with whom your brother Hector is staying; and I saw
Hector myself not an hour ago.'

'Oh! did you?' cried Harold in great excitement.

'To be sure I did; and very well he looked, I can tell you. He has
done nothing but eat sugar-candy and blow on a tin whistle ever since
he went there; and he says he wants nothing better than to stay with
Rumpty-Dudget all his life. And, by the way, he asked me to tell you
if I saw you that he hoped you and your sister would come and join;
for that Rumpty-Dudget is the pleasantest fellow in the world, and not
at all like what you had been made to believe him.'

'Oh-h!' exclaimed Harold, staring at Rumpty-Dudget with wide-open
eyes. 'I don't see how that can be true. Who are you?'

'A friend,' replied Rumpty-Dudget. 'And to prove it I have brought
over this bundle of faggots; and when these are used up I will get
you some more.'

'Oh, thank you very much!' exclaimed Harold, jumping for joy, and
going as near to the inside edge of the circle as he could. 'Give them
to me quick, for there is no time to be lost; the fire is just going
out.'

'I can't bring them inside the circle,' said the dwarf, suddenly
putting the bundle on the ground, and pretending to be very much
exhausted. 'I have carried them already all the way from the further
side of the forest, and that is far enough. Surely you can come the
rest of the way for them yourself.'

'But I must not come outside the circle, you know,' said Harold,
dancing up and down with impatience.

'Why not?'

'Because Tom the Cat said that if I did all would go wrong.'

'Pshaw! what should a cat know about a thing like this?' demanded the
dwarf very scornfully. 'At all events, your fire will burn less than a
minute longer; and you know what will happen when it goes out.'

At that Harold became almost beside himself with anxiety and
bewilderment, and what to do he could not tell. But at last he
thought that anything would be better than to let the fire go out; so
he put one foot outside the circle and stretched forth his hand for
the faggots.

'Just the least bit further,' said the dwarf coaxingly. 'I would save
you the trouble if I could; but I am really too tired to stir.'

Harold saw that by stretching about six inches further he could reach
a faggot. But in order to stretch six inches he would be obliged to
put the other foot outside the circle. 'After all, what can it
matter?' he thought. And the next moment there he was, outside!

Immediately, with aloud laugh, the dwarf flung away the faggots far
into the depths of the forest; and rushing into the circle, he began
to stamp out with his feet what was left of the enchanted fire.

Then Harold recognised Rumpty-Dudget for the first time, for the spell
was off him. And Harold remembered what Tom the Cat had said, and he
leaped back into the circle, and as the last bit of flame flickered at
the end of the stick he laid himself down upon it. Whereupon
Rumpty-Dudget gave a hoarse cry and vanished; and the enchanted fire
blazed up famously, red, blue, and yellow, with poor Harold in the
midst of it.




CHAPTER VIII.

THE GOLDEN IVY.


Now, or never, it was the time for Hilda and the cat to come back.
And, sure enough, at this very instant there was a sound like the
whistling of a blast of wind through the forest, and a hurrying and a
skurrying, and behold! there was Tom the Cat, with Hilda on his back.

Tom said nothing, but he sprang into the circle, and without losing an
instant he dug a little hole in the ground with his fore paws,
throwing up the dirt in a heap behind him. When it was finished he
said:

'Open the hollow pearl, Hilda, and put the Golden Ivy-seed in this
hole; and make haste, for Harold is burning for Hector's sake!'

So Hilda made haste to open the hollow pearl and to put the Golden
Ivy-seed in the hole; and the cat spread the earth over it, and then
said:

'Now take the crystal phial, Hilda, and pour half the Diamond
Waterdrop upon the place where the seed is planted, and the other half
upon the enchanted fire; and make haste, for Harold is burning for
Hector's sake!'

So Hilda made haste and did what the cat had told her to do.

When the half of the Diamond Waterdrop fell upon the fire in which
Harold had all this while been burning the fire was immediately put
out. And there lay Harold, alive and well, amidst the embers; but the
black spot upon his nose was all burned away, and his hair and eyes,
which had until then been brown, were now quite black.

So up he jumped, and he and Hilda kissed each other heartily, for they
felt as if they had been separated for a long time.

'What has become of the black spot on your forehead, Hilda?' asked
Harold. 'It is not there any more.'

'Ah!' said Tom, 'that disappeared when the King of the Gnomes kissed
her. But now make yourselves ready, children, for we are going to take
a ride to Rumpty-Dudget's tower.'

On hearing this the young prince and princess were greatly surprised,
and looked about for the horses on which they were to ride.

But behold! the Golden Ivy-seed, watered with the Diamond Waterdrop,
was already growing and sprouting with marvellous vigour and rapidity.
A strong stem, with leaves of glistening gold, had pushed itself out
of the earth, and was creeping along the ground towards
Rumpty-Dudget's tower: hardly creeping, either, for it moved faster
than a man could run. The cat helped Hilda and Harold to a seat on two
of the largest leaves, while he himself clung to the stem; and so away
they went through the forest merrily. As they advanced the heavy grey
cloud which had overcast all the heavens since Rumpty-Dudget's rule
began was rolled back like a mighty scroll; and the pure sky, lit up
with the fresh sunshine of the early dawn, smiled above the mysterious
forest. Then the forest too awoke to life and joyousness; the birds
sang in the branches, and fragrant flowers, sparkling with dew, glowed
in the happy glades with mingled tints of white, blue, and red. So on
they went, carrying with them the freshness and perfume of the
morning and of spring; and in a wonderfully short time the Golden Ivy
had brought them to the gates of Rumpty-Dudget's tower.

'Jump down now,' said Tom, 'and leave the Golden Ivy to do the rest.'

Down they all jumped accordingly, and stood at one side, near the
castle gates. But the Golden Ivy kept on, and threw itself across, the
moat, and clambered over the portcullis, and forced its way into the
courtyard, and writhed along the passages and up the staircases, until
(in less time than it takes to write about it) the Ivy had reached the
room with the hundred-and-one corners. In the midst of this room stood
Rumpty-Dudget, having fled to it for safety; for it was defended by
enchantments which only the Golden Ivy could have overcome. There he
stood, trembling in his shoes, as well he might; and in all the
corners round about, with their faces to the wall and their hands
behind their backs, stood the poor little children that Rumpty-Dudget
had caught.

But they were not to stand there much longer, for Rumpty-Dudget's hour
had come! He tried to run away, but the terrible Golden Ivy ran after
him and caught him, and bound down his arms, and tied together his
legs, and clutched him around the throat, and squeezed him round the
body, and fastened its coils upon him tighter and tighter, until all
the mischief was squeezed out of him. But, since Rumpty-Dudget was
entirely made of mischief, when all the mischief was squeezed out of
him of course there was no Rumpty-Dudget left--no, not so much as one
of his shoe-buckles!

And when Rumpty-Dudget had ceased to exist of course all the children
who had been made prisoners by his spells became free; and they came
racing and shouting out of the grey tower, with little Prince Hector
at their head. But when Hector saw his brother and sister, and they
saw him, they all three set up a cry of joy, and ran together and
hugged and kissed each other heartily; for they felt as if they had
been parted for a very long time.

At last Hilda said, 'Why, Hector, what has become of the black spot
that used to be on your chin? It is not there any more.'

'It got rubbed off against the wall of the room with the
hundred-and-one corners,' replied Hector demurely.

At that they all three laughed; but Hilda at least had tears in her
eyes.

'And look at his hair and eyes!' exclaimed Harold; 'they are brown
now, instead of black, as they used to be. What is the reason of
that?'

'It is the touch of the Golden Ivy,' said a voice behind them, which
Hilda fancied she had heard somewhere before.

The three children looked round, and saw a lady standing beside them,
dazzlingly beautiful, with a crown on her head and a smile in her
eyes. They all knew her at once, though they had never seen her before
except in their dreams. It was their Fairy Aunt.

'But you look very much like the Queen our mother,' said Hilda.

'And do I look like anyone besides her?' asked the lady, with a smile.

'Yes, you are like the Queen of the Air Spirits!' exclaimed Hilda;
'though you don't look so haughty as she did at first.'

'Anyone else?' asked the lady again, speaking in a very gruff tone,
and drawing her eyebrows together.

'Dear me! that is the way the King of the Gnomes talked,' said Hilda,
clasping her hands. 'Surely you couldn't have been him?'

'Yes, my darlings,' said the lady, sitting down and drawing the three
children to her lap, 'I am the Queen, your mother; though, by
Rumpty-Dudget's spells, I was obliged to leave you, and to be seen by
you only in your dreams at night. And I was what seemed to you the
Queen of the Air Spirits, Hilda, and the King of the Gnomes as well;
because love shows itself in many forms, and works for you above and
beneath, and both while you wake and while you sleep; but it is always
the same love in the end, and if you love one another you will find it
out at last.'

'After all,' said Hilda thoughtfully, 'I love you best as our own
mamma. And you will always be our mamma, and be with us now, won't
you?'

'Yes, my darlings,' answered the Queen, giving them all a hug and a
kiss; 'there will be no more changes or partings, for Rumpty-Dudget
and his tower are gone, and we are free.'

'But where is Tom the Cat?' cried Hector all of a sudden, looking this
way and that. 'We can never be happy anywhere without him.'

'Oh, Tom has done his work, and we shall not see him any more,' said
the Queen, shaking her head mysteriously.

But at this all the children looked ready to cry.

'Well, then, you shall have one more look at him,' said the Queen. She
wore on her shoulders a long hooded mantle of the finest white fur. By
a sudden movement she drew this mantle round her, and pulled the hood
over her head and face; and behold! there sat Tom the Cat, looking as
natural as possible, only that between the folds of the fur the
children could see their mother's eyes laughing.

'I have often looked out at you so before now,' she said, as she threw
back the hood and mantle; 'and you would have seen me as plainly as
you do now, but that the spell prevented you. So, you see, we shall
take what was really Tom the Cat along with us, after all.'

'Where are we going?' Harold asked.

'To our home in Fairyland,' answered the Queen.

'And are we never coming back here any more?' asked Hilda, glad to
go, and yet with almost a sigh.

'No, we shall never see this land again,' the Queen replied. 'It was
beautiful, but all its beauty lives again in the land whither we go.
And there are no Rumpty-Dudgets in that land, and no grey towers full
of corners, and no prickly hedges, nor winds from the north. And all
the stars of the air and jewels of the earth are in that land, only
more glorious and splendid than those that Hilda saw. But why should I
tell you about it, when you are going to see it all for yourselves
this very day? Are you ready?'

