A FRENCH FAIRY TALE
There was once upon a time a very
great Queen who gave birth to little twin girls.
She immediately sent out invitations to twelve fairies
in the neighbouring countries to come to the feast
according to the custom of the country a
custom that was never by any means overlooked, because
it was such a great advantage to have the fairies as
guests.
When the twelve fairies were all assembled
in the great hall where the feast was to be held,
they took their seats at the table a very
big table laden with such good things to eat, and
so rich, that it was past all comprehension.
No sooner had all the guests seated themselves, than
who should enter but the wicked fairy Magotine!
Now the Queen, when she saw her, felt
that some disaster would follow because she had omitted
to send this fairy an invitation; but she hid the
thought deep in her mind, and off she went and found
a beautiful soft seat all embroidered in gold and
inlaid with sapphires; then all the other fairies
moved up and made room for Magotine to seat herself,
saying at the same time, ’Hurry up, sister, and
make your wish for the little Princesses, and then
come and sit down.’
But, before Magotine came to table,
she said rudely that she was quite big enough to eat
standing. There she made a great mistake, because
the table was very high and Magotine was very small,
and, in reaching up, she fell. This misfortune
only increased her bad temper.
‘Madam,’ said the Queen,
‘I beg you to be seated at table.’
‘If you had so much wished to
see me here,’ replied the fairy, ’you
would have sent me an invitation the same as the others.
You have only invited to your court the most beautiful,
well-dressed and good-tempered fairies, like my sisters
here. With them I have no fault to find; I, however,
have one advantage over them, as you will see!’
Then all the fairies begged her to
seat herself with them, and she did so. In front
of each fairy was placed a beautiful bouquet made of
all kinds of precious stones. Each took the bouquet
immediately in front of her, and there remained none
at all for Magotine; and she growled furiously between
her teeth.
The Queen, quickly noticing the awful
error, ran to her cabinet and came back with a large
cup all perfumed and studded outside with rubies, and
inside full of diamonds that gave forth a thousand
different colours. Going up to Magotine, she
begged her to receive the present. But Magotine
only shook her head and replied: ’Keep your
jewels, madam, I do not want them. I came simply
to see if you had thought of me, and I find that you
have forgotten me altogether.’ And with
this she gave a tap with her wand on the table and
at once all the good things were turned into serpents,
which wriggled about and hissed viciously. The
other fairies, seeing this, were filled with horror;
they threw down their serviettes and quitted the table.
While they were leaving the table
the wicked little fairy Magotine, who had come to
disturb the peace, made her way to the room where the
little Princesses were asleep in a golden cot covered
with a canopy studded with diamonds, the most beautiful
ever seen in the world. The other fairies followed
her to watch. Magotine stopped beside the cot,
and, taking out her wand quickly, she touched one
of the little Princesses, saying at the same time:
’I wish that you become the most ugly person
that it would be possible to find.’ Then
she turned to the other little Princess; but, before
she could do anything further, the other fairies interfered,
and taking a great pan full of vitriol, threw it over
the wicked Magotine. But not a drop touched her,
for, before it splashed upon the floor, she had disappeared
before their very eyes.
The Queen then made her way to the
cot and took out the little Princess that Magotine
had wished to be so ugly; and the Queen cried with
sorrow because, every minute as she looked at it,
the child was becoming uglier and uglier, until at
last any one could see she was the ugliest baby in
the world.
Now the other good fairies consulted
amongst themselves how they could lighten this great
sorrow, so they turned to the Queen and said:
’Madam, it is not possible to undo the evil
that the fairy Magotine has put upon your child, but
we will wish for her something that will help to balance
that evil.’ And then they told the Queen
that one day her daughter would be extremely happy.
With this the fairies took their departure, but not
before the Queen had given them all some beautiful
presents; for this custom goes on amongst all the
peoples of the earth, and will continue when other
customs are forgotten.
The Queen called her ugly daughter
Laideronnette, and the beautiful daughter Bellote;
and these names suited them perfectly, because Laideronnette
was frightfully ugly, and her sister was equally charming
and beautiful.
When Laideronnette was twelve years
old, she went and threw herself at the feet of the
King and Queen, and begged them to allow her to go
and shut herself up in a castle far away near the
Light of Dawn, and to let her take the necessary servants
and food to live there. She reminded them that
they still had Bellote, and that she was enough to
console them.
