<h2>PRINCE CHÉRI</h2>
<div class="figright"
style="width:40%;">
<ANTIMG width-obs="250" src="images/085.png" alt="Prince Cheri" /></div>
<p>There was once a king who was such an honourable man that
his subjects called him "The Good King."</p>
<p>One day while he was out hunting, a little rabbit that his
dogs were about to kill, threw itself into his arms. The King
caressed the little creature, and said:</p>
<p>"As you have put yourself under my protection nobody shall
harm you," and he carried the rabbit to his palace, and ordered
a pretty little hutch to be made for it.</p>
<p>That night when he was alone in his room, there appeared a
lovely lady. She wore a robe as white as snow, and a wreath of
white roses on her head. She addressed him thus:</p>
<p>"I am the Fairy Candide; I wished to see if you were as good
as everybody declares you are, and for this reason I changed
myself into the little rabbit, and ran to you in my distress,
for I know that those who have pity for dumb creatures have
still more pity for mankind. I have come to thank you for what
you did and to say that I shall always be your friend, and will
grant any request you would now like to make."</p>
<p>"Madam," replied the King, "I have one only son whom I love
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page86" id="page86"></SPAN></span> devotedly; he is named Prince
Chéri; if you have any good will for me, be a friend to my
son."</p>
<div class="figcenter"
style="width:100%;">
<ANTIMG width-obs="600" src="images/086.png" alt="The fairy and the king" /></div>
<p>"Willingly," responded the Fairy, "I will make your son the
most handsome prince in the world, or the richest, or the most
powerful; choose which you will for him."</p>
<p>"I desire none of these things," replied the King, "but I
shall be very much obliged if you will make him the best of all
princes, for what good would it do to him to be handsome, rich,
or powerful if he were wicked? You know he would be unhappy,
for it is only goodness which brings content."</p>
<p>"You are right," answered the Fairy, "but that I cannot do;
Prince Chéri must himself strive to become good. All that I can
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page87" id="page87"></SPAN></span> promise is that I will give
him good advice, and punish him for his faults, if he will
not himself correct them."</p>
<p>And with this the father had to rest content.</p>
<p>Not long afterwards the good King died, and two days later
the Fairy appeared to Prince Chéri.</p>
<p>"I promised your father to be your friend," she told him;
"here is a little gold ring, take care of it, for it is worth
more than diamonds. Every time that you are about to do any
wrong action it will prick you. If, in spite of the pricks, you
continue your bad actions, you will lose my friendship and I
shall become your enemy."</p>
<p>Saying this the Fairy vanished, leaving the Prince very much
astonished.</p>
<p>For some time Chéri behaved so well that the ring did not
prick at all, but one day when he returned from the chase,
having caught nothing, he felt so ill-humoured, that when his
dog Bibi came fawning upon him, he kicked the poor, faithful
creature from him. At that moment the ring pricked like a pin
running into his finger.</p>
<p>"What is this?" he exclaimed: "the Fairy must be mocking me,
surely I've done no great harm in kicking an animal that
annoyed me. What's the use of being ruler of a great empire if
I may not treat my dog as I will?"</p>
<p>"I am not mocking you," he heard in reply to his thoughts;
"you have been bad tempered, and you have behaved unkindly to a
poor animal who did not deserve such treatment. I know you are
higher than a dog, but the advantage of being ruler of a great
empire is not in doing all the harm one wishes, but in doing
all the good one can."</p>
<p>Chéri promised to be better, but he did not keep his word,
and so the ring often pricked him, sometimes until his finger
bled, and at last, in anger, he threw it away.</p>
<p>Now he thought he would be truly happy, and he gave way to
any foolish fancies and wrong wishes that came into his head,
until he really became very wicked and was disliked by
everyone.</p>
<p>One day when he was out walking he saw a girl named Zélie,
who was so beautiful that he resolved to marry
her.</p>
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page88" id="page88"></SPAN></span>
<p>But Zélie was as good as she was beautiful, and said to
him:</p>
<p>"Sir, I am only a shepherdess and have no fortune, but, in
spite of that, I will never marry you, for although I should be
a Queen, and you are handsome and rich, your evil behaviour
would make me hate you."</p>
<p>Upon this, Chéri flew into a passion, and ordered his
officers to carry Zélie to the Palace, but she was not used
unkindly there, for the Prince loved her.</p>
<p>However, after a while, urged by his foster-brother, a bad
man who encouraged Chéri in his wickedness, the young man
rushed in a rage to the room in which Zélie was confined,
determined that, if she still refused to marry him, the very
next day she should be sold as a slave.</p>
<p>Great was his surprise, on entering the apartment, to find
the captive had disappeared, for he carried the key of the door
in his pocket.</p>
<div class="figcenter"
style="width:100%;">
<SPAN href="images/165.jpg"
name="fig165s" id="fig165s"><ANTIMG width-obs="482"
src="images/165s.jpg" alt="ZÉLIE AND THE FAIRY CANDIDE PRINCE CHÉRI" /></SPAN>
<p><i>Painted by Jennie Harbour</i></p>ZÉLIE AND THE FAIRY
CANDIDE "PRINCE CHÉRI"</div>
<p>Amongst those at the Royal Court was a Councillor named
Suliman, a man of a noble mind, who had often dared to tell the
Prince of his faults, and had at first been thanked for this,
but later on Chéri grew angry that anyone should presume to
blame him while all others at the Court were full of flattery
and praise, but in his heart of hearts the Prince respected
this good man, and this the wicked flatterers knew full well,
and therefore feared lest he should come into the Prince's
favour.</p>
<p>So now they falsely said, that it was Suliman who had helped
Zélie to escape, and beyond himself with fury, Chéri commanded
his foster-brother to send soldiers to bring Suliman to him in
chains, like a criminal.</p>
<p>After giving these orders Chéri retired to his chamber, but
scarcely had he entered, when the earth trembled, there came a
great clap of thunder, and the Fairy Candide appeared before
him.</p>
<p>"I promised your father," said she in a stern voice, "to
give you good advice, and to punish you if you refused to
follow it. You have despised my counsels and your crimes have
converted you into a monster, the horror of heaven and earth.