'Yes!' said all the children together.

Then she folded her arms about them, and they clung to her neck, and
so they seemed to rise aloft in the warm air, and float towards the
south. Far beneath them lay the tops of the tallest trees; but the
children felt no fear. For they were going to their home in Fairyland;
and they are all three living there, with the Queen their mother, to
this very day.

But Hilda's hair is golden still, and her eyes are blue.




CALLADON.




CHAPTER I.

ABRACADABRA.


If you were to take three hoops, the second half as large round as the
first, and the third half as large round as the second, and lay them
on the floor one inside the other, you would have a ground-plan of the
house in which Calladon lived. The outermost wall was built of brick,
and had five narrow windows; the middle wall was of stone, and had
also five windows; the inner wall was of the purest alabaster, and was
a kind of window in itself.

In the centre of the innermost room a lamp was always burning, and the
light which it gave out was so soft and penetrating that it glowed
through the alabaster walls and illuminated the room outside with a
pale white lustre, and some rays penetrated through the windows of
this room into the outermost room of all, and there met the darkness
that streamed in through the outer windows--for the house stood in
that part of the world where it is night all the year round. The name
of the innermost room was Abra, that of the middle room was Cada, and
that of the outermost room was Bra. The whole house, therefore, was
called Abracadabra.

It was a curious thing about this house, that if you were in Abra, you
could see into both Cada and Bra, but, if you were in Cada, you could
not see into Abra, and if you were in Bra, you could not see into
either Abra or Cada. As a general thing, it is easier to see from
darkness towards light than from light towards darkness. But there was
probably something peculiar about this light--and, for the matter of
that, about this darkness too.

As for Calladon himself, he was one of the best-behaved boys ever
known, and he was not less good-looking than he was good. He was a
fine, straight-backed, rosy-cheeked little fellow, with bright eyes, a
cheerful voice, and an obedient spirit. He was seven years old, and
knew as much as it is well for a boy of his age to know. This was due
to the Master who had charge of him, and who had put across his breast
the gold sash, which always pressed against his heart when he wished
to do wrong, and reminded him to stop. The Master had lived with
Calladon ever since Calladon could remember, and probably for a good
while before that. The Master had tended him in his illness, played
with him in his plays, helped him in his studies, and sympathised with
him in his troubles. Calladon loved the Master as much as if he had
been his father and mother in one. Who his father and mother might be,
he, however, did not know; but the Master used to tell him that when
his education was finished he should see them.

Meantime he was obliged to live in Abracadabra, and make the best of
it. The only one of the three rooms which he had ever dwelt in, was
the central one, Abra; but there was plenty of entertainment to be had
there. In the first place, there was the lamp, which lit up not the
room only, but Calladon's mind likewise, so that the more it shone
upon him, the better he understood his studies. And the lamp was warm
as well as bright; so warm, that not only did it make the room
comfortable, but it warmed Calladon's heart likewise, and made him
loving and generous. In the ceiling of the room a large ball of
crystal was hung on a sort of pivot, on which it could be turned at
pleasure. This crystal ball had the power of reflecting all the places
best worth seeing in the world, and casting the reflections on a white
disc arranged for the purpose underneath. It was by this means that
Calladon had studied geography, and he had enjoyed the study more than
most boys do. At other times, the ball would bring the images of the
stars on the disc, so that you would have thought you were aloft in
the sky, watching all the myriad worlds of light, and their movements.
It may be imagined, therefore, that although Abra did not appear to be
a large room, yet it must have been larger than it looked, since it
was able to contain within itself the whole earth and heaven. Beyond
doubt, Abra was a wonderful place, which everybody ought to see at
some time of their lives. The air you breathed there had a delicate
but powerful fragrance, as if it were life itself; and strangely
beautiful chords of music sounded ever and anon through the room,
coming from no visible instrument, but seeming to arise from the
harmony and happiness in the heart of him who listened to it.
Moreover, although there was not much furniture in the room, nor many
toys to play with, yet whenever Calladon needed anything, he was sure
to find it ready to his hand. It is true that he seldom wished for
anything that he ought not to have, and if he did, the pressure of the
golden sash across his heart warned him to forbear. In short, nothing
could be more delightful and satisfactory than were all the
arrangements in Abra; and, up to the time he was seven years old,
Calladon had never wished for anything that it could not give him.

Sometimes he would amuse himself with looking through the alabaster
walls into the outer rooms, Cada and Bra. These had a beauty of their
own, but it was easy to see that they were less beautiful than Abra.
The best use of them was, perhaps, to let it be known that Abra was
better than they. Calladon once asked the Master about this, and he
answered:

'If it were not for Abra, there could be no Cada, and no Bra. But
neither could there be any Abra, if Cada and Bra did not surround it.
The alabaster wall would burst asunder, and the flame of the lamp
would burn up the world.'

'Where did the lamp come from?' asked Calladon.

'It was here before Abracadabra or the world existed,' the Master
replied, smiling; 'and it will burn for ever.'

'Could not I put it out?'

'No; but you might wander away from it into the darkness outside,'
said the Master, in a graver tone.

'But then could I not light a little lamp of my own, to see my way
about?' Calladon inquired.

'Yes, you might do so,' the Master replied. 'But such a lamp would in
time burn out, and then you could never again relight it, and you
would be lost.'

'I should not like that!' exclaimed Calladon. But after a while he
added, 'Still I do not understand why those two other rooms should be
there, since I never go into them.'

'You live in them, even though you do not go into them,' the Master
answered. 'If you did go into them, you would not live in them so
much as you do now, because you could not take the light of the lamp
with you.'

Calladon said nothing more, but he became thoughtful.




CHAPTER II.

THE LAW OF THE LAMP.


One morning, soon after Calladon's seventh birthday, the Master called
him to him and said:

'My dear Calladon, you have now arrived at the age when I must leave
you for awhile, to think your own thoughts, and do your own deeds. I
am going away, and it is uncertain when I may come back. Before I go I
shall tell you a few things which I hope you will remember.'

'But I should like to go with you,' said Calladon.

'That may come to pass hereafter,' the Master replied, 'but not now,
and it will depend upon what you do and think while I am parted from
you, whether or not it comes to pass at all.'

'What is it that I must do?' inquired Calladon.

'I cannot command you either to do or not to do anything,' the Master
said, 'for I shall not be here to enforce obedience. But I have
already taught you many things, and, if you have studied them with
your whole heart and mind, they will direct you as well as I could
direct you myself. All I shall do, therefore, is to tell you what you
had best avoid doing, and then leave you to follow my advice or not,
as you choose.'

'Oh, there will be no trouble about that!' exclaimed Calladon
cheerfully, 'for will not my golden sash press against my heart
whenever I go wrong, and remind me to turn back?'

'No, for you will not wear the golden sash any more,' replied the
Master. 'You are no longer a little child, and you must no longer
depend on what touches your heart from the outside, but on what moves
it from within.'

'Well, I think I shall like that better, on the whole,' said Calladon.
'It will make me feel more like a man. But what is it that I ought not
to do, dear Master?'

'You ought not to lose faith in the lamp,' answered the Master, 'for
it gives you all you have, and all you are. And you ought not to
leave Abra, for Abra only is Abracadabra. And you ought not to light a
lamp of your own, for it would lead you into darkness.'

'Is that all?' asked Calladon.

'That is all I need tell you now,' said the Master; 'for if you obey
these three rules, you will not need to know more, and if you disobey
them, nothing more that I could say would help you.'

'I would have done all that without being told,' said Calladon; 'and
the only thing I don't like is having nobody to see or to speak to.'

'I have taken care about that,' replied the Master, with a smile, 'and
you will not be left entirely alone. When you wake up to-morrow
morning, you will find a little girl beside you. She is to be your
playmate and companion. She can help you to be happier and better than
you have ever been before; but she can also make you worse and more
miserable than if you were left by yourself. It will be according as
you treat her.'

'Perhaps I had better not have her,' said Calladon.

'You must run the risk; for without risk nothing that is really good
can be got,' replied the Master. 'She will not suggest either good or
evil to you; but if your thoughts are good she will know it, and will
help you to carry them out; and if your thoughts are evil, she will
think evil too, and will give you the means of doing it.'

'Does she know all this?' Calladon asked.

'She will know nothing except from you, and as long as you are
obedient to what I have told you, she will be obedient to you. But if
you become disobedient, she will sooner or later begin to rule you;
and whenever that happens you will be sure to suffer.'

'Then it all depends on me?' said Calladon.

'If harm comes, you will have no right to blame her,' the Master
answered; 'but if good comes, you will have no right to take the
credit to yourself.'

'Well,' said Calladon, after thinking awhile, 'the safest thing will
be not to think of myself at all.'

'There is one thing more,' said the Master, before taking leave of
him. 'You will find, hanging round Callia's neck (Callia is the name
of your playmate), a little mirror, set in a frame of precious stones.
This mirror will always show you an image of yourself, not as you
think yourself to be, but as you really are. If you trust to what the
mirror tells you, you will not know trouble; but if you disregard it,
you will be in danger. The mirror is the only thing that will always
tell you the truth.'

'I will always believe it,' said Calladon; and then the Master bade
him good night, and Calladon fell asleep.




CHAPTER III.

CALLIA AND THE MIRROR.


The next morning, when Calladon woke up, the first thing he saw was a
lovely little girl slumbering beside him.

For a moment he was greatly astonished, for he had forgotten that the
Master had gone, and that he had promised him a companion. But
presently the memory of the day before came back to him, and he
recollected that henceforth he was to take care of himself. The
thought made him feel quite brave and manly; and with such a beautiful
playmate as this to keep him company, he felt sure that he would be
the happiest boy in the world. And as he wanted his happiness, and
hers, to begin as soon as possible, he bent over and kissed her on the
lips.

She opened a pair of lovely blue eyes, and yawned, and said--

'Where am I? Oh! Calladon, is that you? How handsome you look, and
how good you are!'

'How did you know me?' asked Calladon.

'If I am Callia, you must be Calladon!' replied she, laughing. 'Who
else could you be?'

'Now that I look in your eyes, it seems as if I must have always known
you!' said Calladon.

'And I know you the same way,' said Callia.

'But how did you get here?' he asked.

'What a funny question! as if I had ever been anywhere else!'

'It is very strange, however,' he said; 'for though I can remember
living here for a long time and not seeing you, still I cannot imagine
your ever having been away from me. We seem always to have been
together.'

'So we have,' replied Callia; 'and we will always stay together, won't
we?'