After a long while they agreed, and
Laideronnette went away to her castle near the Light
of Dawn. On one side of the castle the sea came
right up to the window, and on another there was a
great canal; from still another view was a vast forest
as far as the eye could see, and beyond again a great
desert.
The little Princess played musical
instruments beautifully, and also had a sweet voice
just like a bird, and sang divinely; and so, with these
delights, she lived for two whole years in perfect
solitude. Then, at the end of the two years,
she began to feel homesick and wished to see her father
and mother, the King and Queen; so she started on the
journey home at once, and arrived just as her sister
the Princess Bellote was going to be married.
Now as soon as they saw Laideronnette,
they did not offer to kiss her or say they were pleased
to see her; and they told her she was not to come
to the marriage feast, nor to the ball afterwards.
Poor little Laideronnette said she had not come to
dance and be merry; neither had she come to the marriage
feast; she had come because she felt homesick and
wanted to see her father and mother. However,
she would go away back to her castle near the Light
of Dawn, for there the desert, the trees, and the
fountains never reproached her with her ugliness when
she came near them.
The King and Queen were sorry that
they had been so unkind, and asked Laideronnette to
remain two or three days; but Laideronnette was so
upset that she refused. Then her sister Bellote
gave her some silk, and Bellote’s betrothed
gave her some ribbons. Now, if Laideronnette had
been like some people she would have thrown the silk
and the ribbons at the Princess and her future husband.
But Laideronnette was not like that, and she only
felt a great sorrow in her little heart, and turned
away and took her faithful nurse with her; and all
the way home towards the Light of Dawn, Laideronnette
never spoke a single word.
One day, when Laideronnette was walking
in a very shaded valley in the forest, she saw on
a tree a big green serpent, who lifted his head and
said to her, ’Laideronnette, you are not the
only unhappy person; look at my horrible form, and
I was born more beautiful than you.’ The
Princess was so terrified to hear a serpent talk that
she fled away and remained in her room for days, in
case she should see or meet the green serpent again.
Eventually Laideronnette got tired
of being shut up in her room all day alone, so one
evening she came down and went to the edge of the sea,
bewailing all the time her awful loneliness and her
sad destiny, when suddenly she saw coming towards
her over the waves a little barque of a thousand different
colours and designs on its sides. The sail was
beautifully embroidered in gold, and the Princess became
very curious to see all the beauties that the barque
must contain inside.
She made her way aboard. Inside
she found it lined with lovely velvet, the seats of
pure gold and the walls studded with diamonds; then,
all of a sudden, the barque turned and went out to
sea. The Princess ran up and caught hold of the
oars, thinking to get back to her castle; but it was
no use: she could do nothing at all. On and
on went the barque and the poor little Princess wept
bitterly at this new sorrow that had come to her.
‘Magotine is doing me a bad
turn again,’ she thought, so she abandoned herself
to her fate, hoping that she would die. ’Just
after I was looking forward to a little pleasure in
seeing my parents yesterday, comes one catastrophe
on another; and now my sister is going to be married
to a great Prince. What have I done that I should
have to live alone in a desert spot because of my
ugliness? Alas! for my company I have only a
serpent who speaks!’
These reflections brought tears from
the Princess, and she gazed on every side to see which
way death was coming for her. While looking and
gazing she saw, approaching on the waves, a serpent,
flashing green in the sunlight. He came up to
the side of the barque and said: ’If you
are good enough to receive help from a poor Green
Serpent, tell me, for I am in a position to save your
life.’
‘Death is nothing to me compared
to the sight of you,’ cried the Princess; ’and,
if you really want to do me a favour, never show yourself
before my eyes again.’
The Green Serpent gave a big sigh
(for that is the way of serpents in love), and, without
replying at all, he dived to the bottom of the sea.
‘What a horrible monster!’
said the Princess to herself. ’His body
is of a thousand green colours, and he has eyes like
fire. I would rather die than that he
should save my life. What love can he have for
me, and by what right does he speak like a human being?’
Suddenly a voice replied to her thoughts,
and it said, ’Listen, Laideronnette, it is not
my fault that I am a Green Serpent; and it will not
be for ever; but, I assure you, I am less ugly in my
special way than you are in yours. All the same,
it is not my wish to pain you; I would comfort you
if you would only let me!’
