<h2 class='c012'><abbr title='2'>II</abbr><br/> <br/>TOM, THE FAITHFUL GUARDIAN</h2>
<p class='drop-capa0_15_0_6 c018'>WHEN Princess Hilda and her two little brothers, Prince Frank and
Prince Henry, were still very little indeed, the Queen, their mother,
was obliged to make a long journey to a distant country, and to leave
the children behind her. They were not entirely alone, however; for
there was their fairy aunt to keep guard over them at night, and a
large cat, with yellow eyes and a thick tail, to see that no harm came
to them during the day. The cat was named Tom, and was with them from
the time they got up in the morning until they went to bed again; but
from the time they went to bed until they got up, the cat disappeared
and the fairy aunt took his place. The children had never seen their
fairy aunt except in dreams, because she only came after sleep had
fastened
<span class="pagenum" id='Page_12'>12</span>down their eyelids for the night. Then she would fly in through the
round window, and sit on the edge of their bed, and whisper in their
ears all manner of charming stories about Fairy Land, and the wonderful
things that were seen and done there. Then, just before they awoke, she
would kiss their eyelids and fly out of the round window again; and the
cat, with his yellow eyes and his thick tail, would come purring in at
the window.</p>
<p>One day, the unluckiest day in the whole year, Princess Hilda, Prince
Frank and Prince Henry were playing together on the broad lawn in the
center of the garden. It was Rumpty-Dudget’s birthday, and the only day
in which he had power to creep through the round hole in the hedge
and prowl about the Queen’s grounds. As ill-fortune would have it,
moreover, the cat was forced to be away on this day from sunrise to
sunset; so that during all that time the three children had no one to
take care of them. But they did not know there was any danger, for they
had never yet heard of Rumpty-Dudget; and
<span class="pagenum" id='Page_13'>13</span>they went on playing together very affectionately, for up to this time
they had never quarreled. The only thing that troubled them was that
Tom, the cat, was not there to play with them; he had been away ever
since sunrise, and they all longed to see his yellow eyes and his thick
tail, and to stroke his smooth back, and to hear his comfortable purr.
However, it was now very near sunset, so he must soon be back. The sun,
like a great red ball, hung a little way above the edge of the world,
and was taking a parting look at the children before bidding them good
night.</p>
<p>All at once, Princess Hilda looked up and saw a strange little dwarf
standing close beside her, all gray from head to foot. He had a gray
beard, a gray hat, and a long gray cloak that dragged on the ground,
and on his back was a little gray hump that made him seem even shorter
than he was, though, after all, he was no taller than your knee.
Princess Hilda was not frightened, for nobody had ever done her any
harm; and besides, this strange little gray man, though he was very
ugly,
<span class="pagenum" id='Page_14'>14</span>smiled at her from ear to ear, and seemed to be the most good-natured
dwarf in the world. So she called to Prince Frank and Prince Henry, and
they looked up too, and were no more frightened than Hilda; and as the
dwarf kept smiling from ear to ear, the three children smiled back at
him. Meanwhile, the great red ball of the sun was slowly going down,
and now his lower edge was just resting on the edge of the world.</p>
<p>Now, you have heard of Rumpty-Dudget before, and therefore you know
that this strange little gray dwarf was none other than he, and that,
although he smiled so good-naturedly from ear to ear, he was really
wishing to do the children harm, and even to carry one of them off to
his tower, to stand in the thousand and first corner. But he had no
power to do this so long as the children stayed on their side of the
hedge; he must first tempt them to creep through the round opening, and
then he could carry them whither he pleased. So he held out his hand and
said:</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id='Page_15'>15</span>“Come with me, Princess Hilda, Prince
Frank and Prince Henry. I am very fond of
little children; and if you will creep through that
round opening in the hedge, I will show you
something you never saw before.”</p>
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<p>“‘COME WITH ME, PRINCESS HILDA, PRINCE FRANK AND PRINCE HENRY’”</p>
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<p>The three children thought it would be very pleasant to see something
they never saw before; for if that part of the world which they had
already seen was so beautiful, it was likely that the part they had not
seen would be more beautiful still. So they stood up, and Rumpty-Dudget
took Prince Frank by one hand, and Prince Henry by the other, and
Princess Hilda followed behind, and thus they all set off across the
lawn toward the round opening in the hedge. But they could not go very
fast, because Prince Henry was hardly old enough to walk fast yet; and
meanwhile, the great red ball of the sun kept going down very slowly,
and now his lower half was out of sight beneath the edge of the world.
However, at last they came to the round opening, and Rumpty-Dudget took
hold of Prince Henry to lift him through it.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id='Page_16'>16</span>But just at that moment the last bit of the sun disappeared beneath the
edge of the world, and instantly there was a great sound of meowing and
spitting, and Tom, the cat, came springing across the lawn, his great
yellow eyes flashing, and his back bristling, and every hair upon his
tail standing straight out, until it was as big round as your leg.
And he flew at Rumpty-Dudget, and jumped upon his hump, and bit and
scratched him soundly. At that Rumpty-Dudget screamed with pain, and
dropped little Prince Henry, and vanished through the opening of the
hedge in the twinkling of an eye.</p>
<p>But from the other side of the hedge he threw a handful of black mud
at the three children; a drop of it fell upon the forehead of Princess
Hilda, and another upon Prince Frank’s nose, and a third upon little
Prince Henry’s chin; and each drop made a little black spot, which
all the washing and scrubbing in the world would not take away. And
immediately Princess Hilda, who had till then been the best little
girl in the world, began to wish to order everybody
<span class="pagenum" id='Page_17'>17</span>about, and make them do what she pleased, whether they liked it or not;
and Prince Frank, who till then had been one of the two best little
boys in the world, began to want all the good and pretty things that
belonged to other people, in addition to what already belonged to him;
and Prince Henry, who till then had been the other of the two best
little boys in the world, began to wish to do what he was told not to
do, and not to do what he was told to do. Such was the effect of the
three black drops of mud.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum" id='Page_19'>19</span></p>
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<span class="pagenum" id='Page_21'>21</span>
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