'Indeed we will,' said Calladon; 'so now give me a kiss, and let us
have our breakfast.'

Their breakfast was there waiting for them, as was everything else
they needed; and while they were eating it they talked about what they
would do during the day. They soon found out that the difficulty
would be to make a choice from the many pleasant things that suggested
themselves; and whatever one proposed, the other declared to be more
delightful than anything yet. And after all, what could be more
delightful than simply to be together? Calladon was more pleased in
knowing that Callia was pleased than he could have been at anything
that merely pleased himself; and his pleasure gave greater pleasure to
Callia than any pleasure of her own could have done. What they did,
therefore, on this first day, was not of nearly so much importance to
them as that they did it together; and when the day came to an end (as
it did, more quickly than any day that either of them could remember)
all they knew was that it had been one song of joy. As to doing
anything that the Master had warned them against, they really had not
had time so much as to think of such a thing.

But night came at last, and they found themselves getting sleepy.
Before going to bed, Calladon said--

'By the way, Callia, have you got a mirror round your neck?'

'Do you mean this pretty little thing, set in precious stones? Shall
I give it to you, dearest Calladon?'

'Oh, no; only the Master said that I was to look in it every once in a
while, to find out what I really am.'

'You really are the handsomest and dearest boy in the world, and so
the mirror will tell you,' said Callia; and she held it up before him
as she spoke. Calladon looked; and certainly the mirror did show him
the image of a very charming little face and figure. It told the
truth, and the truth was very agreeable.

'I am glad of it for your sake, Callia,' said Calladon. 'I hope I
shall always be as handsome as you want me to be.'

'I don't mind whether you are handsome or not, as long as you are
Calladon,' she answered.

'It seems to me, Callia, that if I have you, and you have me, we do
not need anything else.'

'And it would not make any difference whether we were in Abra or not.'

'I should hardly mind even if the lamp were to go out,' said
Calladon.

'I only care for the lamp because it lets me see you,' she answered.

'And because it lets me see myself in the mirror.'

'Why should you believe the mirror more than me?' asked Callia.

'Well, if you think I am handsome, it is not so much matter whether
the mirror tells me I am or not,' returned Calladon.

And with this they kissed each other, and fell asleep.




CHAPTER IV.

THE OUTER ROOMS.


When they awoke next day, Calladon stretched himself, and shivered a
little. The lamp seemed to be burning rather more dimly than usual,
and the air seemed thin and cold. Glancing at Callia, who was lying
with her eyes still half closed, his eye caught the sparkle of the
mirror round her neck, and he took a peep into it. It seemed to him
that his cheeks looked pale, and his eyes dull.

'Callia!' he exclaimed, 'Callia! wake up, and tell me how I look.'

'You look just the same,' answered she, opening her eyes and sitting
up. 'But don't you think it is colder than it was yesterday?'

'I was sure it was; and if you feel it too, it must be so. But are you
quite certain that I look as well and handsome as when you first saw
me? because, in the mirror, I seemed to be pale and dull.'

'The mirror must be wrong, then,' said Callia; 'for I can see you with
my own eyes, and of course I should know if there were any
difference.'

'Well,' said Calladon, 'I suppose it is time we had our breakfast.'

The breakfast was there, but it was neither so good nor so plentiful
as before; and Calladon and Callia felt comparatively little appetite.
This displeased them; and they began to ask each other how they should
contrive to amuse themselves during the day. They proposed many
things, but afterwards rejected them, either because they had done
them yesterday, or because they did not find them any longer
attractive.

'This is rather a small room, after all, for two people to pass their
lives in,' remarked Calladon at last.

'Especially when there are two other larger ones outside,' added
Callia.

'It would be good fun to explore them, wouldn't it?' said Calladon.

'Why shouldn't we do it?' asked Callia.

'It makes me feel quite lively again to think of it,' exclaimed
Calladon, springing to his feet. 'Only,' he added, 'that is one of the
things the Master told us not to do.'

'Oh, I don't believe the Master would mind,' said Callia. 'Besides,
how should he ever know anything about it? He has gone away.'

'Of course, too, it is our own affair,' observed Calladon. 'If any
harm comes of it, it will be to ourselves, and not to him.'

'I am not afraid,' said Callia. 'Are you?'

'Not in the least. By the way, though, I am not sure that I know the
way out of Abra. There doesn't seem to be any door.'

'I think I can find the way, if that is all,' returned Callia. 'I
don't know how I happened to think of it--but since we have been
talking about going, it has seemed to me that if we were to push
against that little carved knob in the wall, it would open a passage
into the room outside. Shall we try it?'

'Yes,' said Calladon; 'it can do no harm to see whether you are right,
at all events.' So they went to the knob, and Calladon gave it a push.

'Not that way; you should push it sideways; see--like this,' said
Callia; and she shoved it a little towards the right. Sure enough, a
part of the alabaster wall slid back, so that the children were able
to look into the room beyond.

'It seems rather dark; don't you think so?' remarked Calladon, drawing
back after a moment.

'We must take a lamp along with us,' said Callia. 'That lamp that
burns in the centre of the room will be no use to us. We shan't be
able to see anything without a lamp of our own.'

'Well, I suppose we must,' said Calladon. 'Now I think of it, though,
that was another of the things the Master said we ought not to do.'

'What did he say would happen to us if we did do it?'

'I don't remember his saying anything.'

'Of course he didn't! because nothing will happen, except that we
shall know more than we could know by staying here. He was only trying
whether he could frighten you.'

'You shall see that I am not so easily frightened,' said Calladon. 'I
am a man now, and able to take care of myself. Come, let us light a
lamp of our own and go. I will show you the way.'

'Here is a lamp,' said Callia. 'I just found it on this little shelf
in the corner, though I had not seen it there before. But how shall we
light it?'

'We must light it from the great lamp; there is no other way.'

'But then it will be the light of that great lamp that will guide us,
after all.'

'No,' said Calladon, 'because the part of the flame that we take away
will become our own, and would keep on burning even if the great lamp
were to go out.'

They lit the lamp accordingly. As they did so, the air around them
grew colder than before, and a gust of strangely melancholy music
sighed through the room. From the crystal ball in the roof overhead
there came a red reflection, as of some terrible fire burning in the
world without; and then a white flash, as if an angel's sword had
suddenly been thrust down into the room. Now the sword seemed to be
brandished about the great lamp, its point against the children, who
shrank back in fear towards the alabaster wall. Still the sword
threatened them; and there was a violent rush of icy wind, which
forced them to the opening leading to the outer chamber. For a moment
they tried to struggle against it, and not to be driven from the
alabaster room in which they had lived so happily; but the blast grew
stronger, and the sword came nearer; and at last Callia cried out:

'Let us go, Calladon, or our light will be lost!'

'Come, then!' said he; and hand in hand they staggered through the
opening, which closed behind them with a hollow sound. Then there was
silence. Save for the wavering flame of their little lamp they were in
darkness.

'What have you done, Callia?' said Calladon.

'It is your doing as much as mine,' she answered. 'Well, I suppose we
must make the best of it. At any rate, it is not so cold here as it
was in the other room.'

'No, and there is not that terrible light to dazzle our eyes. And that
sword--we are safe from that!'

'I think, upon the whole, we are better off where we are; and I am
glad we came,' said Callia. 'It is more mysterious here, and I like
mystery. If you can see everything around you merely by opening your
eyes, it is stupid. Here we have the excitement of going about and
not knowing what we may find.'

'It is strange it should be so dark!' remarked Calladon. 'On which
side of us is the alabaster wall? No light comes through either side;
and yet, when we were in Abra, it seemed to shine through and
illuminate both the outer rooms.'

'The great lamp must have gone out; all lamps go out after a while, I
suppose,' replied Callia. 'But that is no harm; when we go back we can
light it again from our own. It does not seem so dark here as it was
at first.'

'I can see better, too!' exclaimed Calladon. 'Our lamp seems to be
getting brighter. By and by, perhaps, it will be as bright as the
great lamp was.'

'Meanwhile,' said Callia, 'let us begin our explorations.'

Holding the lamp before them, they advanced together curiously through
the gloom; but, as Calladon had said, their lamp seemed continually to
grow brighter, or else their eyes became more accustomed to the
darkness, so that presently they were able to see their way with
little difficulty. The walls of the room they were in were sombre and
rich; there were carved panels and cornices of metal or stone,
encrusted here and there with what appeared to be precious stones,
gleaming with a dusky red lustre. There was gold, too, here and there;
but not bright and resplendent, like the gold of Abra, but dull and
tarnished, so that it might almost have been mistaken for rusty brass.
As they went along, the black smoke from their candle rose in the air,
and collected in clouds beneath the heavy groined roof, until it hung
above them like a murky canopy. From this canopy a stifling odour
descended, and was diffused about the room; but, strange to say, the
children seemed to breathe it with pleasure, and to grow stronger and
livelier under its influence. At length they came to a great heap of
some dark substance, piled up in an obscure corner.

'What is this?' said Calladon, stirring it with his foot.

Callia stooped down and took up a piece of it in her hand. 'It
shines,' she said. 'It must be something valuable. Hold the lamp
nearer.'

'It is certainly some kind of jewel,' said Calladon, after they had
examined it. 'Perhaps it is a ruby, or a black diamond. Such things
are very precious.'

'We had better take what we can get, then,' said Callia; 'we shall not
find anything like this in Abra--of that I am sure. How foolish you
were, Calladon, never to have thought of coming in here before. It is
ten times better than the other place!'

'I will fill my pockets now, at all events,' replied Calladon, 'and
make up for lost time. What a heap of them! and how heavy they are!
I'm afraid we shan't be able to carry them all.'

'I can hold a great many in my apron,' said Callia; 'and we can take
them to some safe place, and then come back for more. I wonder whom
they belong to?'

'They belong to us, since we have found them,' returned Calladon; 'and
if anyone says they are his, we can say it is not true. Who has more
right here than we?'

'I don't see why we should go back at all,' observed Callia. 'I feel
much more comfortable and happy in this pleasant light and smoke than
I did in that glaring white Abra, with its cold air and its tiresome
music. Suppose we make our home here?'

'I was going to propose the same thing,' answered Calladon. 'And I
have been thinking, Callia, that perhaps this is the real Abra that we
are in now. For what can be better than what we like best?'

