SEARCH
0-9 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Prev | Current Page 129 | Next

Vredenburg, Edric

"My Book of Favorite Fairy Tales"

"
[Illustration]
"It pleases you to say so, sir," replied the Princess, and relapsed
into silence.
"Beauty," went on Riquet, "is so delightful that one would give
everything for it, and if anyone is beautiful I can't understand
anything troubling greatly."
"I would rather be as ugly as you," answered the Princess, "and be
clever, than as beautiful as I am, and be stupid."
"To think you are stupid is a sure sign that you have a certain amount
of cleverness, madam," replied Riquet.
"I don't think about that," said the Princess, "but I am quite sure
that I am very silly, and the grief of that is killing me."
"If that is all that troubles you, I can soon put an end to your
grief," said Riquet, "for I have the power of giving cleverness to the
person whom I love the best, and if only you will marry me, you shall
become as clever as you can wish."
The Princess was greatly astonished, but remained silent.
"I can see," continued Riquet, "that this proposal is not to your
taste, and I am not astonished. I will give you a year to think about
it."
So great was the longing of the Princess to be clever, that she at
once promised Riquet to marry him in a year's time, and no sooner had
she made the promise than a great change took place in her, and she
found she could say all sorts of pleasant things, on all sorts of
subjects, in quite an easy manner.


Pages:
117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141