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<h2> Donkey Skin </h2>
<p>There was once upon a time a king who was so much beloved by his subjects
that he thought himself the happiest monarch in the whole world, and he
had everything his heart could desire. His palace was filled with the
rarest of curiosities, and his gardens with the sweetest flowers, while in
the marble stalls of his stables stood a row of milk-white Arabs, with big
brown eyes.</p>
<p>Strangers who had heard of the marvels which the king had collected, and
made long journeys to see them, were, however, surprised to find the most
splendid stall of all occupied by a donkey, with particularly large and
drooping ears. It was a very fine donkey; but still, as far as they could
tell, nothing so very remarkable as to account for the care with which it
was lodged; and they went away wondering, for they could not know that
every night, when it was asleep, bushels of gold pieces tumbled out of its
ears, which were picked up each morning by the attendants.</p>
<p>After many years of prosperity a sudden blow fell upon the king in the
death of his wife, whom he loved dearly. But before she died, the queen,
who had always thought first of his happiness, gathered all her strength,
and said to him:</p>
<p>'Promise me one thing: you must marry again, I know, for the good of your
people, as well as of yourself. But do not set about it in a hurry. Wait
until you have found a woman more beautiful and better formed than
myself.'</p>
<p>'Oh, do not speak to me of marrying,' sobbed the king; 'rather let me die
with you!' But the queen only smiled faintly, and turned over on her
pillow and died.</p>
<p>For some months the king's grief was great; then gradually he began to
forget a little, and, besides, his counsellors were always urging him to
seek another wife. At first he refused to listen to them, but by-and-by he
allowed himself to be persuaded to think of it, only stipulating that the
bride should be more beautiful and attractive than the late queen,
according to the promise he had made her.</p>
<p>Overjoyed at having obtained what they wanted, the counsellors sent envoys
far and wide to get portraits of all the most famous beauties of every
country. The artists were very busy and did their best, but, alas! nobody
could even pretend that any of the ladies could compare for a moment with
the late queen.</p>
<p>At length, one day, when he had turned away discouraged from a fresh
collection of pictures, the king's eyes fell on his adopted daughter, who
had lived in the palace since she was a baby, and he saw that, if a woman
existed on the whole earth more lovely than the queen, this was she! He at
once made known what his wishes were, but the young girl, who was not at
all ambitious, and had not the faintest desire to marry him, was filled
with dismay, and begged for time to think about it. That night, when
everyone was asleep, she started in a little car drawn by a big sheep, and
went to consult her fairy godmother.</p>
<p>'I know what you have come to tell me,' said the fairy, when the maiden
stepped out of the car; 'and if you don't wish to marry him, I will show
you how to avoid it. Ask him to give you a dress that exactly matches the
sky. It will be impossible for him to get one, so you will be quite safe.'
The girl thanked the fairy and returned home again.</p>
<p>The next morning, when her father (as she had always called him) came to
see her, she told him that she could give him no answer until he had
presented her with a dress the colour of the sky. The king, overjoyed at
this answer, sent for all the choicest weavers and dressmakers in the
kingdom, and commanded them to make a robe the colour of the sky without
an instant's delay, or he would cut off their heads at once. Dreadfully
frightened at this threat, they all began to dye and cut and sew, and in
two days they brought back the dress, which looked as if it had been cut
straight out of the heavens! The poor girl was thunderstruck, and did not
know what to do; so in the night she harnessed her sheep again, and went
in search of her godmother.</p>
<p>'The king is cleverer than I thought,' said the fairy; 'but tell him you
must have a dress of moonbeams.'</p>
<p>And the next day, when the king summoned her into his presence, the girl
told him what she wanted.</p>
<p>'Madam, I can refuse you nothing,' said he; and he ordered the dress to be
ready in twenty-four hours, or every man should be hanged.</p>
<p>They set to work with all their might, and by dawn next day, the dress of
moonbeams was laid across her bed. The girl, though she could not help
admiring its beauty, began to cry, till the fairy, who heard her, came to
her help.</p>
<p>'Well, I could not have believed it of him!' said she; 'but ask for a
dress of sunshine, and I shall be surprised indeed if he manages that!'</p>
<p>The goddaughter did not feel much faith in the fairy after her two