As Callia was about to reply, they heard a flapping sound in the air
above their heads; and looking up, they saw a hideous great bird--or
perhaps it was a bat--with black wings outstretched, fiery eyes, and a
long hooked beak, that it kept opening and shutting with a snap. At
this sight the children were much terrified, and started to run away;
but the horrid bird followed them in the air, swooping downwards every
now and then, and pecking at them with its beak, or trying to tear
them with its ugly claws. At length, however, they managed to conceal
themselves behind a buttress in the wall; and the bird flapped by, and
left them.




CHAPTER V.

REGENERATION.


'It will not do to stay here,' said Calladon, as soon as he had caught
his breath. 'That creature probably owns the jewels, and we should
never be safe from him. And I have lost ever so many of the stones
while----' Here Calladon broke off suddenly, and uttered a cry.

'What is the matter?' asked Callia. 'Is the creature here again?'

But Calladon was staring at the mirror which still hung round Callia's
neck, and he looked as if he had seen a ghost.

'Tell me, Callia,' he said; 'tell me quick! Am I the same as I was
before?'

'Just the same, except that you look very much scared at something.'

Calladon gave a shudder. 'Then the glass tells what is false,' said
he. 'It makes me seem like a hideous little deformed dwarf, with a
hump on my back, and one shoulder higher than the other, and a
hateful face all covered with sores and bruises. If I look like that,
I must be more horrible than anything we are likely to see here.'

'The mirror tells lies, that is all,' replied Callia, scornfully. 'If
I were you, I would not look in it again. I can tell you all you need
to know about yourself. But I think we had better attend to getting
away from here now. There seems to be a hole through the wall just
where we are standing. It must lead into the next room.'

'Let us creep through then,' said Calladon. 'That flying creature will
not be likely to follow us there; and as well as I can see, it looks
more comfortable there than here. At all events, it is further from
Abra, and that is reason enough for going.'

'Mind that the lamp doesn't go out, then,' said Callia, 'and come
along!'

They crawled through the opening (which was, in reality, one of the
five windows of Cada) and found themselves standing in something soft
and slippery, like mud. The walls were covered with damp mould an inch
thick; spotted toadstools grew in the crevices of the stones, and
festoons of decaying weeds hung from the roof. There was a low
crackling sound in the air, like the noise of burning wood, and hot
puffs of steamy vapour were wafted into the children's faces, smelling
like the inside of a pig-sty. Strange to say, however, neither
Calladon nor Callia appeared to find this odour disagreeable, but
quite the contrary; and they went onwards with evident gratification.

'The more I think about it, Callia,' said Calladon, 'the surer I am
that this must be the real Abra. Could anything be more delightful
than this thick air, that you can see as well as breathe; and this
floor, all soft and sticky--not hard and dry like the other; and these
beautiful walls, covered with that curious green stuff; and then the
toadstools and the weeds? What a lucky thing that we thought of
coming!'

'And how much wiser we are than we were before!' added Callia. 'When I
was in that dreadful white place, I used to feel as if I knew almost
nothing, and as if the great lamp were the only light in the world.
But now that we have a light of our own, it is easy to see that we
know almost everything, and by the time we have explored this place,
there will be nothing we do not know.'

'This mud must be very valuable,' said Calladon, after a while; 'for I
never saw anything like it before. Don't you think it would be a good
thing if we were to smear ourselves all over with it, and then hang
some of those lovely weeds round our necks?'

Callia was delighted with this idea, and the two forthwith sat
themselves down in the softest mud-heap they could find, and began to
cover themselves with mud very diligently. After this had gone on for
some time, however, Callia suddenly gave a shriek.

'What is the matter?' asked Calladon.

'The snake! the snake!' cried Callia. 'It is winding itself all round
me!'

'And round me too!' screamed Calladon. 'Oh, what shall we do?'

In fact, the mud with which they had covered themselves had become
alive, and was coiling itself tightly about them in the form of
serpents. There were already scores of them, and more seemed to be
coming to life every moment. They tried to run away, but the serpents
twined about their limbs and tripped them up. There seemed to be no
escape; and now, to make matters worse, Calladon's lamp flickered and
went out.

'We shall die!' moaned the children. 'Oh, will no one help us!'

Then a sound was heard like an earthquake, and the walls that
separated them from Abra were rent asunder, and a terrible white light
streamed forth, and fell upon the unhappy children. In that light they
looked at one another, and saw that they were deformed and hideous
beyond the power of words to describe. The next instant the walls
closed together again, but a faint illumination still remained, in
which Calladon and Callia again seemed to themselves to resume their
natural form. But even then, Calladon caught a glimpse of himself in
the enchanted mirror; and there was once more the crook-backed,
grisly-faced dwarf that had frightened him in Cada, now made more ugly
yet by the serpent-mud of Bra.

'Oh, Callia, it is the truth!' groaned he. 'Our own eyes have deceived
us, and our lamp has led us astray; but in the mirror is the light of
the great lamp, and it shows me as I really am.'

'Yes, it is the truth!' answered Callia. 'It must be so!'

'It is well that you have found it out, even so late as this,' said a
stern voice close behind them; and looking round, the children saw a
tall, threatening figure, with angry eyes, and in his hand a heavy
whip.

'Who is it?' faltered the children to each other, with trembling
voices.

'I am he who built Abracadabra,' replied he of the angry eyes,
brandishing his whip. 'I built it clean and wholesome, and you have
made it a place of mud and serpents, and all unclean things. This dirt
in which you have wallowed is the evil that has come out of your own
minds and hearts, and these snakes were called into life by the light
of the lamp which you stole from the lamp of Abra. Therefore your doom
is, to repair the mischief you have done. You shall cleanse these
rooms that you have defiled, until they are as pure as they appeared
when you looked on them through the alabaster wall. From this hour,
too, you shall see each other no more until your work is done. As you
were given to each other for happiness, so, since you have disobeyed
the law by which alone your happiness could be everlasting, you shall
be separated to do your penance. And I will stand over you with the
whip; and every time you pause to breathe or rest, you shall be
driven onwards with a blow.'

Scarcely had the tall man uttered these awful words, than Calladon saw
Callia suddenly vanish from his side; and at the same moment he felt
the heavy stroke of the whip across his shoulders, and heard the stern
voice bidding him work. So to work he went with all his might; and
with his bare hands--for no tools were given him--he strove to scrape
away the mud from the floor, and to clear the mould from the walls,
and to pull down the decaying weeds that dangled from the roof. But,
for a long time, he seemed to make no progress; the mud rose before
him in mountains; the mould collected on the walls as fast as he swept
it down, and the weeds hung from the roof in thicker masses.
Nevertheless, if he stopped to take breath or rest, down came the
heavy whip with relentless blows; his skin was cut and bleeding, his
face was bruised, and the bones of his back were broken. With tears
and groans he struggled on; and ever and anon in the darkness near him
his ear caught the sound of sobbing and piteous cries, and the voice
that uttered them reminded him of the voice of Callia.

Thus he strove for many weary hours; and at last it seemed to him that
he could strive no more, yet half his work was still undone. But the
thought that, unless it were finished, he would see Callia no more,
gave him new strength, and he fell to again, and worked like a
whirlwind; and the mountains of mud gave way before him, and the mould
fell from the walls in showers, and the dangling weeds were swept down
in mighty heaps. And although the blows of the whip still fell, they
no longer weakened him as before, but made his strength greater.
Indeed, it seemed to him as if he were inspired with a strength not
his own, and as if, when the work were done, it would be the
achievement not of himself, but of a mightier than he. In the midst of
these thoughts the gloom suddenly brightened, and he saw that his work
was done.

'Well, Calladon, what do you think of yourself?' said the tall man, in
a somewhat less stern tone than before. 'Are you as handsome as you
once were?'

So Calladon looked at himself; and he saw that he was begrimed with
dirt, and that his back had been broken by the whip, and one shoulder
made higher than the other; and his face was bruised and covered with
sores. There was nothing beautiful about him.

'I have become what the mirror has already showed me that I was,' he
said humbly. 'But I would rather seem as ugly as I am, than seem
beautiful when I am ugly.'

'Calladon,' said the tall man again, 'your work is done, and you
deserve some reward. You may choose what it shall be; but I will tell
you beforehand that, if you choose to be made beautiful again as you
were before, it shall be done.'

'I would rather be made happy.' replied Calladon, 'and it would make
me happy if I could see Callia once more.'

'So be it!' said the tall man, kindly. 'Come with me!'

He took Calladon by the hand, and instantly the light grew brighter;
the dark walls grew white; there was a sound of music in the air, and
a delicate perfume of flowers came to Calladon's nostrils. He looked
up and saw that he was in Abra; and the great lamp burned in the
centre as before.

'Oh, not here!' he exclaimed, shrinking back and hiding his face. 'I
am not fit to be seen in the light of Abra!'

'Take courage,' said his guide. 'Callia is here. See, she is asleep.
Go to her, Calladon, and look in the mirror on her bosom.'

So Calladon drew near, and looked into the magic mirror. But instead
of a hideous and misshapen little dwarf, it showed him the image of a
noble and beautiful boy, with rosy cheeks and bright eyes. At the same
moment Callia awoke; and seeing Calladon, she sprang up with a cry of
joy and kissed him. She was as lovely as the day.

'The mirror tells you the truth now as always, Calladon,' said the
Master's loving voice--for it was he. And he laid his hand upon him,
and instantly the deformed shell in which Calladon was clothed fell
from him, and he was more beautiful than ever. From that time forth
there was no unhappiness for either Callia or Calladon, because they
had learnt that the light of Abra was the only true light, and that
their strength was not their own.




THEEDA.




CHAPTER I.

THE BOOK AND THE VASE.


Oscar lived beside the sea, and had no companions except the waves,
the seagulls, the sunsets and sunrises, the moonlight and the shore.
He was happy, and yet there was something that he wanted. He could not
tell what that something was, but he did not the less feel the need of
it on that account.

He knew that he had a father, but he had never seen him. He knew that
his father cared for him, and gave him what he needed to eat and drink
and wear. His mother had told him that his father was wise and
powerful and good; and that once, before Oscar was old enough to
remember anything, he had lived with her in the cottage beside the
sea. But soon after Oscar was born, his father had left them and gone
across the sea to another country. When a few more years had passed,
he had sent for Oscar's mother to follow him, and she had gone. Oscar
could just remember the ship which had taken her away. He had sat in
the cottage doorway, and watched the ship grow smaller and smaller as
it receded over the waves. At first its sails had looked dark, because
they were against the light; but a moment before it touched the
horizon, where earth and heaven meet, the great white light from
beyond had touched the sails, and made them gleam like angels' wings.
Then ship and sails had settled into a lustrous invisibility; a long
wave had broken with a hollow sound upon the shore, and a feeling of
tender sadness had come into the little boy's heart.

