Versified by Clara Doty Bates
The ringing bells and the booming cannon
Proclaimed
on a summer morn
That in the good king’s royal palace
A
Princess had been born.
The towers flung out their brightest banners,
The
ships their streamers gay,
And every one, from lord to peasant,
Made
joyful holiday.
Great plans for feasting and merry-making
Were
made by the happy king;
And, to bring good fortune, seven fairies
Were
bid to the christening.
And for them the king had seven dishes
Made
out of the best red gold,
Set thickly round on the sides and covers
With
jewels of price untold.
When the day of the christening came,
the bugles
Blew
forth their shrillest notes;
Drums throbbed, and endless lines of soldiers
Filed
past in scarlet coats.
And the fairies were there the king had
bidden,
Bearing
their gifts of good
But right in the midst a strange old woman
Surly
and scowling stood.
They knew her to be the old, old fairy,
All
nose and eyes and ears,
Who had not peeped, till now, from her
dungeon
For
more than fifty years.
Angry she was to have been forgotten
Where
others were guests, and to find
That neither a seat nor a dish at the
banquet
To
her had been assigned.
Now came the hour for the gift-bestowing;
And
the fairy first in place
Touched with her wand the child and gave
her
“Beauty
of form and face!”
Fairy the second bade, “Be witty!”
The
third said, “Never fail!”
The fourth, “Dance well!”
and the fifth, “O Princess,
Sing
like the nightingale!”
The sixth gave, “Joy in the heart
forever!”
But
before the seventh could speak,
The crooked, black old Dame came forward,
And,
tapping the baby’s cheek,
“You shall prick your finger upon
a spindle,
And
die of it!” she cried.
All trembling were the lords and ladies,
And
the king and queen beside.
But the seventh fairy interrupted,
“Do
not tremble nor weep!
That cruel curse I can change and soften,
And
instead of death give sleep!
“But the sleep, though I do my best
and kindest,
Must
last for an hundred years!”
On the king’s stern face was a dreadful
pallor,
In
the eyes of the queen were tears.
“Yet after the hundred years are
vanished,”
The
fairy added beside,
“A Prince of a noble line shall
find her,
And
take her for his bride.”
But the king, with a hope to change the
future,
Proclaimed
this law to be:
That, if in all the land there was kept
one spindle,
Sure
death was the penalty.
The Princess grew, from her very cradle
Lovely
and witty and good;
And at last, in the course of years, had
blossomed
Into
full sweet maidenhood.
And one day, in her father’s summer
palace,
As
blithe as the very air,
She climbed to the top of the highest
turret,
Over
an old worn stair
And there in the dusky cobwebbed garret,
Where
dimly the daylight shone,
A little, doleful, hunch-backed woman
Sat
spinning all alone.
“O Goody,” she cried, “what
are you doing?”
“Why,
spinning, you little dunce!”
The Princess laughed: “’Tis
so very funny,
Pray
let me try it once!”
With a careless touch, from the hand of
Goody
She
caught the half-spun thread,
And the fatal spindle pricked her finger!
Down
fell she as if dead!
And Goody shrieking, the frightened courtiers
Climbed
up the old worn stair
Only to find, in heavy slumber,
The
Princess lying there.
They bore her down to a lofty chamber,
They
robed her in her best,
And on a couch of gold and purple
They
laid her for her rest,
The roses upon her cheek still blooming,
And
the red still on her lips,
While the lids of her eyes, like night-shut
lilies,
Were
closed in white eclipse.
Then the fairy who strove her fate to
alter
From
the dismal doom of death,
Now that the vital hour impended,
Came
hurrying in a breath.
And then about the slumbering palace
The
fairy made up-spring
A wood so heavy and dense that never
Could
enter a living thing.
And there for a century the Princess
Lay
in a trance so deep
That neither the roar of winds nor thunder
Could
rouse her from her sleep.
Then at last one day, past the long-enchanted
Old
wood, rode a new king’s son,
Who, catching a glimpse of a royal turret
Above
the forest dun
Felt in his heart a strange wish for exploring
The
thorny and briery place,
And, lo, a path through the deepest thicket
Opened
before his face!
On, on he went, till he spied a terrace,
And
further a sleeping guard,
And rows of soldiers upon their carbines
Leaning,
and snoring hard.
Up the broad steps! The doors swung
backward!
The
wide halls heard no tread!
But a lofty chamber, opening, showed him
A
gold and purple bed.
And there in her beauty, warm and glowing,
The
enchanted Princess lay!
While only a word from his lips was needed
To
drive her sleep away.
He spoke the word, and the spell was scattered,
The
enchantment broken through!
The lady woke. “Dear Prince,”
she murmured,
“How
long I have waited for you!”
Then at once the whole great slumbering
palace
Was
wakened and all astir;
Yet the Prince, in joy at the Sleeping
Beauty,
Could
only look at her.
She was the bride who for years an hundred
Had
waited for him to come,
And now that the hour was here to claim
her,
Should
eyes or tongue be dumb?
The Princess blushed at his royal wooing,
Bowed
“yes” with her lovely head,
And the chaplain, yawning, but very lively,
Came
in and they were wed!
But about the dress of the happy Princess,
I
have my woman’s fears
It must have grown somewhat old-fashioned
In
the course of so many years!