previous failures; but not knowing what else to do, she told her father
what she was bid.</p>
<p>The king made no difficulties about it, and even gave his finest rubies
and diamonds to ornament the dress, which was so dazzling, when finished,
that it could not be looked at save through smoked glasses!</p>
<p>When the princess saw it, she pretended that the sight hurt her eyes, and
retired to her room, where she found the fairy awaiting her, very much
ashamed of herself.</p>
<p>'There is only one thing to be done now,' cried she; 'you must demand the
skin of the ass he sets such store by. It is from that donkey he obtains
all his vast riches, and I am sure he will never give it to you.'</p>
<p>The princess was not so certain; however, she went to the king, and told
him she could never marry him till he had given her the ass's skin.</p>
<p>The king was both astonished and grieved at this new request, but did not
hesitate an instant. The ass was sacrificed, and the skin laid at the feet
of the princess.</p>
<p>The poor girl, seeing no escape from the fate she dreaded, wept afresh,
and tore her hair; when, suddenly, the fairy stood before her.</p>
<p>'Take heart,' she said, 'all will now go well! Wrap yourself in this skin,
and leave the palace and go as far as you can. I will look after you. Your
dresses and your jewels shall follow you underground, and if you strike
the earth whenever you need anything, you will have it at once. But go
quickly: you have no time to lose.'</p>
<p>So the princess clothed herself in the ass's skin, and slipped from the
palace without being seen by anyone.</p>
<p>Directly she was missed there was a great hue and cry, and every corner,
possible and impossible, was searched. Then the king sent out parties
along all the roads, but the fairy threw her invisible mantle over the
girl when they approached, and none of them could see her.</p>
<p>The princess walked on a long, long way, trying to find some one who would
take her in, and let her work for them; but though the cottagers, whose
houses she passed, gave her food from charity, the ass's skin was so dirty
they would not allow her to enter their houses. For her flight had been so
hurried she had had no time to clean it.</p>
<p>Tired and disheartened at her ill-fortune, she was wandering, one day,
past the gate of a farmyard, situated just outside the walls of a large
town, when she heard a voice calling to her. She turned and saw the
farmer's wife standing among her turkeys, and making signs to her to come
in.</p>
<p>'I want a girl to wash the dishes and feed the turkeys, and clean out the
pig-sty,' said the w omen, 'and, to judge by your dirty clothes, you would
not be too fine for the work.'</p>
<p>The girl accepted her offer with joy, and she was at once set to work in a
corner of the kitchen, where all the farm servants came and made fun of
her, and the ass's skin in which she was wrapped. But by-and-by they got
so used to the sight of it that it ceased to amuse them, and she worked so
hard and so well, that her mistress grew quite fond of her. And she was so
clever at keeping sheep and herding turkeys that you would have thought
she had done nothing else during her whole life!</p>
<p>One day she was sitting on the banks of a stream bewailing her wretched
lot, when she suddenly caught sight of herself in the water. Her hair and
part of her face was quite concealed by the ass's head, which was drawn
right over like a hood, and the filthy matted skin covered her whole body.
It was the first time she had seen herself as other people saw her, and
she was filled with shame at the spectacle. Then she threw off her
disguise and jumped into the water, plunging in again and again, till she
shone like ivory. When it was time to go back to the farm, she was forced
to put on the skin which disguised her, and now seemed more dirty than
ever; but, as she did so, she comforted herself with the thought that
to-morrow was a holiday, and that she would be able for a few hours to
forget that she was a farm girl, and be a princess once more.</p>
<p>So, at break of day, she stamped on the ground, as the fairy had told her,
and instantly the dress like the sky lay across her tiny bed. Her room was
so small that there was no place for the train of her dress to spread
itself out, but she pinned it up carefully when she combed her beautiful
hair and piled it up on the top of her head, as she had always worn it.
When she had done, she was so pleased with herself that she determined
never to let a chance pass of putting on her splendid clothes, even if she
had to wear them in the fields, with no one to admire her but the sheep
and turkeys.</p>
<p>Now the farm was a royal farm, and, one holiday, when 'Donkey Skin' (as
they had nicknamed the princess) had locked the door of her room and
clothed herself in her dress of sunshine, the king's son rode through the
gate, and asked if he might come and rest himself a little after hunting.