Although he was alone, however, he was not lonely; there was a great
deal to amuse him. The cottage, which was made out of the hull of an
old fishing boat, was as pleasant a place to live in as a boy could
wish. It was divided into two rooms, in one of which Oscar slept, and
in the other he ate his dinner. The furniture was very simple--a bed,
a chair or two, a table, and a bookshelf; but these were all that
Oscar required; and besides, he spent most of his time outdoors. There
were two other things in the dining-room, however, for which he cared
very much. One was a large book, which lay on the bookshelf. It was a
gift which his father had left for him when he went away. It was a
large heavy book, with a dark binding and a golden clasp. This clasp
could be opened only by pronouncing over it certain words which
Oscar's father had bade the boy's mother teach him when he should be
old enough. These words were a secret, and if the secret were
betrayed, certain penalties would follow. It was Oscar's habit, on
getting up every morning, to take the book from the bookshelf, and
having spoken the magic words, to open it and read. Now, the pages of
the book appeared like ordinary printed pages, and if anyone besides
Oscar had looked into them, they would have read only a number of
stories which were not very interesting, and which did not seem to be
of any especial importance to anybody. But with Oscar it was very
different; for, as the morning sunshine fell upon the page, he saw,
not the printed words, but wonderful pictures, which lived and moved,
and had many strange and beautiful meanings. The pictures were
something like the world in which the boy lived, but much brighter
and more glorious, and the people who moved in them were far nobler
and handsomer than any that Oscar could have imagined; and chief among
them was a grand figure which the boy recognised as his father. While
going over the pages of this mysterious book, therefore, Oscar, in his
lonely cottage, was able to see with his own eyes all the mighty deeds
that his father had done, and even many of those that he was at that
moment doing; for the book was a living book, and though it told of
marvels in comparison with which all other fairy stories would seem
dull and commonplace, yet these marvels were all true. By studying
that book a man could become wiser than the wisest of philosophers,
and see more than the greatest of travellers, and yet remain as simple
as a little child. It would take a long time to tell you even a few of
the wonders which this book held between its dark covers. One of them
was, that if Oscar was in any trouble, he had but to open his book,
and the pictures would show him how the trouble was to be overcome.
Every pain that he could suffer, and every difficulty that he could
meet, had been met and suffered by his father long before; so that by
seeing what his father had done, he learned what was the best thing to
do himself. For Oscar was like his father, though he was but a little
boy.

The other thing that the dining-room contained was a large crystal
vase, which stood in the window. It had seven sides, and was so large
round that Oscar could not make his arms meet about it. It was filled
with the purest water, and at the bottom were sand and pebbles, and
delicate seaweeds, red and green, and pieces of rock covered with
curious mosses and tinted lichens. It was like a little sea, only that
there were no living animals in it. But under the shadow of one of the
rocks lay a large pearl shell, which Oscar fancied must hold some
living thing, although, often as he had watched it, it had never yet
moved or opened. But the boy had faith and patience, and every new day
he went to the vase, in the hope that now at last something might have
come from the pearl shell. It lay quiet, however, and kept its secret
to itself. It must certainly be a pleasant secret, Oscar thought, for
the shell was exquisitely curved, and its pearly sides shone with a
delicate lustre. And the more he pondered over the matter, the surer
he became that the vase must have been given for the sake of the
shell, and that by-and-by the shell would show why it was there.
Sometimes he felt tempted to take it out of the water, and try whether
he could see inside of it. But he could never quite bring himself to
do this, because, though the vase and the shell were his own, he felt
that they had been given to him to look at, and not to meddle with. In
his book, too, he saw that the night always comes before the morning,
and the winter before the spring; and though he did not understand why
that should be so--why the morning should not begin just after the sun
had set, and the spring buds and flowers come out as soon as the red
and yellow leaves of autumn had fallen--yet he saw that one wave
followed another to break against the shore, and that every flower was
a bud before it was a blossom, and that no happiness was so happy as
that which had been waited for; so he believed that the secret of the
shell would disclose itself when the right time should come, and
that to try to find it out beforehand would perhaps be to lose it
altogether. Moreover, was not the shell beautiful enough as it was?




CHAPTER II.

OSCAR INSIDE OUT.


When these early morning hours were over, Oscar used to go out of the
cottage and wander about beside the sea. The waves murmured to him,
and the sun was warm; the seagulls wheeled above his head and screamed
with their wild voices; great white clouds built themselves into
cities and palaces before his eyes; lights and shadows wavered
everywhere, and made the grey rocks and the distant mountains seem
alive; winds whispered in the long grass, and sang crooning melodies
in the branches of the trees; little insects and animals ran hither
and thither, and seemed busy even when they were doing nothing.
Sometimes the rain fell, making a secret sound in the leaves, and
causing the surface of the clear pools to leap aloft in tiny pyramids;
then the green plants stood up and stretched out their stems, taking
their wetting gladly, and growing taller after it, though it had made
them bob their heads. With the evening, splendid colours came along
the sky, though the hand that painted them was not seen: they, too,
spoke a kind of language; the glories of the day that was past, and
the thoughts and hopes that Oscar had had, seemed to glow in the
heavens as they glowed in the boy's memory. They faded at last, and
night darkened the world, so that Oscar might not forget the moon and
stars. These never slept, and therefore Oscar knew that he might
sleep. The rays that came from them found their way silently into his
heart, and filled it with the fresh and quiet fancies that afterwards
grew into dreams. For his dreams did not come from the world he lived
in, but from some other.

But what was this that the waves and the birds, and the light and
shadow, and the trees and the rain, and all the rest of it, were
trying to say to him? Was it really anything? and if it were, why
could he not understand it? Sometimes he thought he almost understood
it. If the things would speak a very little plainer, or if he could
see and hear the least bit more clearly, there would be no more
mystery. He thought they would say, 'Oscar, we are like you. We are
here because you are here. If you were not Oscar, we should not be
what we are. And if we were not here you could not speak, nor think,
nor be glad or sorry.' But they never did quite say this. Therefore
Oscar was not quite content, and he felt that he needed something, he
knew not what, more than the earth and the sea and the sky had given
him. They were so friendly to him that they made him long for a nearer
friendship still. He could not come closer to them; and if they could
not come closer to him, must not something be wrong? He found them
always fresh, and full of new things that never came to an end; they
were alive, but the life they had was not quite the same as his own
life. The world was so big that he could not put his arms round it and
hug it; it was calm and orderly, and although he could never get to
the end of the new things that were in it, yet he knew that every year
it was the same world that it had been before. It was not so with him;
for, in spite of his being always Oscar, he knew every day that he
never had been and never would be exactly the same Oscar that he was
at that moment. So the world was not only too big for him, but, in
another way, it was too small for him also. The world could live only
a year, after all, since one of its years was the same as another; but
Oscar felt that he could live innumerable years, because no one of his
years was the same as any other. Oh, if he could only find something
to love that would grow in the same way that he grew, and answer him
when he spoke, and be in all ways both as large and as small as he! Up
and down the shore Oscar wandered, and through the green shade of the
rustling forest, and with his eyes he sought amidst the clouds and the
stars, but the thing that he wanted he did not find.

When the rain came down too hard, Oscar would stay within the cottage,
and study his book, or watch his pearl-shell, or sometimes go into the
bedroom and look at the things his mother had left behind her. They
were very ordinary things, and there were very few of them; but they
were dearer to Oscar than anything else. Here was the jacket his
mother used to wear, and against which Oscar's face had often rested,
while she nursed him in her arms, or lulled him to sleep. It was full
of wrinkles and stains, and was torn in one or two places; but it was
his own mother's own jacket, and made him think so vividly of her kind
face and loving eyes and warm soft arms, that he would heave a deep
sigh, and sit still with his eyes very wide open. Then there was the
comb that his mother used to wear in her hair. It was made of white
ivory prettily carved. Oscar remembered how his mother used sometimes
to take out this comb while he was sitting on her lap, and let her
hair tumble down about her shoulders; and she used to let him feel its
smoothness with his small hands, and taught him how to braid it by
weaving three strands of it in and out.

The feelings that Oscar had while sitting in the bedroom with these
and other things that had belonged to his mother were very different
from any that came to him while he was outdoors. They were less
cheerful than his outdoor feelings, but he liked them better. For in
thinking of his mother he forgot himself; he had been able to put his
arms round his mother's neck and to kiss her cheek. She had loved him
and called him by his name; he had known that no other boy could be to
her what he was; she had comforted him when he was hurt or grieved;
she had been made to be his mother, as he had been made to be her son.
It was not so with the world outdoors--with the earth and the sea and
the sky. These had been made for Oscar perhaps; but if Oscar had been
some other boy they would still have remained. They belonged to him
only because he was a boy, and not because he was the boy Oscar.
Therefore he could not forget himself in loving and giving himself to
them, as he had done in loving and giving himself to his mother. All
this brought him to think that unless, out of the earth and sea and
sky, something could come to him that should both bring them nearer
and yet be different from them, the promise which they seemed to hold
out to him would not be fulfilled. It was not a bigger or a more
beautiful world that he wanted, but a world within the world, which
should contain all that made the outer world beautiful and lovable,
and something more besides. Such a world within the world his mother
had been to him; but it was not his mother that the boy looked for,
because he knew that she was gone never to return. What was it then?
Oscar did not yet know; but now something began to stir within him
that seemed to mean that the answer would not be long delayed.




CHAPTER III.

THE PEARL-SHELL'S GIFT.