Now it is time to fulfill my
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page89" id="page89"></SPAN></span> promise of punishment. I
condemn you to take the resemblance of the beasts you are
like in disposition—A lion, because of your
fury—a wolf, on account of your greediness—a
serpent, for destroying him who has been your second
father—a bull, by reason of your brutality."</p>
<div class="figleft"
style="width:60%;">
<ANTIMG width-obs="275" src="images/089.png" alt="Zelie" /></div>
<p>Hardly had the Fairy pronounced these words, when Chéri
perceived with horror that his body had been transformed.</p>
<p>He had a lion's head, a bull's horns, the feet of a wolf,
and the tail of a viper. At the same moment he found himself in
a forest, and there, after roaming about miserably for some
time, he fell into a pit dug by hunters. He was captured and
led into the capital of his Kingdom.</p>
<p>On the way thither instead of acknowledging that he had
brought this evil plight upon himself, he bit at his chains,
and cursed the Fairy. As he was nearing the city great
rejoicings were seen on every side, and, on the hunters
enquiring the reason, they were told that Prince Chéri, whose
only pleasure it was to torment his people, had been crushed to
death <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page90" id="page90"></SPAN></span> in his chamber by a
thunder-bolt, a just punishment for his offences. Four of
his wicked companions had tried to partition the Kingdom
between them, but the people would have none such to rule,
and they had offered the crown to the good and wise Suliman.
Chéri panted with rage on hearing this, and in the Palace
Square he saw Suliman on a superb throne, and all the people
who shouted with joy, and wished him a long life to repair
the evil brought about by their former sovereign. "I accept
the throne," said Suliman, "but it is to preserve it for
Prince Chéri. A fairy has revealed to me that he is not
dead, and possibly will return to you as virtuous as in his
earliest years. Alas!" cried Suliman, bursting into tears,
"his flatterers have ruined him, I know that at heart he is
good." These words moved Chéri to sorrow for his crimes, and
he felt that he had not been punished as severely as he
deserved, and he now resolved to amend his faults.</p>
<div class="figcenter"
style="width:100%;">
<ANTIMG width-obs="600" src="images/090.png" alt="Abduction" /></div>
<p>Therefore he obeyed the man who had charge over him, and who
constantly cruelly beat him, and one day when this keeper lay
asleep, and a tiger who had broken loose was about to devour
him, Chéri fought the fierce beast, and saved the man's
life.</p>
<p>Then a voice was heard saying, "a good action shall be
<!--page contained image-->
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page92" id="page92"></SPAN></span> rewarded!" and, to Chéri's
joy he was instantaneously transformed into a pretty little
dog which the keeper carried to the Queen.</p>
<p>The Queen was delighted with him, but, for fear he should
grow bigger, she gave him only small pieces of bread to eat, so
that poor Chéri nearly died of hunger.</p>
<p>One day he carried his little piece of bread into the garden
to eat it there, but wandering with it in his mouth, still
further on, he saw a young girl pale and thin, and almost
fainting for want of food.</p>
<p>"I am hungry," thought Chéri, "but if I give my breakfast to
this poor thing, perhaps I shall save her life." He placed his
bread in the girl's hand, and she ate it hungrily. Just then he
heard loud cries, and saw that it was the beautiful Zélie
struggling to free herself from four men who were carrying her
into a house near by.</p>
<p>Chéri, longing to help her, followed them barking, and
although the men kicked him savagely, he would not leave the
place. Presently from a window was thrown a plateful of
tempting-looking food. Chéri was just about to devour it, when
the girl to whom he had given the bread, rushed forward and
throwing her arms around him cried,</p>
<div class="figcenter"
style="width:100%;">
<ANTIMG width-obs="489" src="images/091.png" alt="COME, MY CHILDREN, I AM GOING TO TRANSPORT YOU TO YOUR PALACE." />
<br/>
"COME, MY CHILDREN, I AM GOING TO TRANSPORT YOU TO YOUR
PALACE."</div>
<p>"Poor little dog, do not touch that food, it is poisoned."
Just then a voice was heard saying, "You see that a good action
meets with reward," and at the same time Chéri was changed into
a pretty white pigeon. For several days he flew around hoping
to catch sight of Zélie, and at last, seated by a hermit,
outside a cave, he found her. Fluttering down he alighted upon
her shoulder. Zélie stroked his feathers whispering that she
now accepted his gift and would love him always, and at that
moment Chéri regained his natural figure, and Fairy Candide
appeared in place of the hermit whose form she had taken.
"Come, my children," said she, "I am going to transport you to
your Palace, that Chéri may receive his crown of which he has
now become worthy," and hardly had she ceased speaking, when
they found themselves in Suliman's presence. The worthy
Governor was delighted to behold his dear master, and gladly
resigned the throne to him. Chéri and Zélie reigned long and
happily, and we are told that the ring, which the Prince now
wore again, never once severely pricked him.</p>
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<hr />
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page93" id="page93"></SPAN></span>
<div class="figcenter"
style="width:100%;">
<ANTIMG width-obs="600" src="images/093.png" alt="Rding a wooden horse" /></div>
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