Some food and milk were set before him in the garden, and when he felt
rested he got up, and began to explore the house, which was famous
throughout the whole kingdom for its age and beauty. He opened one door
after the other, admiring the old rooms, when he came to a handle that
would not turn. He stooped and peeped through the keyhole to see what was
inside, and was greatly astonished at beholding a beautiful girl, clad in
a dress so dazzling that he could hardly look at it.</p>
<p>The dark gallery seemed darker than ever as he turned away, but he went
back to the kitchen and inquired who slept in the room at the end of the
passage. The scullery maid, they told him, whom everybody laughed at, and
called 'Donkey Skin;' and though he perceived there was some strange
mystery about this, he saw quite clearly there was nothing to be gained by
asking any more questions. So he rode back to the palace, his head filled
with the vision he had seen through the keyhole.</p>
<p>All night long he tossed about, and awoke the next morning in a high
fever. The queen, who had no other child, and lived in a state of
perpetual anxiety about this one, at once gave him up for lost, and indeed
his sudden illness puzzled the greatest doctors, who tried the usual
remedies in vain. At last they told the queen that some secret sorrow must
be at the bottom of all this, and she threw herself on her knees beside
her son's bed, and implored him to confide his trouble to her. If it was
ambition to be king, his father would gladly resign the cares of the
crown, and suffer him to reign in his stead; or, if it was love,
everything should be sacrificed to get for him the wife he desired, even
if she were daughter of a king with whom the country was at war at
present!</p>
<p>'Madam,' replied the prince, whose weakness would hardly allow him to
speak, 'do not think me so unnatural as to wish to deprive my father of
his crown. As long as he lives I shall remain the most faithful of his
subjects! And as to the princesses you speak of, I have seen none that I
should care for as a wife, though I would always obey your wishes,
whatever it might cost me.'</p>
<p>'Ah! my son,' cried she, 'we will do anything in the world to save your
life——and ours too, for if you die, we shall die also.'</p>
<p>'Well, then,' replied the prince, 'I will tell you the only thing that
will cure me——a cake made by the hand of "Donkey Skin."'</p>
<p>'Donkey Skin?' exclaimed the queen, who thought her son had gone mad; 'and
who or what is that?'</p>
<p>'Madam,' answered one of the attendants present, who had been with the
prince at the farm, '"Donkey Skin" is, next to the wolf, the most
disgusting creature on the face of the earth. She is a girl who wears a
black, greasy skin, and lives at your farmer's as hen-wife.'</p>
<p>'Never mind,' said the queen; 'my son seems to have eaten some of her
pastry. It is the whim of a sick man, no doubt; but send at once and let
her bake a cake.'</p>
<p>The attendant bowed and ordered a page to ride with the message.</p>
<p>Now it is by no means certain that 'Donkey Skin' had not caught a glimpse
of the prince, either when his eyes looked through the keyhole, or else
from her little window, which was over the road. But whether she had
actually seen him or only heard him spoken of, directly she received the
queen's command, she flung off the dirty skin, washed herself from head to
foot, and put on a skirt and bodice of shining silver. Then, locking
herself into her room, she took the richest cream, the finest flour, and
the freshest eggs on the farm, and set about making her cake.</p>
<p>As she was stirring the mixture in the saucepan a ring that she sometimes
wore in secret slipped from her finger and fell into the dough. Perhaps
'Donkey Skin' saw it, or perhaps she did not; but, any way, she went on
stirring, and soon the cake was ready to be put in the oven. When it was
nice and brown she took off her dress and put on her dirty skin, and gave
the cake to the page, asking at the same time for news of the prince. But
the page turned his head aside, and would not even condescend to answer.</p>
<p>The page rode like the wind, and as soon as he arrived at the palace he
snatched up a silver tray and hastened to present the cake to the prince.