One morning, as he was sitting with his book open upon his knees, the
page at which he looked seemed suddenly to be overspread with a grey
cloud. At first he could not see through the cloud, but after a while
lights and shadows began to stir duskily within it, and presently he
saw, as through a mist, some one walking along a lonely pathway in a
forest. The mist gradually cleared away, but the face of the person
was turned from him, so that it could not be known who he was. The
person came to an opening amidst the trees, overspread with soft green
grass and flowers of many hues. In the centre of this grass-plot was a
fountain, bubbling up like living crystal from a basin of sparkling
sand. Around the margin were the golden smile of buttercups and the
blue glance of forget-me-nots. The wanderer drew near and bent over
the fountain. Then, out of the pure water, an arm was stretched
upwards, holding in its hand a radiant pearl. The wanderer took the
pearl, and then the mysterious hand and arm were drawn under the water
again and disappeared. The wanderer looked at the pearl and seemed to
rejoice in it, as well he might; for it was the most precious of all
pearls. But while he was rejoicing, a man came up to him who, though
he had eyes and a tongue, was both dumb and blind; but he talked very
rapidly with his fingers, as most dumb persons can do; and he used his
nose instead of eyes, for he judged whether or not a thing were
beautiful or valuable by smelling of it. The wanderer spoke to this
odd person, and bade him look at the pearl and rejoice with him. But
the other shook his head contemptuously, and said with his fingers
that his eyes were not made to see, and that seeing was all folly and
deception; and that a good nose was worth all the eyesight in the
world. So, instead of looking at the pearl he smelt of it, and after
doing so again shook his head contemptuously, and pulled out of his
pocket a raw onion. 'Smell of that,' he said with his fingers; 'that
is worth all the pearls in the world!' and then he began to try to
persuade the owner of the pearl, by many clever and cunning
arguments, to throw the pearl away, and take an onion in its stead.
Oscar bent forward in great eagerness to see whether the owner of the
pearl could possibly be so foolish as to let himself believe that the
most precious pearl in the world could be exchanged for an onion; but
just then the mist arose once more, and rapidly deepened to an
impenetrable cloud, and the figures of both the man with the pearl and
of the man with the onion were blotted out. Oscar closed the book. All
the rest of the day he could think of nothing but this strange
picture; and he wondered deeply whether the blind man with the onion
had succeeded in making the other man as blind as himself. If only the
cloud had held back a few minutes longer!

Before Oscar went to bed he looked into the crystal vase, to see
whether there were any change in the shell. For the first time it
seemed to him that it had really moved a little. But the light was so
dim that he could not be sure. Out of the window the sea had a
marvellous twinkle of moonlight over it, and the night air was cool
and sweet. Suddenly, a hideous bat, with broad noiseless wings of
filmy black, hovered into the room, poised itself for a moment over
the crystal vase, and then flitted away again.

The next day was one which Oscar, so long as he lived, never forgot.

He had had a strange dream during the night, and this had taken from
his memory the change which he had fancied he noticed in the shell
before going to bed. But now, when he went as usual to look at it, he
saw that a change had taken place indeed.

The shell was rolled over on its back; the lid, which heretofore had
closed its mouth, was open; and the shell was empty. Oscar could see
far down into the very depths of the curving interior; it was as
smooth as satin, and looked fit to house the queen of the fairies. But
there was nothing in it. When, however, Oscar raised his eyes, he
beheld a sight which made him draw in his breath with a long sigh of
amazement and tremulous delight. The two largest pieces of rock in the
vase leaned together in such a way as to make an arch, upon the sides
of which delicate leaves of pink and green seaweed grew, and other
broader leaves clustered together in a sort of grove further back.
Within this grove Oscar now perceived a movement, as if something were
advancing through them. In a moment they parted, and a fairy-like
little figure floated between, touching the sand with the tips only of
her tiny feet. Forward she came until she stood just beneath the
highest part of the arch. She was scarcely six inches tall, but she
was perfectly formed in every part; and her face, though it was less
than an inch long, was completely and exquisitely beautiful; and,
moreover, it looked even more good than lovely. Her hair, which was
finer than the finest cobweb, floated around her like a sort of brown
mist; it was very thick and immensely long--nearly five inches! Her
skin was more pure and delicate than the inside of a white geranium
bud; but the palms of her little hands had a faint rose tint, and so
had the tips of her infinitesimal fingers and toes. Her eyes were like
fairy forget-me-nots; and, ah! who can describe that tiniest marvel of
all perfection, her mouth, with its tender curved lips, and teeth no
bigger than grains of white sand. This little lady carried in one hand
a broad frond of green weed, which arched over her head and protected
her from the rays of the sun that fell through the crystal sides of
the vase. Round her neck was hung a necklace of seed pearls that might
have come out of a mussel as large as a millet seed. From the waist
depended a curiously woven girdle made of thread-like sea-grasses of
various colours. There she stood, gazing straight at Oscar with her
wondering blue eyes, and her lips half parted. And Oscar gazed at her,
almost afraid to breathe, lest she should vanish out of his sight. For
he could not yet believe that she was real. He had never even dreamed
of anything like her before. But he was awake, and she still stood
beneath the archway of rock, and he saw many sweet expressions pass
over her face. Yes, she was a real, living little maiden, and she had
come into the world to make Oscar happy; to supply the want he had
felt; to be something that he could love and live for.

Oscar felt so tenderly towards her, and so fearful lest he should do
something to alarm or shock her, that at first he did not venture to
do anything at all. He was so terribly big, he thought, that she must
find him frightful. He longed to show her in some way that there was
nothing in his heart but love and reverence for her. In the midst of
his perplexity, however, the little maiden smiled a smile that was all
the more delightful because the eyes and mouth she smiled with were so
small; and with a light movement she half walked, half floated towards
him, until she stood close to the crystal side of the vase. The tips
of her fingers rested against it, and she looked up at Oscar with a
glance so winning and so confiding that he no longer felt any doubt
about her or about himself. He stooped down and put his lips to his
side of the crystal vase, and they kissed each other through it.

In this way the pledge of friendship between them was given. As soon
as it had been done, the little maiden made a leap as of joy, and then
began to dance about inside the vase, sometimes touching the sandy
bottom, but most of the time gliding to and fro in mid-water, turning
herself this way and that in graceful caprioles, diving through the
archway and coming up out of the grove of seaweeds on the other side;
waving her arms about her head with dreamy motions; sometimes resting
quietly upon nothing, as if she were asleep; then swimming like a fish
with her arms folded and her feet crossed one over the other; and now
playing at peep-bo with Oscar behind the rocks. Oscar had never been
so delighted; his eyes sparkled and his cheeks were red. At last his
little playmate dived into the pearl-shell and disappeared, and the
boy began to fear that he should see her no more. But in a very short
time she came out again, holding something in her hand. She smiled and
nodded to him, and rose up through the water until she nearly reached
the surface. Oscar thought she must be coming out, and his heart beat
with expectation. But she was not coming out. Instead of that, she
stretched up her tiny hand above the surface, and Oscar now saw that
it held a pearl. He cautiously put out his own hand, and took the
pearl from her fingers. Then she nodded again, and descended.

'Is this for me?' asked Oscar, very softly.

Hereupon she made him the most charming little bow imaginable, at the
same time bringing both her hands to her lips, and blowing him a kiss.

'Thank you, you lovely little creature!' said Oscar. 'But can you
understand all I say to you?'

Again the little maiden smiled, and nodded her head up and down.

'And can you speak also?' the boy demanded.

She put up one hand, and waved it slowly backwards and forwards before
her face.

'Ah, she cannot speak!' thought Oscar; and he felt a momentary touch
of sadness.

But at that an expression came into her face that seemed to say, as
plainly as could be, 'If I cannot talk as you do, still I can talk.'
And not only did her face seem to say this, but she said it, as it
were, with all there was of her; and although in one sense there was
very little of her, yet in another sense there was so very much, that
not the largest giant ever heard of could have said so much without
speaking as she could. Oscar could not account for it. Talking without
speaking was something new to him. 'But, after all,' he thought,
'nobody could talk under water; and no doubt thinking under water is
the same as talking out of it.' Besides, though this wonderful little
water-maiden was but six inches tall, her thoughts were evidently
quite as big as those of an ordinary grown-up person, so that they
must be so much the more easily visible. And, finally, why should
Oscar trouble himself about how anything happened, as long as it did
happen, and was agreeable? Probably it was because he already loved
this exquisite fairy so much, that he was able to understand what was
passing in her mind.

He named her Theeda--he did not know why, except that that sounded as
if it must be her name, and she seemed to be perfectly satisfied with
it. And so these two fell in love with each other at first sight,
though she lived in water and he in air, and there could therefore be
no meeting between them, except the meeting of their hearts and eyes.
They must even kiss each other through the crystal. Nevertheless they
were as happy as the day was long, and indeed much happier, for time
is a thing with which happiness has very little to do. Oscar's only
regret was that Theeda could not be with him when he took his walks
upon the shore. He enjoyed his walks, however, more than he had ever
before done, because now the earth and the sea and the sky not only
said to him, 'We are like you, Oscar,' but also, 'Theeda loves you!'




CHAPTER IV.

THE CRAB.


Oscar could never see enough of his little water-maiden; and he talked
to her perhaps all the more because she answered him only by
sympathetic thoughts. He told her all that he knew of his life before
she came to him--about his dreams by night and his reveries by day;
about all the beauties of the world that she could not see from the
crystal imprisonment of her vase; about his mother, too, and how the
sails of the ship in which she went away had been lit up by the light
beyond just before reaching the horizon verge. He spoke likewise of
his father, how good and great he was, and how, although he lived and
ruled in a distant country, he never forgot to send his little son all
things that were necessary for his comfort and happiness.

'And I believe, Theeda,' added Oscar, 'that he put you in the
pearl-shell for me. Perhaps you have seen him?'

Theeda threw back her floating mist of hair, and smiled.

'Ah, of course, everybody who is good and lovely must have come from
him,' Oscar murmured, as if answering something she had said. And then
he went on to talk about the book, and of the strange picture he had
seen in it the day before she appeared.

'I think, now,' he said, 'that the wanderer in the forest must have
been myself; and the precious pearl that was given to him out of the
fountain was you. But who was the blind and dumb man with the onion?'

At that Theeda's head dropped, and she sank slowly down on the sand,
and she hid her face in her hands.

'What is the matter, Theeda?' cried Oscar; 'dearest Theeda, what has
happened?'

She partly lifted herself up, though still crouching in the sand, and
held out her arms towards Oscar as if entreating him to do something.
And now, for the first time, he could not read her thought. She seemed
to beseech him; but he, who would have given her everything, knew not
for what she besought him. At last she trailed herself to the side of
the vase and put up her lips to be kissed.

'I love you, Theeda!' said he. 'See! with my whole heart!'

But all that day Theeda's sadness did not wholly pass away; and each
morning afterwards, when Oscar first came into the room, she would
meet him with a kind of timorousness, and would not be happy until he
had kissed her through the crystal, and had told her again that he
loved her.