The voice surprised the Princess very
much, so sweet was it that she could not hold back
her tears. ’I am not crying because I am
afraid to die,’ she answered, ’but I am
hurt enough to weep over my ugliness. I have
nothing to live for, why should I cry for fear of dying?’
While she was thus moralising, the
little barque that floated with the wind ran into
a rock and broke up into pieces, and, when all else
had sunk, there remained of the wreck only two little
pieces of wood. The poor Princess caught hold
of these two little pieces and kept herself afloat;
then, happily, her feet touched a rock and she scrambled
up on to it.
Alas! what was that coming towards
her now but the Green Serpent! As if he knew
that she was afraid, he moved away a little, and said:
’You would be less afraid of me, Laideronnette,
if you knew what advantages can be had through me;
it is one of the punishments of my destiny, however,
that I should frighten every one in the world.’
And with this he threw himself back
into the sea, and Laideronnette remained alone on
the rock in the middle of the ocean. On whichever
side she looked she saw nothing but what would cause
her despair; and darkness began to fall, and she had
no food to eat, and Laideronnette did not know where
to sleep.
‘I thought,’ said she
sadly, ’that I should end my days at the bottom
of the sea; but without a doubt this is to be the
end; what sea-monster will come to eat me up?’
She crept higher and higher up the
rock, and looked out over the sea. Darkness was
falling fast, so she took off her dress and covered
her head and face in it, so that she could not see
the awful things that would pass in the night.
After a long time she fell asleep, and dreamt that she heard the most
melodious music, and she tried to persuade herself that she was awake, but in a
second she heard a voice singing, as if to her alone:
’Suffer the love that
wounds you:
It is a tender fire.
The love that follows and surrounds you
To your love would aspire.
Banish fear, forgo all grieving:
Love hath joys past all believing.
Suffer the love that wounds you:
It is a tender fire.’
At the end of this song she woke up
at once. ’What happiness or what misfortune
threatens me?’ said she. She opened her
eyes very carefully, for she was full of fear, expecting
to find herself surrounded by monsters from the sea;
but, imagine her surprise to find herself in a chamber
all glittering with gold! The bed on which she
lay was perfect, and the most beautiful to be seen
anywhere in the wide world. Laideronnette got
up and went out on to a wide balcony, where she saw
all the beauties of nature before her. The gardens
were full of flowers flowers that gave
out the rarest perfume; fountains splashed everywhere,
and were surmounted by lovely figures; and outside
the gardens was a wonderful forest green with verdure.
The palace and the walls were encrusted with precious
stones, the roofs and ceilings were made of pearls,
so beautifully done that it was a perfect work of art.
From the tower of the palace could be seen beyond the
forest a sea calm and placid, just like a sheet of
glass, and on the sea floated thousands of little
boats with all kinds of different sails, which, when
caught by the wind, had the most lovely effect imaginable.
‘Gods, sweet gods!’ cried
Laideronnette, ’what do I see? Where am
I? Is it possible that I am in heaven I
who yesterday was in peril in a barque?’ She
walked as she spoke, then she stopped; what noise was
that she heard in her apartment? She turned and
entered her room, and, coming towards her, she saw
a hundred little animated pagodas, all of different
designs. Some were very beautiful, while others
were extremely ugly. In fact there was hardly
any difference between the little pagodas and the
people who inhabit the world.
The pagoda which now presented itself
before Laideronnette was the deputy of the King.
It said that sometimes it went travelling all over
the world, but was allowed to do so only on one condition:
namely, that it did not talk to any one; otherwise
the King would not give the necessary permission.
On its return it entertained the King by recounting
all that it had heard and seen; moreover, it held the
most precious secrets of the court. ’It
will be a pleasure to serve you, madam,’ it
went on, ’and everything you want we shall be
delighted to get for you; in the meantime we will
play for you and dance so that you will have plenty
to make you happy.’ And they all began to
dance and sing, and play on castanets and tambourines.
When they had finished, the principal
pagoda said to the Princess: ’Listen, madam,
these hundred pagodas are here expressly to serve you,
and any mortal thing you want in the world you have
only to ask for it and it shall be yours at once.’
The little pagodas paused in their movements and came
near to Laideronnette, and she saw at a glance that
they were simply lovely. Looking inside, she saw
that they contained presents for her, some useful
and others so beautiful that she could only cry out
with joy.
