The wise woman walked straight up
to the hearth, looked at the fire, looked at the bed,
glanced round the room, and went up to the table.
When she saw the one streak in the thick dust which
the princess had left there, a smile, half sad, half
pleased, like the sun peeping through a cloud on a
rainy day in spring, gleamed over her face. She
went at once to the door, and called in a loud voice,
“Rosamond, come to me.”
All the wolves and hyenas, fast asleep
in the wood, heard her voice, and shivered in their
dreams. No wonder then that the princess trembled,
and found herself compelled, she could not understand
how, to obey the summons. She rose, like the
guilty thing she felt, forsook of herself the hiding-place
she had chosen, and walked slowly back to the cottage
she had left full of the signs of her shame. When
she entered, she saw the wise woman on her knees,
building up the fire with fir-cones. Already
the flame was climbing through the heap in all directions,
crackling gently, and sending a sweet aromatic odor
through the dusty cottage.
“That is my part of the work,”
she said, rising. “Now you do yours.
But first let me remind you that if you had not put
it off, you would have found it not only far easier,
but by and by quite pleasant work, much more pleasant
than you can imagine now; nor would you have found
the time go wearily: you would neither have slept
in the day and let the fire out, nor waked at night
and heard the howling of the beast-birds. More
than all, you would have been glad to see me when I
came back; and would have leaped into my arms instead
of standing there, looking so ugly and foolish.”
As she spoke, suddenly she held up
before the princess a tiny mirror, so clear that nobody
looking into it could tell what it was made of, or
even see it at all only the thing reflected
in it. Rosamond saw a child with dirty fat cheeks,
greedy mouth, cowardly eyes which, not
daring to look forward, seemed trying to hide behind
an impertinent nose stooping shoulders,
tangled hair, tattered clothes, and smears and stains
everywhere. That was what she had made herself.
And to tell the truth, she was shocked at the sight,
and immediately began, in her dirty heart, to lay
the blame on the wise woman, because she had taken
her away from her nurses and her fine clothes; while
all the time she knew well enough that, close by the
heather-bed, was the loveliest little well, just big
enough to wash in, the water of which was always springing
fresh from the ground, and running away through the
wall. Beside it lay the whitest of linen towels,
with a comb made of mother-of-pearl, and a brush of
fir-needles, any one of which she had been far too
lazy to use. She dashed the glass out of the wise
woman’s hand, and there it lay, broken into
a thousand pieces!
Without a word, the wise woman stooped,
and gathered the fragments did not leave
searching until she had gathered the last atom, and
she laid them all carefully, one by one, in the fire,
now blazing high on the hearth. Then she stood
up and looked at the princess, who had been watching
her sulkily.
“Rosamond,” she said,
with a countenance awful in its sternness, “until
you have cleansed this room ”
“She calls it a room!” sneered the princess
to herself.
“You shall have no morsel to
eat. You may drink of the well, but nothing else
you shall have. When the work I set you is done,
you will find food in the same place as before.
I am going from home again; and again I warn you not
to leave the house.”
“She calls it a house! It’s
a good thing she’s going out of it anyhow!”
said the princess, turning her back for mere rudeness,
for she was one who, even if she liked a thing before,
would dislike it the moment any person in authority
over her desired her to do it.
When she looked again, the wise woman had vanished.
Thereupon the princess ran at once
to the door, and tried to open it; but open it would
not. She searched on all sides, but could discover
no way of getting out. The windows would not
open at least she could not open them;
and the only outlet seemed the chimney, which she was
afraid to try because of the fire, which looked angry,
she thought, and shot out green flames when she went
near it. So she sat down to consider. One
may well wonder what room for consideration there was with
all her work lying undone behind her. She sat
thus, however, considering, as she called it, until
hunger began to sting her, when she jumped up and
put her hand as usual in the hole of the wall:
there was nothing there. She fell straight into
one of her stupid rages; but neither her hunger nor
the hole in the wall heeded her rage. Then, in
a burst of self-pity, she fell a-weeping, but neither
the hunger nor the hole cared for her tears.
The darkness began to come on, and her hunger grew
and grew, and the terror of the wild noises of the
last night invaded her. Then she began to feel
cold, and saw that the fire was dying. She darted
to the heap of cones, and fed it. It blazed up
cheerily, and she was comforted a little. Then
she thought with herself it would surely be better
to give in so far, and do a little work, than die of
hunger. So catching up a duster, she began upon
the table. The dust flew about and nearly choked
her. She ran to the well to drink, and was refreshed
and encouraged. Perceiving now that it was a tedious
plan to wipe the dust from the table on to the floor,
whence it would have all to be swept up again, she
got a wooden platter, wiped the dust into that, carried
it to the fire, and threw it in. But all the time
she was getting more and more hungry and, although
she tried the hole again and again, it was only to
become more and more certain that work she must if
she would eat.
At length all the furniture was dusted,
and she began to sweep the floor, which happily, she
thought of sprinkling with water, as from the window
she had seen them do to the marble court of the palace.
That swept, she rushed again to the hole but
still no food! She was on the verge of another
rage, when the thought came that she might have forgotten
something. To her dismay she found that table
and chairs and every thing was again covered with
dust not so badly as before, however.
Again she set to work, driven by hunger, and drawn
by the hope of eating, and yet again, after a second
careful wiping, sought the hole. But no! nothing
was there for her! What could it mean?