She was by no means an idle little maiden, however. The vase was her
home and her garden, and she was busy many hours a day in keeping it
in order and making it more and more beautiful. It was wonderful how
much she found to do. In some places, where the red and green weeds
grew too thick, she pruned them with a little knife that Oscar had
given her, made out of a piece of a mussel shell, and cut away the
pieces that were decayed. She sifted the brown sand between her
fingers, and cleansed it from all impurities; and she brought the
prettiest of the pebbles and laid them in tasteful patterns. She
plaited a kind of hammock out of the sea grass, and hung it at the
entrance of the archway; and in the afternoons, when the sun was hot,
she lay in it and took her siesta. And now Oscar, from time to time,
put in little sea-animals to keep her company and amuse her; he found
many such in the rock pools along the shore. There were prawns, almost
transparent, striped like zebras with fine pink stripes, and having
long feelers like hairs, which they waved about, and, as it were,
asked delicate questions with them of everything that came near. They
moved as lightly as thistledown and as swiftly as sunshine. Then there
were fishes, slender little things an inch or two long, with round
astonished eyes, and open mouths that looked as if they were saying,
'Hoo! hoo!' They were of all colours, and some of them had
fierce-looking spines on their backs, which they could move backwards
and forwards very much as a horse moves its ears. These fish were at
first very timid, and kept under the shadow of the rocks, or lurked
amidst the seaweed. But Theeda soon made friends with them, so that
they regularly came to her to be fed, and sometimes she used to play
at tag with them, darting round and round inside the vase, and in and
out amongst the rocks, while the weeds waved to and fro like banners
in a gale of wind. Oscar also brought sea-snails, with brightly tinted
shells, which crawled slowly about, measuring their way with their one
soft foot, and stretching out little transparent horns in front, like
children feeling their way in the dark. Besides these there was a
hermit crab, which lived in a pearl shell very much like Theeda's, but
only about a sixth part as big. This crab was the only ill-natured
creature in the vase. He sat sullenly in the door of his house, in a
little hollow under a large stone; his little dull eyes stuck far out
of his head, and his ugly claws hung down in front like a pair of red
fists. He never had a pleasant word for anybody; but, if any came near
him, he either pettishly hitched himself back into his shell, or else
made a vicious snap at the visitor with his claws. He even snapped at
Theeda two or three times, and then Oscar wanted to take him out and
throw him back into the sea. But Theeda was very forgiving, and would
not let this cross little crab be punished. She always treated him
kindly, brought his dinner to him every day, and did all she could to
make him goodnatured and comfortable. But nothing seemed to make him
any better; and one day, when Theeda had made him let go of a prawn
which he had caught by the tail with one of his claws, he flew into
such a terrible passion that Oscar felt very glad, for the sake of the
other creatures in the vase, that he was no bigger. He made up his
mind to have him out before long.

Except for the crab, the vase was the most charming place to live in
that could be imagined, and Oscar often wished that he were able to
breathe under water as easily as Theeda did, and that he were as small
as she was. Theeda, no doubt, wished so too; but it was not to be.
Then Oscar used to hope that, some day, Theeda would grow up to be as
tall, or nearly as tall, as himself, and then come out of the water,
and live with him in the cottage. But that did not seem very likely to
happen either. And perhaps, after all, they were as near together as
many people who live in the same house, and are separated by neither
water nor crystal. Only, when Theeda brought out her oyster-shell
dinner-table, and set it under the bower of green ulva leaves, and
placed upon it her little cockle-shell dishes of fresh sea vegetables
(which was all she ate), Oscar's very heart ached to be sitting at the
opposite side of the table and dining with her. Water then seemed to
him a much more agreeable element to pass one's time in than air. But,
although wishing can do a great deal, it could not quite make a merman
of Oscar. Theeda ate her dinners by herself except for the tit-bits
that she gave to the prawns and snails, and the scraps that the fishes
stole when they thought she was not looking.

'Some day, Theeda, perhaps....!' Oscar used to say, without ever
finishing the sentence.

Theeda understood very well what he meant, and used to look as if she
meant it also. And Oscar's father, who was as powerful as he was kind,
would no doubt be able to make them happy in the way they wanted, if
he saw that it was best for them. But the hermit crab had a very ugly
and malicious look, as if he had a mind to prevent anybody from being
happy if he could.




CHAPTER V.

A STRANGER.


One morning, while Oscar was looking into the vase, and admiring the
bright silver beads that were forming all over the leaves of seaweed,
and on the lichen-covered surface of the rocks; and while Theeda was
busy feeding the fishes, who seemed to get hungrier the more they ate;
and just when Oscar was about to remark that the hermit-crab was not
in his usual hole, nor anywhere else that he could see--at that moment
a dark shadow suddenly fell across the vase, shutting it off from the
sunlight, scaring away the fishes, and making Theeda look up with a
start, and then quickly take refuge in her shell, as from something
she feared.

Oscar also looked up, and saw somebody standing before the window.

It was a boy; but a very odd boy, Oscar thought. He was not any bigger
than Oscar, but he seemed to be a good deal older. He had a broad
flat face, with a sharp little nose in the middle of it, a wide thin
mouth, and pale eyes which stuck out very far, and over which he wore
spectacles. He had pale reddish hair growing upright on his head. His
legs were so thin that it seemed a wonder he could stand upon them,
and indeed they were bowed out sideways, as if the boy's weight were
too much for them. His arms also were thin, but his hands were
immensely large and red, with stiff, thick fingers, and huge thumbs.
He was not quite facing the window, but stood sideways towards it, and
looked at Oscar askance. The skin of this boy's face was coarse and
rough, and seemed as thick as orange-peel.

'What is your name?' asked the strange boy, after a while.

Oscar told him what it was.

'What an absurdly old-fashioned name!' said the boy, contemptuously.
'I have a better name than that--my name is Kanker!'

'Do you want anything?' said Oscar.

'Yes,' said Kanker. 'I want to ask questions. I am in search of truth.
I never believe lies; so you needn't tell me any.'

'I never tell lies,' said Oscar, gravely.

'That is a lie to begin with. Everybody tells lies--except me!
Everything lies--the things that can't talk, as well as the things
that can. The world is a lie.'

'The world is not a lie,' said Oscar, indignantly. 'And if you think
it is, why do you search for truth?'

'I have at all events found the only truth there is to be found--and
that is, that everything is a lie,' replied Kanker. 'I have proved it
a thousand times already, and every new question I ask proves it
again.'

'What makes your hands so big?' Oscar could not help asking.

'They are no bigger than they ought to be,' Kanker answered, holding
them up and looking at them admiringly. 'I use them to touch things
with. I never believe in anything that I haven't touched. Nothing
exists unless I can touch it. Come out of that room, so that I may
touch you, and see whether you exist.'

'I will come out,' said Oscar; for he thought it would be better to go
to Kanker than to have Kanker come in to him. 'But you need not touch
me; I can touch myself if I want to.'

Nevertheless, no sooner had he come out than Kanker took hold of him
by the arm, and gripped it so hard with his big red hand that Oscar
said, 'Let go, you hurt me!'

'Your touching yourself would prove nothing to me, you know,' said
Kanker. 'Well, you seem to exist. Where are your father and mother?'

'They are not here,' answered Oscar. 'They are gone--long ago.'

'I don't believe it. Where did they go to?'

'Over there,' said Oscar, pointing across the sea.

'Nonsense! Do you mean they are drowned?'

'No. They are gone to a country over there.'

'How do you know there is a country over there? Did you ever touch
it?'

Oscar shook his head.

'I thought so. Then there is no such place. Therefore your father and
mother have gone nowhere. Therefore they do not exist. And what
business have you to exist if you never had a father and mother?'

'I don't know what you mean,' said Oscar, 'and I don't care whether I
exist or not, so long as I do what is right, and am happy.'

At this Kanker laughed, a spluttering laugh, as if he had his mouth
full of water. 'Sit down here beside me,' he said, 'I want to ask you
some more questions.'

Oscar sat down beside him. He did not at all like Kanker, whose voice
was as harsh as his manners were impolite. And he was certainly ugly.
When Oscar did not look full at him he had something the appearance of
a gigantic crab, which was increased by his sidelong shuffle in
walking, and by the two great red hands that he carried hanging before
him, very much as a crab carries his claws. He held a sun-umbrella
over his head, a small book in one pocket, and a roll of measuring
tape in the other. Nevertheless, Kanker seemed to know so much, and to
be so positive about what he knew, that Oscar could not help thinking
he must be an important person; not the sort of person to be
contradicted, especially by a person who knew so little as Oscar did.
'For, after all,' Oscar thought, 'a great deal of what I supposed I
knew has only been told me. I do not know it as he knows things--by
touching them. It may be, as he says, that some things that seem to be
true are not true. I wonder whether he believes in the sun and the
stars? He can hardly have touched them! And I wonder why he wears
spectacles?'

'Why do I wear spectacles?' repeated Kanker; for Oscar had spoken the
last sentence aloud. 'To see with, of course! Nobody can see without
spectacles; and not only that, but nobody can see with any other
spectacles than these I have on.'

'Oh, you are mistaken there,' exclaimed Oscar; 'for I have never worn
spectacles, and I have always been able to see.'

'You never saw anything in your life,' replied Kanker, very
confidently. 'You only think you see. That is your hallucination. An
hallucination is when you think a thing is so, and it isn't. You are
blind, and probably deaf and dumb as well. What books do you read?'

'I have only one book,' said Oscar; and then he told what a wonderful
book it was; how it could only be opened by repeating certain mystic
words, and how its pages were full of living pictures, representing
things which had been done in the world, and which were being done
now. Kanker burst out laughing.

'I don't believe it,' he said. 'It's an hallucination. There is no
such book, in the first place, and if there were, it couldn't be what
you say it is.'

This made Oscar angry. 'There is such a book,' said he, 'and if you
don't believe it I can show it to you.'

Kanker went on laughing and wagging his great hands up and down. 'Oh!
show it to me--show it to me!' he spluttered. 'Let me touch it with my
fingers, and then perhaps I'll believe.'

'Come into the house, then, and you shall touch it!' exclaimed Oscar.
He sprang up and went into the house, and Kanker followed him readily
enough. 'Let me put my fingers on it--that's all I ask,' he kept
repeating. 'Let me touch it.'

'There!' said Oscar, 'there it is on that shelf. Do you believe now?'

Kanker took the book down from the shelf, and felt it all over. 'I
believe that this is something that feels like a book,' he said at
last. 'But I don't believe it is a book until I see it opened; and
then I shan't believe it has the pictures you talk about unless I see
them, and can put my finger on them; and I don't believe you can open
it.'

'I can open it!' cried Oscar.

'If you can do it, then why don't you?' Kanker replied.