The biggest pagoda, which was a little
figure of pure diamonds, then came up to Laideronnette
and asked her if she would now like her bath in the
little grotto. The Princess walked, between a
guard of honour, to the place it pointed to, and there
she saw two beautiful baths of crystal, and from them
came such a lovely fragrance that Laideronnette could
not help remarking about it. Then she asked why
there were two bathing places, and they told her that
one was for her and the other for the King of the
Pagodas.
‘But where is he, then?’
cried Laideronnette. ‘Madam,’ said
they, ’at present he is at the war; but you
shall see him on his return.’
The Princess asked them if he was
married, and they shook their little top turrets,
meaning that he was not. Then they told her that
he was so good and kind that he had never found any
one good enough to marry.
Laideronnette then undressed herself
and got into the bath, and at once the pagodas began
to sing and play. Then, when the Princess was
ready to come out of her bath, she was given a dress
of shining colours, and they all walked before her
to her room, where her toilet was made by maids, all
of them quaint little pagodas.
The Princess was astounded, and expressed
her delight at her great good fortune.
There was not a day that the pagodas
did not come and tell her all the news of the courts
where they had been in different parts of the world.
People plotting for war, others seeking for peace;
wives who were unfaithful, old widowers who married
wives a thousand times more unsuitable than those
they had lost; discovered treasures; favourites at
court, and out of it, who had fallen from the coveted
seat they occupied; jealous wives, to say nothing
at all about husbands; women who flirted, and naughty
children; in fact they told her everything
that was going on, to make her happy and to help to
pass the time away.
Now one night it happened that the
Princess could not sleep, and she lay awake, thinking.
At last she said: ’What is going to happen
to me? Shall I always be here? My life is
passed more happily than I ever could wish; but, all
the same, there is a feeling in my heart that there
is something missing.’
‘Ah! Princess,’ said
a voice, ’is it not your own fault? If you
would only love me, you would recognise at once that
it would be possible to remain in this palace for
ever, alone with the one you loved, without ever wishing
to leave it.’
‘Which little pagoda is speaking
to me now?’ she asked. ’What dreadful
counsel to give me, contrary to all I have been taught
in my life!’
’It is not a pagoda who is talking
to you; it is the unhappy King who loves you, madam.’
‘A King who loves me!’
replied the Princess. ’Has this King eyes,
or does he need glasses? Has he not seen that
I am the ugliest person in the world?’
’Yes, I have seen you, madam.
All that you are, and all that you may have been,
make not the least difference to me. I repeat,
I love you.’
The Princess did not speak again,
but she spent the rest of the night thinking over
this adventure.
Every day on getting up she found
new clothes and fresh jewels; it was too much homage,
considering she was so ugly.
One night it must have
been the darkest night of the whole year Laideronnette
was asleep, and, on awakening, she felt that some
one sat near her bed. The Princess put out her
hand to feel, but somebody took her hand and kissed
it, and in so doing let teardrops fall upon it.
She knew full well that it must be the invisible King.
‘What do you want with me?’
she said. ’Can I love somebody I have never
seen and do not know?’
‘Ah! madam,’ replied he,
’what pleasure it would give me to be able to
fulfil your wish! But the wicked Magotine, who
played you such a cruel trick, has done the same to
me, for I am condemned to remain thus for seven years;
five have already gone by and there remain another
two years. You could, if you would, lessen the
time and make it pass quickly for me if you would
marry me; you will think that what I ask is impossible;
but, madam, if you only knew how deep my love is for
you, you would never refuse me the favour I ask of
you.’
Laideronnette, as I have already said,
thought that this invisible King was very sweet, and
the love he offered was without a doubt genuine.
And, in a moment of pity, she replied that she would
like a few days to think over his proposal. So
the days passed, and all the time the music went on
and the pagodas danced and new presents arrived for
her, better than those she had received before.
And in the end the Princess made up her mind to marry
the invisible King, and she promised to wait to see
him until his time of punishment was over and he could
take visible shape again.
Then the voice said: ’The
consequences will be terrible for you and for me if
your curiosity should overcome you, and I shall have
to commence my punishment all over again; but, should
you, on the other hand, stay your desire to see me,
you will receive that beauty that the wicked Magotine
took away from you.’
The Princess, full of this new hope,
promised to keep her word to him. But after a
while she had a deep desire to see her father and mother
again; also her sister and her husband. The pagodas,
who knew the road well, conducted the royal family
to the castle of Laideronnette’s father and
mother; and when she saw them she nearly died of joy.