Her asking this question was a sign
of progress: it showed that she expected the
wise woman to keep her word. Then she bethought
her that she had forgotten the household utensils,
and the dishes and plates, some of which wanted to
be washed as well as dusted.
Faint with hunger, she set to work
yet again. One thing made her think of another,
until at length she had cleaned every thing she could
think of. Now surely she must find some food
in the hole!
When this time also there was nothing,
she began once more to abuse the wise woman as false
and treacherous; but ah! there was the bed
unwatered! That was soon amended. Still
no supper! Ah! there was the hearth unswept,
and the fire wanted making up! Still no
supper! What else could there be? She was
at her wits’ end, and in very weariness, not
laziness this time, sat down and gazed into the fire.
There, as she gazed, she spied something brilliant, shining
even, in the midst of the fire: it was the little
mirror all whole again; but little she knew that the
dust which she had thrown into the fire had helped
to heal it. She drew it out carefully, and, looking
into it, saw, not indeed the ugly creature she had
seen there before, but still a very dirty little animal;
whereupon she hurried to the well, took off her clothes,
plunged into it, and washed herself clean. Then
she brushed and combed her hair, made her clothes
as tidy as might be, and ran to the hole in the wall:
there was a huge basin of bread and milk!
Never had she eaten any thing with
half the relish! Alas! however, when she had
finished, she did not wash the basin, but left it as
it was, revealing how entirely all the rest had been
done only from hunger. Then she threw herself
on the heather, and was fast asleep in a moment.
Never an evil bird came near her all that night, nor
had she so much as one troubled dream.
In the morning as she lay awake before
getting up, she spied what seemed a door behind the
tall eight-day clock that stood silent in the corner.
“Ah!” she thought, “that
must be the way out!” and got up instantly.
The first thing she did, however, was to go to the
hole in the wall. Nothing was there.
“Well, I am hardly used!”
she cried aloud. “All that cleaning for
the cross old woman yesterday, and this for my trouble, nothing
for breakfast! Not even a crust of bread!
Does Mistress Ogress fancy a princess will bear that?”
The poor foolish creature seemed to
think that the work of one day ought to serve for
the next day too! But that is nowhere the way
in the whole universe. How could there be a universe
in that case? And even she never dreamed of applying
the same rule to her breakfast.
“How good I was all yesterday!”
she said, “and how hungry and ill used I am
to-day!”
But she would not be a slave,
and do over again to-day what she had done only last
night! She didn’t care about her breakfast!
She might have it no doubt if she dusted all the wretched
place again, but she was not going to do that at
least, without seeing first what lay behind the clock!
Off she darted, and putting her hand
behind the clock found the latch of a door. It
lifted, and the door opened a little way. By squeezing
hard, she managed to get behind the clock, and so through
the door. But how she stared, when instead of
the open heath, she found herself on the marble floor
of a large and stately room, lighted only from above.
Its walls were strengthened by pilasters, and in every
space between was a large picture, from cornice to
floor. She did not know what to make of it.
Surely she had run all round the cottage, and certainly
had seen nothing of this size near it! She forgot
that she had also run round what she took for a hay-mow,
a peat-stack, and several other things which looked
of no consequence in the moonlight.
“So, then,” she cried,
“the old woman is a cheat! I believe
she’s an ogress, after all, and lives in a palace though
she pretends it’s only a cottage, to keep people
from suspecting that she eats good little children
like me!”
Had the princess been tolerably tractable,
she would, by this time, have known a good deal about
the wise woman’s beautiful house, whereas she
had never till now got farther than the porch.
Neither was she at all in its innermost places now.
But, king’s daughter as she
was, she was not a little daunted when, stepping forward
from the recess of the door, she saw what a great
lordly hall it was. She dared hardly look to the
other end, it seemed so far off: so she began
to gaze at the things near her, and the pictures first
of all, for she had a great liking for pictures.
One in particular attracted her attention. She
came back to it several times, and at length stood
absorbed in it.
A blue summer sky, with white fleecy
clouds floating beneath it, hung over a hill green
to the very top, and alive with streams darting down
its sides toward the valley below. On the face
of the hill strayed a flock of sheep feeding, attended
by a shepherd and two dogs. A little way apart,
a girl stood with bare feet in a brook, building across
it a bridge of rough stones. The wind was blowing
her hair back from her rosy face. A lamb was
feeding close beside her; and a sheepdog was trying
to reach her hand to lick it.
“Oh, how I wish I were that
little girl!” said the princess aloud. “I
wonder how it is that some people are made to be so
much happier than others! If I were that little
girl, no one would ever call me naughty.”
She gazed and gazed at the picture.
At length she said to herself,
“I do not believe it is a picture.
It is the real country, with a real hill, and a real
little girl upon it. I shall soon see whether
this isn’t another of the old witch’s
cheats!”
She went close up to the picture,
lifted her foot, and stepped over the frame.
“I am free, I am free!”
she exclaimed; and she felt the wind upon her cheek.
The sound of a closing door struck
on her ear. She turned and there was
a blank wall, without door or window, behind her.
The hill with the sheep was before her, and she set
out at once to reach it.
Now, if I am asked how this could
be, I can only answer, that it was a result of the
interaction of things outside and things inside, of
the wise woman’s skill, and the silly child’s
folly. If this does not satisfy my questioner,
I can only add, that the wise woman was able to do
far more wonderful things than this.