Now Oscar knew that the mystic words which undid the clasp were a
secret which he had no right to disclose. But he wanted so much to
show Kanker the inside of the book, and make him acknowledge that he
was wrong, that everything else seemed of little account in
comparison. He took the book from Kanker's hands. As he did so, a
strange feeling came over him. A voice, that seemed to speak not to
his ears, but within him, bid him pause. Did he care so much for this
Kanker, with his flat face and his great red hands, as to betray the
secret which his mother had confided to him? Oscar hesitated.

'Ha! I knew you were lying!' said Kanker, with his disagreeable laugh.

'You shall see that I am not!' retorted Oscar, becoming angrier than
ever. Then he began to repeat the mystic words. But he found it hard
to pronounce them, and some of them he could scarcely remember. His
teeth chattered as he went on, and his heart beat painfully. But
Kanker was watching him askance with his pale spectacled eyes, and
Oscar would not stop. At last he had spoken all the words; the clasp
flew back; the book opened!

'There!' said Oscar, thrusting it into Kanker's hands. 'It is open:
now look for yourself!' Then he turned away, and hid his face in his
hands.

All of a sudden he heard again Kanker's hateful spluttering laugh. He
looked up in astonishment. Kanker was pointing contemptuously to the
page.

'No pictures here!' he was saying. 'Show me your pictures! There's
nothing but printing here, and very stupid commonplace printing too!'

Oscar fixed his eyes upon the book; but they were darkened, and at
first he could see nothing. At length his sight cleared; but, alas! it
was as Kanker had said: there were no pictures in the book, no beauty,
no life, and no mystery. It was just like any other book--ordinary
pages printed with ordinary print. There had been some terrible loss,
but whether the loss were in Oscar or in the book, Oscar could not
tell. He stood there unable to speak, and almost to think.

'It is just as I knew it was,' said Kanker, throwing down the book.
'Another of your absurd hallucinations. You dream about things until
you think they are real. You had much better do as I do--wear
spectacles, make up your mind that everything is a lie, and trust to
your fingers. By doing that you might, in the course of time, come to
know something. Look here, I'll tell you what I'll do. I'll make an
exchange with you. It isn't a fair exchange, for what I give you is
worth a great deal, and what you give me is worth nothing. You give me
your book, and I'll give you mine.'

'What is your book?' Oscar asked.

'An arithmetic, to be sure!' replied Kanker, pulling it out of his
pocket. 'See, here is the multiplication table. And here are addition,
subtraction, multiplication, and division. And here are vulgar
fractions. And here are examples. And here is the Rule of Three.
That's what I call a book worth having.'

'But if you think my book is not worth having, why do you want it?'

'To make a fire to warm myself with,' Kanker replied.

'If you are cold, will not the sun warm you?' asked Oscar.

'No one has been able to prove that there is any warmth in the sun,'
said Kanker. 'It only seems to be warm. But I know that a fire is
warm, because I can burn my fingers in it.'

'But if the sun feels warm, is not that as good as if it were really
warm?'

'For you it may be,' answered Kanker, 'but not for me. I care only for
truth, and I don't choose to be warmed by anything I don't believe in.
That is the reason I carry a sun-umbrella. Well, will you let me have
your book?'

'It is no more use to me,' said Oscar, gloomily. 'I do not care
whether you take it or not, or what becomes of it.'

'You will find my arithmetic much more useful,' returned Kanker. 'Come
outside and see me make my fire.'

But Oscar turned sullenly away.

Kanker went outside the cottage, with the book in his arms. After a
moment, Oscar could not help going to the window to see what was being
done.

Kanker had laid the book across two stones, and had gathered some bits
of driftwood from the shore for kindlings to put underneath. Now he
struck a match, and held it to the kindlings. But at that there was a
sudden and mighty sound, like thunder, and also like a great voice
speaking some solemn and awful word. And the book seemed to dissolve,
and in its place arose a tall pillar of light, more dazzling than the
lightning, which hung for a moment near the earth, and, to Oscar's
amazed eyes, took on the likeness of a glorious and majestic figure,
which bent upon him a look that made his heart tremble. Then the
figure moved away through the air seaward, casting a radiance across
the waters, and making the sun look red and dim. It drifted slowly
away over the sea, and at last became as a bright star, further and
further off, until it vanished in the depths of the sky. Then a great
coldness fell upon Oscar, and the daylight became dusky to him, as if
it were already evening; and he knew that the dazzling face which he
had seen was the face of his father. Now he understood what the book
had been; but it was too late.




CHAPTER VI.

THE SECRET OF THE WAVES.


It seemed to Oscar that many hours passed away while he remained
crouched down on his knees in a dark corner, shivering and miserable.
At last he looked up. It was evening, and a bitter wind was blowing
outside; heavy clouds were driving across the sky, and rain was
beating on the roof. Kanker was sitting in the middle of the room,
with his chin upon his hands, staring at him.

'You had better go,' Oscar said. 'What other harm do you want to do
me?'

'It is you who have done harm to me,' replied Kanker, 'by giving me a
box of gunpowder to make a fire with. The explosion has cracked my
spectacles. However, I bear no malice. What do you keep that jar of
sea-water for?'

'Ah! that is where Theeda lives,' exclaimed Oscar, rising, with some
cheerfulness in his face. 'I had forgotten her.'

'Theeda? what is Theeda?' demanded Kanker.

'She is my playmate and companion,' Oscar said. 'She is dearer to me
than anything else in the world, and nothing in the world is so lovely
as she.'

'And do you mean to say she lives in the water? Pray, how big is she?'

'She is not so tall as your hand is long.'

'No such creature ever existed,' said Kanker, positively. 'In the
first place, no one ever was made of that size, and in the second
place, it is impossible for anyone to live under water. It is another
of your hallucinations. There is no use in your denying it. I shall
believe in her when I see her, and not before.'

'I will not let you see her,' replied Oscar.

'Just what I expected! When did you see her last yourself?'

'Just before your shadow fell across the vase.'

'What language does she talk?'

'She does not talk at all, but I know all she thinks.'

'This is really too absurd! Have you ever touched her?'

'No. It is enough for me to look at her.'

'I will tell you what it is,' said Kanker, lifting up one of his ugly
fingers and holding it at the side of his little sharp nose. 'You are
crazy--quite crazy! You have lived here by yourself until you don't
know what is real from what isn't. Now, I will make this bargain with
you. If you will let me put my finger on this Theeda of yours, and I
thereby prove to my own satisfaction that she exists, I will let you
use me for your servant the rest of my life. Do you agree?'

Oscar waited a little while before answering. He hated Kanker, and he
thought that if Kanker became his servant, he should be able to make
him as miserable as Kanker had made him. He did not stop to think
whether Theeda would like to be touched or not; it seemed to him an
easy way of being revenged on his enemy, and that was all. 'Yes, I
agree!' he said.

'Very well!' returned Kanker. 'And, of course, if I prove that Theeda
does not exist, you are to become my servant for the rest of your
life?'

'There is no danger in my promising that,' said Oscar. 'Let it be so
if you wish.'

'Very well!' said Kanker again; and then they both went to the vase.

'Where is she?' asked Ranker. 'I don't see her.'

'Oh, she has gone into her shell; it is late--she must be asleep by
this time,' answered Oscar. 'You must wait until to-morrow.'

'That won't do!' said Kanker. 'The agreement was for this evening. If
you back out, you become my servant.'

'It shall be this evening, then,' replied Oscar; 'but you will regret
it more than I!' And stooping over the vase, he called, 'Theeda!
Theeda! wake up! come out!'

They waited a moment. There was no movement in the great pearl shell,
and Theeda did not appear.

'Come! there's enough of this nonsense!' Kanker exclaimed. 'You may as
well make up your mind at once to being my servant.'

'Not yet!' said Oscar, scornfully, and he called in a louder voice,
'Come out, Theeda! Come out--I want you!'

The shell stirred slightly, but still Theeda did not appear. Kanker
laughed.

Then Oscar grew angry, and in a harsh tone he cried, 'Theeda, come
out! or I shall not love you or believe in you any more!'

The sun had set long ago, and the sky was almost dark; but now,
through a break in the clouds, the moon shone down, white and clear,
into the crystal vase. It gleamed upon the pearly shell; and in its
cold lustre Oscar saw the tiny water-maiden, whom he had loved better
than anything else in the world, and who was the most precious thing
that the world contained, come slowly out of her shell, and stand
downcast and drooping before him. Then he felt that, in his anger, and
in his desire to be revenged on his enemy, he had done a wicked thing,
which could not be forgiven. He had shown what was most sacred and
dear to his own soul to one who could neither believe in her nor
reverence her. His heart was filled with bitter sorrow and repentance;
but again it was too late.

For, as Theeda stood there in the moonlight, drooping amidst her
shadowy mist of hair, Kanker put out his hideous red hand, that was
less like a hand than like a crab's claw, and plunging it into the
water, he tried to grasp Theeda round the waist. But his fingers met
together, and behold! no Theeda was there. She had faded into
nothingness where she stood; or else the shadow of a cloud which at
that moment passed across the room, and made the vase and the room
dark again, had caused her to become invisible. Before she
disappeared, however, she bent one sad reproachful look upon Oscar,
and he knew that he had seen his mother's spirit in her eyes. He
understood all then; but it was too late indeed!

'I told you how it would be!' said the harsh voice of Ranker, with his
spluttering laugh, 'and now you are my servant!'

'Yes, for I have lost my Theeda!' answered Oscar, with a heavy sigh.

But even as he spoke, he chanced to turn his eyes towards the sea.
Beyond the moon he saw a pure white cloud drifting down the sky. To
Oscar's fancy it took on the likeness of a female form--the form of
someone whom he knew and loved. She seemed to beckon him to a far-off
country, whither Kanker could not come, and where he would be free.

'Yes, I will follow her!' Oscar thought; and, in some way, he slipped
from where he was, and left the cottage and Kanker behind him, and
went down towards the ocean.

Kanker did not at first know that Oscar had escaped, for he had left
something behind which resembled him, but was not really he. The next
morning, when the sun peeped as usual into the crystal vase, neither
Oscar nor Kanker were to be seen. But, in the pearl shell, where
formerly Theeda had lived, sat a great ugly crab, twiddling its huge
red claws, and peering this way and that with its malicious little
eyes, which stuck far out of its head. Oscar was not in the cottage,
nor on the shore, nor has he, from that day to this, ever reappeared
there. But, if you should ever happen to visit the place, you will
hear the waves murmur mysteriously to one another, as they gambol
along the beach; and since they come from that far-off line where the
world meets the sky, they may possibly know more about Oscar and
Theeda than people like Kanker would be apt to believe.


                               THE END.

      _Spottiswoode & Co., Printers, New-street Square, London._