Her mother and her sister questioned
Laideronnette about her husband, and Laideronnette
remembered what her husband had told her; she did not
like to tell her people the truth, so she told them
that he was at the war fighting, and that he did not
like seeing people. But her mother and sister
chaffed her about him, and at last Laideronnette said
that the wicked Magotine had punished him for seven
years, that two remained to be finished, and that
she had married him without ever having seen him;
but that he was a charming person and his conversation
proved the fact, and that if she held her curiosity
until the two years were up, she would regain all
the beauty that the fairy Magotine had taken from her.
‘Ah!’ replied her mother,
’is it possible that you are such a simpleton
as to believe all those tales? Your husband is
a huge monster; he is the King of monkeys truly.’
‘I know full well,’ replied
Laideronnette, ’that he is the god of Love himself.’
‘What a terrible mistake!’ screamed the
Queen Bellote.
The poor Princess was so confused
and upset that, after giving them the presents, she
resolved to go and see her husband. Ah, fatal
curiosity! She took a little lamp with her that
she might be able to see him the better. What
was her surprise when, instead of Love, she saw the
Green Serpent! He drew himself up in rage and
sorrow:
‘O wicked one!’ cried
he; ‘is this the return for all my love for you?’
Now Magotine, knowing that Laideronnette
and the Green Serpent were in trouble, came to add
to their sorrow and taunt them. She took away,
with one wave of her wand, all the lovely castles
and fountains and gardens. And Laideronnette,
seeing all that she had done, was very troubled.
So, during the night, Laideronnette deplored her sad
fate. Then, high up near the stars, she saw coming
towards her the Green Serpent.
‘I always make you afraid,’
he cried; ’but you are infinitely dear to me.’
‘Is it you, Serpent, dear lover;
is it you?’ cried Laideronnette. ’Can
you forgive me for my fatal curiosity?’
‘Ah! how the sorrow of absence
troubles this loving heart!’ replied the Serpent,
with never a word of reproach to Laideronnette for
her broken promise.
Magotine, now, was one of those fairies
who never slept at all: the wish to do harm and
never to miss the chance kept her awake; and she did
not fail to hear the conversation between the King
Serpent and his spouse; and she came down upon them
in a fury.
‘Now then, Green Serpent,’
said she, ’I order you for your punishment to
go right to the good Proserpine, and give her my compliments.’
The poor Green Serpent went at once
with great sighs, leaving the Queen in sorrow.
And Laideronnette cried out:
’What crime have we committed
now, you wicked Magotine? I am certain that the
poor King, whom you have sent to the bottomless pit
of hell, was as innocent as I myself am; but let me
die: it is the least you can do.’
‘You would be too happy,’
said Magotine, ’were I to listen and grant you
your wish. I will send you to the bottom of the
sea.’ So saying, she took the poor Princess
to the top of the highest mountain and tied a mill-stone
about her neck, telling her that she was to go down
and bring enough Water of Discretion to fill up her
great big glass. The Princess said that it was
absolutely impossible to carry all that water.
‘If you do not,’ said
Magotine, ’you may rest assured that your Green
Serpent will suffer more.’
This threat caused the Queen to think
of her utter feebleness. She began to walk, but,
alas! it was useless. Oh! if the Fairy Protectress
would only help her! Loudly she called, and lo!
there stood the good fairy by her side.
‘See,’ said she, ‘to
what a pass your fatal curiosity has brought you!’
So saying, she took her to the top of the mountain;
she gave her a little carriage drawn by two white
mice and told them to descend the mountain. Then
she gave the little mice a vessel to fill up with the
Water of Discretion for Magotine, and produced a little
pair of iron shoes for Laideronnette to put on.
She counselled her not to remain on the mountain and
not to stay by the fountain, but to go into a little
wood and to remain there three years, for then Magotine
would think that she was getting the water or that
she had perished in the awful perils of the voyage.
Laideronnette kissed and embraced
the good Fairy Protectress, and thanked her a thousand
times for her great favours. ‘But, madam,’
said Laideronnette, ’all the joys that you have
given me will not lessen the sorrow of not having
my Green Serpent.’
’He will come to you after you
have been three years in the wood in the mountain,’
said the fairy; ’and on your return you can give
the water to Magotine.’
