<h2 class='c012'><abbr title='1'>I</abbr><br/> <br/>THE PRINCESS AND THE TWO PRINCES</h2>
<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_6 c018'>LONG ago, before the sun caught fire, before the moon froze up, and
before you were born, a Queen had three children, whose names were
Princess Hilda, Prince Frank, and Prince Henry. Princess Hilda, who
was the eldest, had blue eyes and golden hair; Prince Henry, who was
the youngest, had black eyes and black hair; and Prince Frank, who was
neither the youngest nor the eldest, had hazel eyes and brown hair.
They were the best children in the world, and the prettiest, and the
cleverest of their age; they lived in the most beautiful palace ever
built, and
<span class="pagenum" id='Page_4'>4</span>the garden they played in was the loveliest that ever was seen.</p>
<p>This palace stood on the borders of a great forest, on the other side
of which was Fairy Land. But there was only one window in the palace
that looked out upon the forest, and that was the round window of the
room in which Princess Hilda, Prince Frank, and Prince Henry slept.
And since this 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 kind of
birds sang in the branches of the trees. Sometimes, however, as they
lay with their heads on their little pillows, and their eyes open,
waiting for sleep to come <SPAN name='TNlines'></SPAN>and fasten down their eyelids,
they saw stars, white, blue, and red, twinkling in the sky overhead; and
below amongst the tree-trunks, other yellow stars, which danced about,
and flitted to and fro. These flitting stars were called, by grown-up
people, will-o’-the-wisps, jack-o’-lanterns, fire-flies, and such like
names; but the
<span class="pagenum" id='Page_5'>5</span>children knew them to be the torches carried by the elves, as they ran
hither and thither about their affairs. They often wished that one of
these elves would come through the round window of their chamber, and
make them a visit; but if this ever happened, it was not until after
the children had fallen asleep, and could know nothing of it.</p>
<p>The garden was on the opposite side of the palace to the forest, and
was full of flowers, and birds, and fountains, in the basins of which
gold-fishes swam. In the center of the garden, was a broad green lawn
for the children to play on; and on the further edge of this lawn was
a high hedge, with only one round opening in the middle of it. But
through this opening no one was allowed to pass; for the land on the
other side belonged to a dwarf, whose name was Rumpty-Dudget, and whose
only pleasure was in doing mischief. He was an ugly little dwarf, about
as high as your knee, and all gray from head to foot. He had a gray
beard and wore a broad-brimmed gray hat, and a gray cloak, that
<span class="pagenum" id='Page_6'>6</span>was so much too long for him that it dragged on the ground as he
walked; and on his back was a small gray hump, that made him look
even shorter than he was. He lived in a gray tower, whose battlements
could be seen from the palace windows. In this tower was a room with a
thousand and one corners in it. In each of these corners stood a little
child, with its face to the wall, and its hands behind its back. They
were children that Rumpty-Dudget had caught trespassing on his grounds,
and had carried off with him to his tower. In this way he had filled up
one corner after another, until only one corner was left unfilled; and
if he could catch a child to put in that corner, then Rumpty-Dudget
would become master of the whole country, and the beautiful palace
would disappear, and the lovely garden would be changed into a desert,
covered over with gray stones and brambles. You may be sure, therefore,
that Rumpty-Dudget tried very hard to get hold of a child to put in the
thousand and first corner; but all the mothers
<span class="pagenum" id='Page_7'>7</span>were so careful, and all the children so obedient, that for a long
time that thousand and first corner had remained empty.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum" id='Page_9'>9</span></p>
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<span class="pagenum" id='Page_11'>11</span>
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