<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2>
<h3>PRINCE WISEWIT'S RETURN</h3>
<p>King Winwealth was so pleased with the
stories told by the wonderful chair that he
gave Snowflower many presents, among
which was a golden girdle, and promised
that she should no longer go into low
company, but feast with him and his nobles
in the chief hall, and sleep in one of the
best rooms of the palace.</p>
<p>Snowflower was delighted at the promise
of feasting with those noble lords and ladies,
whose wonderful stories she had heard from
the chair. She bowed very low, and thanked
King Winwealth from the bottom of her
heart. All the company were glad to make
room for her, and when her golden girdle
was put on, little Snowflower looked as fine
as the best of them.</p>
<p>"Mamma," whispered the Princess Greedalind,
while she looked ready to cry for spite,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</SPAN></span>
"only see that low little girl who came here
in a coarse frock and barefooted, what finery
and favour she has gained by her story-telling
chair! All the Court are praising her
and overlooking me, though the feast was
made in honour of my birthday. Mamma,
I must have that chair from her. What
business has a common little girl with anything
so amusing?"</p>
<p>"So you shall, my daughter," said Queen
Wantall—for by this time she saw that King
Winwealth had, according to custom, fallen
asleep on his throne. So calling two of her
pages, Screw and Hardhands, she ordered
them to bring the chair from the other end
of the hall where Snowflower sat, and at
once made it a present to Princess Greedalind.</p>
<p>Nobody in that Court ever thought of
disputing Queen Wantall's commands, and
poor Snowflower sat down in a corner to cry.
While Princess Greedalind, putting on what
she thought a very grand air, laid down
her head on the cushion, saying: "Chair
of my grandmother, tell me a story."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Where did you get a grandmother?"
cried the clear voice from under the cushion.
And up went the chair with such force as to
throw Princess Greedalind off on the floor,
where she lay screaming, a good deal more
angry than hurt.</p>
<p>All those at Court tried in vain to comfort
her. But Queen Wantall, whose temper was
still worse, vowed that she would punish the
impudent thing, and sent for Sturdy, her
chief woodman, to chop it up with his axe.</p>
<p>At the first stroke the cushion was cut
open, and to the surprise of everybody a
bird, whose snow-white feathers were tipped
with purple, darted out, and flew away
through an open window.</p>
<p>"Catch it! catch it!" cried the Queen and
the Princess; and all but King Winwealth,
who still slept on his throne, rushed out after
the bird. It flew over the palace garden and
into a wild common, where houses had been
before Queen Wantall pulled them down to
search for a gold mine, which Her Majesty
never found, though three deep pits were dug
to come at it.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>To make the place look smart at the feast
time, these pits had been covered over with
loose branches and turf. All the rest of the
company remembered this but Queen Wantall
and Princess Greedalind. They were
nearest to the bird, and poor Snowflower,
by running hard, came close behind them,
but Fairfortune, one of the King's pages,
drew her back by the purple mantle, when,
coming to the covered pit, branches and turf
gave way, and down went the Queen and
the Princess.</p>
<p>Everybody looked for the bird, but it was
nowhere to be seen. But on the common
where the people saw it alight, there stood
a fair and royal Prince, clad in a robe of
purple and a crown of changing colours,
for sometimes it seemed of gold and sometimes
of forest leaves.</p>
<p>Most of the people stood not knowing
what to think, but all the fairy people and
all the lords and ladies of the chair's stories,
knew him, and cried: "Welcome to Prince
Wisewit!"</p>
<p>King Winwealth heard that sound where<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</SPAN></span>
he slept, and came out glad of heart to
welcome back his brother. When her own
pages came out with ropes and lanterns to
search for Queen Wantall and Princess
Greedalind, they found them safe and well
at the bottom of the pit, having fallen on
a heap of loose sand. The pit was of great
depth, but some daylight shone down, and
whatever were the yellow grains they saw
glittering among the sand, the Queen and
the Princess believed it was full of gold.</p>
<p>They called the miners false knaves, lazy
rogues, and a score of bad names beside,
for leaving so much wealth behind them,
and utterly refused to come out of the pit;
saying, that since Prince Wisewit was come,
they could find no pleasure in the palace,
but would stay there and dig for gold, and
buy the world with it for themselves.</p>
<p>King Winwealth thought the plan was a
good one for keeping peace in his palace.