Laideronnette promised the fairy not
to forget anything she had told her. So, when
she got into her carriage, the mice took her to get
the water, and afterwards they went to the wood that
the fairy had told them about. There never was
a more lovely place. Fruit hung on all the branches;
and there were long avenues where the sun could not
pierce; thousands of little fountains splashed, but
the most wonderful thing of all was, that all the
animals could speak.
Three years passed, and the time had
now arrived for her departure with the water for Magotine.
So Laideronnette told all the animals that she was
sorry to leave them, and tears fell from her eyes,
because she was so touched with the kindness they
all had shown her.
She did not forget the vessel full
of the Water of Discretion, nor the little shoes of
iron that the good fairy had given her; and, just when
Magotine thought her dead, she presented herself all
of a sudden before her, the stones around her neck,
the shoes of iron on her feet, and the vessel full
of water in her hand.
Magotine on seeing her cried out in
surprise. Where had she come from?
‘Madam,’ said Laideronnette,
’I passed three years in trying to get this
water for you.’
Magotine roared with laughter when
she thought of the awful job this poor Queen must
have had to get it; but she regarded her attentively.
‘What is it that I see?’
she cried to Laideronnette, who had changed greatly.
‘How did you become so beautiful?’
Laideronnette told her that she had
washed in the Water of Discretion, and that was how
she had become beautiful.
Magotine, on hearing this, threw the
water on the ground. ’I will be avenged,’
said she. ’Go down to the bottomless pit
and ask Proserpine to give you the Essence of Long
Life for me; I am always afraid of falling ill and
dying. When you have done this you will be free.
But mind you do not upset any; neither may you drink
the tiniest drop.
The poor Queen, on hearing this new
order, was terribly cut up. She began to cry;
and Magotine, seeing this, was delighted. ’Go
on, get away!’ said she. ‘Do not
lose one moment.’
Laideronnette walked for a long time
without finding the right path, turning first one
way and then the other; then suddenly she saw the
Fairy Protectress, who said to her:
’Do you know, beautiful Queen,
that by the orders of Magotine your husband is to
remain as he is until you take the Essence of Life
to that wicked fairy?’
‘I am yet a long way away,’ said Laideronnette.
‘Here,’ said the Fairy
Protectress, ’see, here is a branch of a tree:
touch the earth and repeat this verse distinctly.’
The Queen once again kissed the knees
of this really good and generous fairy, and at the
same time repeated after her:
’Thou who all malice
canst disarm,
Protect me as
I rove!
Deliver me from all who harm,
But not from him
I love.
For, if devoured I am to be,
He is my monster none
but he!’
And immediately, in answer to her
prayer, a little boy more beautiful than any in heaven
or earth came up to her. On his head was a garland
of flowers, and in his hand a bow and arrow.
The Queen knew at once that it was Love. He said
to her:
‘You appeal to me so tenderly
that I deserted the heavens.’
Love, who sang beautifully in verse,
gave three knocks while singing this song:
’Earth, listen and
my voice obey.
It is Love who speaks:
reveal the way!’
The earth obeyed: a path opened
up, and Love took Laideronnette under his protection;
and so they arrived at the mouth of hell. She
expected to see her husband in the form of a serpent,
but he had just finished his terrible punishment.
The first thing that Laideronnette saw was indeed
her husband; but she had never seen such a charming
figure, nor any one so handsome; and neither had he
seen any one so beautiful as she had become.
Then the Queen said with extreme tenderness:
’Destiny! I
bend the knee
To thee and thy
decree:
If he must dwell in deepest
hell
He dwelleth there
with me,
For e’en in hell I’ll
love him well
For all eternity.’
The King was full of joy and love,
and showed it by the way he kissed her. Love,
however, never did believe in wasting time, so he took
the Queen to Proserpine. The Queen gave the compliments
of the fairy Magotine, and begged her to give her
the Essence of Long Life. Love took it and handed
it to her, telling her not to forget the penalty that
she had paid for her curiosity, and to take every
care this time. He would never leave them again.
He conducted them to the fairy Magotine, and then,
so that Magotine should not see him, he hid in their
hearts.
During this time the fairy Magotine
was so impressed with the beauty of human feelings,
that she received the poor unfortunate King and Queen
with some feeling of generosity. She gave them
back the lovely palace with all the good things that
they had before, and made the King head of the pagodas
again. So they went home, and all the great sorrows
that they had passed through they soon forgot in the
greater joy of each other.