The sick man began to eat it so fast that the doctors thought he would
choke; and, indeed, he very nearly did, for the ring was in one of the
bits which he broke off, though he managed to extract it from his mouth
without anyone seeing him.</p>
<p>The moment the prince was left alone he drew the ring from under his
pillow and kissed it a thousand times. Then he set his mind to find how he
was to see the owner—-for even he did not dare to confess that he
had only beheld 'Donkey Skin' through a keyhole, lest they should laugh at
this sudden passion. All this worry brought back the fever, which the
arrival of the cake had diminished for the time; and the doctors, not
knowing what else to say, informed the queen that her son was simply dying
of love. The queen, stricken with horror, rushed into the king's presence
with the news, and together they hastened to their son's bedside.</p>
<p>'My boy, my dear boy!' cried the king, 'who is it you want to marry? We
will give her to you for a bride; even if she is the humblest of our
slaves. What is there in the whole world that we would not do for you?'</p>
<p>The prince, moved to tears at these words, drew the ring, which was an
emerald of the purest water, from under his pillow.</p>
<p>'Ah, dear father and mother, let this be a proof that she whom I love is
no peasant girl. The finger which that ring fits has never been thickened
by hard work. But be her condition what it may, I will marry no other.'</p>
<p>The king and queen examined the tiny ring very closely, and agreed, with
their son, that the wearer could be no mere farm girl. Then the king went
out and ordered heralds and trumpeters to go through the town, summoning
every maiden to the palace. And she whom the ring fitted would some day be
queen.</p>
<p>First came all the princesses, then all the duchesses' daughters, and so
on, in proper order. But not one of them could slip the ring over the tip
of her finger, to the great joy of the prince, whom excitement was fast
curing. At last, when the high-born damsels had failed, the shopgirls and
chambermaids took their turn; but with no better fortune.</p>
<p>'Call in the scullions and shepherdesses,' commanded the prince; but the
sight of their fat, red fingers satisfied everybody.</p>
<p>'There is not a woman left, your Highness,' said the chamberlain; but the
prince waved him aside.</p>
<p>'Have you sent for "Donkey Skin," who made me the cake?' asked he, and the
courtiers began to laugh, and replied that they would not have dared to
introduce so dirty a creature into the palace.</p>
<p>'Let some one go for her at once,' ordered the king. 'I commanded the
presence of every maiden, high or low, and I meant it.'</p>
<p>The princess had heard the trumpets and the proclamations, and knew quite
well that her ring was at the bottom of it all. She, too, had fallen in
love with the prince in the brief glimpse she had had of him, and trembled
with fear lest someone else's finger might be as small as her own. When,
therefore, the messenger from the palace rode up to the gate, she was
nearly beside herself with delight. Hoping all the time for such a
summons, she had dressed herself with great care, putting on the garment
of moonlight, whose skirt was scattered over with emeralds. But when they
began calling to her to come down, she hastily covered herself with her
donkey-skin and announced she was ready to present herself before his
Highness. She was taken straight into the hall, where the prince was
awaiting her, but at the sight of the donkey-skin his heart sank. Had he
been mistaken after all?</p>
<p>'Are you the girl,' he said, turning his eyes away as he spoke, 'are you
the girl who has a room in the furthest corner of the inner court of the
farmhouse?'</p>
<p>'Yes, my lord, I am,' answered she.</p>
<p>'Hold out your hand then,' continued the prince, feeling that he must keep
his word, whatever the cost, and, to the astonishment of every one
present, a little hand, white and delicate, came from beneath the black
and dirty skin. The ring slipped on with the utmost ease, and, as it did
so, the skin fell to the ground, disclosing a figure of such beauty that
the prince, weak as he was, fell on his knees before her, while the king
and queen joined their prayers to his. Indeed, their welcome was so warm,
and their caresses so bewildering, that the princess hardly knew how to
find words to reply, when the ceiling of the hall opened, and the fairy
godmother appeared, seated in a car made entirely of white lilac. In a few
words she explained the history of the princess, and how she came to be
there, and, without losing a moment, preparations of the most magnificent
kind were made for the wedding.</p>
<p>The kings of every country in the earth were invited, including, of
course, the princess's adopted father (who by this time had married a
widow), and not one refused.</p>
<p>But what a strange assembly it was! Each monarch travelled in the way he
thought most impressive; and some came borne in litters, others had
carriages of every shape and kind, while the rest were mounted on
elephants, tigers, and even upon eagles. So splendid a wedding had never
been seen before; and when it was over the king announced that it was to
be followed by a coronation, for he and the queen were tired of reigning,
and the young couple must take their place. The rejoicings lasted for
three whole months, then the new sovereigns settled down to govern their
kingdom, and made themselves so much beloved by their subjects, that when
they died, a hundred years later, each man mourned them as his own father
and mother.</p>
<p>[From le Cabinet de Fees.]</p>
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