He commanded shovels and picks to be
lowered to the Queen and Princess. The
two pages, Screw and Hardhands, went
down to help them, in hopes of halving the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</SPAN></span>
profits; and there they stayed, digging for
gold. Some of the people about the Court
said they would find it. Others believed
they never could, and the gold was not
found when this story was written.</p>
<p>As for Prince Wisewit, he went home with
the rest of the company, leading Snowflower
by the hand, and telling them all how he had
been turned into a bird by the cunning fairy
Fortunetta, who found him off his guard in
the forest; how she had shut him up under
the cushion of that curious chair, and given
it to old Dame Frostyface; and how all his
comfort had been in little Snowflower, to
whom he told so many stories.</p>
<p>King Winwealth was so rejoiced to find his
brother again, that he commanded another
feast to be held for many days. All that
time the gates of the palace stood open; all-comers
were welcome, all complaints heard.
The houses and lands which Queen Wantall
had taken away, were given back to their
rightful owners. Everybody got what they
wanted most. There were no more noises
of strife without, nor discontents within the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</SPAN></span>
palace; and on the last day of the feast who
should arrive but Dame Frostyface, in her
grey hood and cloak.</p>
<p>Snowflower was right glad to see her
grandmother—so were the King and Prince,
for they had known the Dame in their youth.
They kept the feast for a few days more;
and when it was ended everything was right
in the kingdom. King Winwealth and
Prince Wisewit reigned once more together;
and because Snowflower was the best girl in
all that country, they chose her to be their
heiress, instead of Princess Greedalind.</p>
<p>From that day forward she wore white
velvet and satin; she had seven pages, and
lived in the grandest part of the palace.
Dame Frostyface, too, was made a great
lady. They put a new velvet cushion on
her chair, and she sat in a gown of grey
cloth, edged with gold, spinning on an ivory
wheel in a fine painted parlour.</p>
<p>Prince Wisewit built a great summer-house
covered with vines and roses, on the
spot where her old cottage stood. He also
made a highway through the forest, that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</SPAN></span>
all good people might come and go there
at their leisure; and the cunning fairy
Fortunetta, finding that her reign was over
in those parts, set off on a journey round
the world, and did not return in the time
of this story.</p>
<p>Good boys and girls, who may chance
to read it, that time is long ago. Great
wars, work, and learning have passed over
the world since then, and changed all its
fashions. Kings make no seven-day feasts for
all-comers now. Queens and princesses, however
greedy, do not mine for gold. Chairs
tell no tales. Wells work no wonders; and
there are no such doings on hills and forests,
for the fairies dance no more. Some say it
was the hum of schools—some think it was
the din of factories that frightened them.
But nobody has seen them for many a
year, except, it is said, one Hans Christian
Andersen, in Denmark, whose tales of the
fairies are so good that they must have
been heard from themselves.</p>
<p>It is certain that no living man knows the
later history of King Winwealth's country,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</SPAN></span>
nor what became of the people who lived and
visited at his palace. Yet there are people
who believe that the King still falls asleep
on his throne and into low spirits in the
evening; that Queen Wantall and Princess
Greedalind have found the gold, and begun
to buy; that Dame Frostyface yet spins—they
cannot tell where; that Snowflower
may still be seen at the new year's time
in her dress of white velvet, looking out
for the early spring; that Prince Wisewit
has somehow fallen under a stronger spell
and a thicker cushion, that he still tells
stories to Snowflower and her friends, and
when cushion and spell are broken by another
stroke of Sturdy's hatchet—which they
expect will happen some time—the Prince
will make all things right again, and bring
back the fairy times to the world.</p>
<div class='center'><br/><br/><br/>
<small>PRINTED AND BOUND IN GREAT BRITAIN</small><br/>
<small><i>By Blackie & Son, Limited, Glasgow</i></small><br/></div>
<hr style='width: 65%;' />
<div class='tnote'><h3>Transcriber's Notes:</h3>
<p>The original did not have a Table of Contents. One was created for this
edition.</p>
<p>This text often closed a quote before adding the
final punctuation. An example may be found on page 7:</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>Then
Snowflower remembered her grandmother's
words, and, laying her head gently down,
she said: "Chair of my grandmother, tell
me a story".</p>
</div>
</div>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />