One morning when the papa was on a
visit to the grandfather, the nephew and the niece
came rushing into his room and got into bed with him.
He pretended to be asleep, and even when they grabbed
hold of him and shook him, he just let his teeth clatter,
and made no sign of waking up. But they knew
he was fooling, and they kept shaking him till he opened
his eyes and looked round, and said, “Oh, oh!
where am I?” as if he were all bewildered.
“You’re in bed with us!”
they shouted; and they acted as if they were afraid
he would try to get away from them by the way they
held on to his arms.
But he lay quite still, and he only
said, “I should say you were in bed with
me. It seems to be my bed.”
“It’s the same thing!” said the
nephew.
“How do you make that out?”
asked the papa. “It’s the same thing
if it’s enchantment. But if it isn’t,
it isn’t.”
The niece said, “What enchantment?”
for she thought that would be a pretty good chance
to get what they had come for.
She was perfectly delighted, and gave
a joyful thrill all over when the papa said, “Oh,
that’s a long story.”
“Well, the longer the better,
I should say; shouldn’t you, brother?”
she returned.
The nephew hemmed twice in his throat,
and asked, drowsily, “Is it a little-pig story,
or a fairy-prince story?” for he had heard from
his cousins that their papa would tell you a little-pig
story if he got the chance; and you had to look out
and ask him which it was going to be beforehand.
“Well, I can’t tell,”
said the papa. “It’s a fairy-prince
story to begin with, but it may turn out a little-pig
story before it gets to the end. It depends upon
how the Prince behaves. But I’m not
anxious to tell it,” and the papa put his face
into the pillow and pretended to fall instantly asleep
again.
“Now, brother, you see!”
said the niece. “Being so particular!”
“Well, sister,” said the
nephew, “it wasn’t my fault. I had
to ask him. You know what they said.”
“Well, I suppose we’ve
got to wake him up all over again,” said the
niece, with a little sigh; and they began to pull at
the papa this way and that, but they could not budge
him. As soon as they stopped, he opened his eyes.
“Now don’t say, ‘Where am I?’”
said the niece.
The papa could not help laughing,
because that was just the very thing he was going
to say. “Well, all right! What about
that story? Do you want to hear it, and take
your chances of its being a Prince to the end?”
“I suppose we’ll have to; won’t
we, sister?”
“Yes, we’ll leave it all
to you, uncle,” said the niece; and she thought
she would coax him up a little, and so she went on:
“I know you won’t be mean about it.
Will he, brother?”
“No,” said the nephew.
“I’ll bet the Prince will keep a Prince
all the way through. What’ll you
bet, sister?”
“I won’t bet anything,”
said the niece, and she put her arm round the papa’s
neck, and pressed her cheek up against his. “I’ll
just leave it to uncle, and if it does turn
into a little-pig story, it’ll be for the moral.”
The nephew was not quite sure what
a moral was; but at the bottom of his heart he would
just as soon have it a little-pig story as not.
He had got to thinking how funny a little pig would
look in a Prince’s clothes, and he said, “Yes,
it’ll be for the moral.”
The papa was very contrary that morning.
“Well,” said he, “I don’t know
about that. I’m not sure there’s going
to be any moral.”
“Oh, goody!” said the
niece, and she clapped her hands in great delight.
“Then it’s going to be a Prince story all
through!”
“If you interrupt me in that
way, it’s not going to be any story at all.”
“I didn’t know you had
begun it, uncle,” pleaded the niece.
“Well, I hadn’t.
But I was just going to.” The papa lay quiet
a while. The fact is, he had not thought up any
story at all; and he was so tired of all the stories
he used to tell his own children that he could not
bear to tell one of them, though he knew very well
that the niece and nephew would be just as glad of
it as if it were new, and maybe gladder; for they
had heard a great deal about these stories, how perfectly
splendid they were — like the Pumpkin-Glory,
and the Little Pig that took the Poison Pills, and
the Proud Little Horse-car that fell in Love with
the Pullman Sleeper, and Jap Doll Hopsing’s Adventures
in Crossing the Continent, and the Enchantment of
the Greedy Travellers, and the Little Boy whose Legs
turned into Bicycle Wheels. At last the papa said,
“This is a very peculiar kind of a story.
It’s about a Prince and a Princess.”
“Oh!” went both of the
children; and then they stopped themselves, and stuffed
the covering into their mouths.
The papa lifted himself on his elbow
and stared severely at them, first at one, and then
at the other. “Have you finished?”
he asked, as if they had interrupted him; but he really
wanted to gain time, so as to think up a story of
some kind. The children were afraid to say anything,
and the papa went on with freezing politeness:
“Because if you have, I might like to say something
myself. This story is about a Prince and a Princess,
but the thing of it is that they had names almost exactly
alike. They were twins; the Prince was a boy and
the Princess was a girl; that was a point that their
fairy godmother carried against the wicked enchantress
who tried to have it just the other way; but it made
the wicked enchantress so mad that the fairy godmother
had to give in to her a little, and let them be named
almost exactly alike.”
Here the papa stopped, and after waiting
for him to go on, the nephew ventured to ask, very
respectfully indeed, “Would you mind telling
us what their names were, uncle?”
The papa rubbed his forehead.
“I have such a bad memory for names. Hold
on! Wait a minute! I remember now! Their
names were Butterflyflutterby and Flutterbybutterfly.”
Of course he had just thought up the names.
“And which was which, uncle
dear?” asked the niece, not only very respectfully,
but very affectionately, too; she was so afraid he
would get mad again, and stop altogether.
“Why, I should think you would
know a girl’s name when you heard it. Butterflyflutterby
was the Prince and Flutterbybutterfly was the Princess.”
“I don’t see how we’re
ever going to keep them apart,” sighed the niece.
“You’ve got to
keep them apart,” said the papa. “Because
it’s the great thing about the story that if
you can’t remember which is the Prince and which
is the Princess whenever I ask you, the story has to
stop. It can’t help it, and I can’t
help it.”
They knew he was just setting a trap
for them, and the same thought struck them both at
once. They rose up and leaned over the papa, with
their arms across and their fluffy heads together in
the form of a capital letter A, and whispered in each
other’s ears, “You say it’s one,
and I’ll say it’s the other, and then we’ll
have it right between us.”
They dropped back and pulled the covering
up to their chins, and shouted, “Don’t
you tell! don’t you tell!” and just perfectly
wriggled with triumph.
The papa had heard every word; they
were laughing so that they whispered almost as loud
as talking; but he pretended that he had not understood,
and he made up his mind that he would have them yet.
“A little and a more,” he said, “and
I should never have gone on again.”
“Go on! Go on!” they
called out, and then they wriggled and giggled till
anybody would have thought they were both crazy.
“Well, where was I?” This
was another of the papa’s tricks to gain time.
Whenever he could not think of anything more, he always
asked, “Well, where was I?” He now added:
“Oh yes! I remember! Well, once there
were a Prince and a Princess, and their names were
Butterflyflutterby and Flutterbybutterfly; and they
were both twins, and both orphans; but they made their
home with their fairy godmother as long as they were
little, and they used to help her about the house
for part board, and she helped them about their kingdom,
and kept it in good order for them, and left them
plenty of time to play and enjoy themselves. She
was the greatest person for order there ever was;
and if she found a speck of dust or dirt on the kingdom
anywhere, she would have out the whole army and make
them wash it up, and then sand-paper the place, and
polish it with a coarse towel till it perfectly glistened.
The father of the Prince and Princess had taken the
precaution, before he died, to subdue all his enemies;
and the consequence was that the longest kind of peace
had set in, and the army had nothing to do but keep
the kingdom clean. That was the reason why the
fairy godmother had made the General-in-Chief take
their guns away, and arm them with long feather-dusters.
They marched with the poles on their shoulders, and
carried the dusters in their belts, like bayonets;
and whenever they came to a place that the fairy godmother
said needed dusting — she always went along
with them in a diamond chariot — she made
the General halloo out: ’Fix dusters!
Make ready! Aim! Dust!’ And then the
place would be cleaned up. But the General-in-Chief
used to go out behind the church and cry, it mortified
him so to have to give such orders, and it reminded
him so painfully of the good old times when he would
order his men to charge the enemy, and cover the field
with gore and blood, instead of having it so awfully
spick-and-span as it was now. Still he did what
the fairy godmother told him, because he said it was
his duty; and he kept his troops supplied with sudsine
and dustene, to clean up with, and brushes and towels.
The fairy godmother — ”
“Excuse me, uncle,” said
the nephew, with extreme deference, “but I should
just like to ask you one question. Will you let
me?”
“What is it?” said the
papa, in the grimmest kind of manner he could put
on.
“Ah, brother!” murmured
the niece; for she knew that he was rather sarcastic,
and she was afraid that something ironical was coming.
“Well, I just wanted to ask
whether this story was about the fairy godmother,
or about the Prince and Princess.”
“Very well, now,” said
the papa. “You’ve asked your question.
I didn’t promise to answer it, and I’m
happy to say it stops the story. I’ll guess
I’ll go to sleep again. I don’t
like being waked up this way in the middle of the
night, anyhow.”
“Now, brother, I hope you’re satisfied!”
said the niece.
The nephew evaded the point.
He said: “Well, sister, if the story really
isn’t going on, I should like to ask uncle another
question. How big was the fairy godmother’s
diamond chariot?”
“It was the usual sized chariot,” answered
the papa.
“Whew! It must have been a pretty big diamond,
then!”
“It was a very big diamond,”
said the papa; and he seemed to forget all about being
mad, or else he had thought up some more of the story
to tell, for he went on just as if nothing had happened.
“The fairy godmother was so severe with the
dirt she found because it was a royal prerogative — that
is, nobody but the King, or the King’s family,
had a right to make a mess, and if other people did
it, they were infringing on the royal prerogative.
“You know,” the papa explained,
“that in old times and countries the royal family
have been allowed to do things that no other family
would have been associated with if they had done them.
That is about the only use there is in having a royal
family. But the fairy godmother of Prince — ”
“Butterflyflutterby,” said the niece.
“And Princess — ”
“Flutterbybutterfly,” said the nephew.
“Correct,” said the papa.
The children rose up into a capital
A again, and whispered, “He didn’t catch
us that time,” and fell back, laughing,
and the papa had to go on.
“The fairy godmother thought
she would try to bring up the Prince and Princess
rather better than most Princes and Princesses were
brought up, and so she said that the only thing they
should be allowed to do different from other people
was to make a mess. If any other persons were
caught making a mess they were banished; and there
was another law that was perfectly awful.”
“What-was-it-go-ahead?”
said the nephew, running all his words together, he
was so anxious to know.
“Why, if any person was found
clearing up anywhere, and it turned out to be a mess
that the royal twins had made, the person was thrown
from a tower.”
“Did it kill them?” the niece inquired,
rather faintly.
“Well, no, it didn’t kill
them exactly, but it bounced them up pretty high.
You see, they fell on a bed of India-rubber about twenty
feet deep. It gave them a good scare; and that’s
the great thing in throwing persons from a high tower.”
The nephew hastened to improve the
opportunity which seemed to be given for asking questions.
“What do you mean exactly by making a mess,
uncle?”
“Oh, scattering scraps of paper
about, or scuffing the landscape, or getting jam or
molasses on the face of nature, or having bonfires
in the back yard of the palace, or leaving dolls around
on the throne. But what did I say about asking
questions? Now there’s another thing about
this story: when it comes to the exciting part,
if you move the least bit, or even breathe loud, the
story stops, just as if you didn’t know which
was the Prince and which was the Princess. Now
do you understand?”
The children both said “Yes”
in a very small whisper, and cowered down almost under
the clothing, and held on tight, so as to keep from
stirring.
The papa went on: “Well,
about the time they had got these two laws in full
force, and forty or fifty thousand boys and girls had
been banished for making a mess, and pretty nearly
all the neat old ladies in the kingdom had been thrown
from a high tower for cleaning up after the Prince
and Princess Butterflyflutterby and Flutterbybutterfly,
the young Khan and Khant of Tartary entered the kingdom
with a magnificent retinue of followers, to select
a bride and groom from the children of the royal family.
As there were no children in the royal family except
the twins, the choice of the Khan and Khant naturally
fell upon the Prince — ”
“Butterflyflutterby!”
“And the Princess — ”
“Flutterbybutterfly!”
“Correct. It also happened
that the Khan and the Khant were brother and sister;
but if you can’t tell which was the brother and
which was the sister, the story stops at this point.”
“Why, but, uncle,” said
the little girl, reproachfully, “you haven’t
ever told us which is which yourself yet!”
“I know it. Because I’m
waiting to find out. You see, with these Asiatic
names it’s impossible sometimes to tell which
is which. You have to wait and see how they will
act. If there had been a battle anywhere, and
one of them had screamed, and run away, then I suppose
I should have been pretty sure it was the sister;
but even then I shouldn’t know which was the
Khan and which was the Khant.”
“Well, what are we going to
do about it, then?” asked the nephew.
“I don’t know,”
said the papa. “We shall just have to keep
on and see. Perhaps when they meet the Prince
and Princess we shall find out. I don’t
suppose a boy would fall in love with a boy.”
“No,” said the niece;
“but he might want to go off with him and have
fun, or something.”
“That’s true,” said
the papa. “We’ve got to all watch
out. Of course the Khan and the Khant scuffed
the landscape awfully, as they came along through
the kingdom, and got the face of nature all daubed
up with marmalade — they were the greatest
persons for marmalade — and when they reached
the palace of the Prince and Princess they had to camp
out in the back yard, and they had to have bonfires
to cook by, and they made a frightful mess.
“Well, there was the greatest
excitement about it that there ever was. The
General-in-Chief kept his men under arms night and
day, and the fairy godmother was so worked up she
almost had a brain-fever; and if she had not taken
six of aconite every night when she went to bed she
would have had. You see, the question was
what to do about the mess that the Khan and Khant
made. They were visitors, and it wouldn’t
have been polite to banish them; and they belonged
to a royal family, and so nobody dared to clean up
after them. The whole kingdom was in the most
disgusting state, and whenever the fairy godmother
looked into the back yard of the palace she felt as
if she would go through the floor.
“Well, it kept on going from
bad to worse. The only person that enjoyed herself
was the wicked enchantress; she never had such
a good time in her life; and when the fairy godmother
got hold of the Grand Vizier and the Cadi, and told
them to make a new law so as to allow the army to
clean up after royal visitors, without being thrown
from a high tower, the wicked enchantress enchanted
the whole mess, so that the army could not tell which
the Prince and Princess had made, and which the Khan
and Khant had made; they were all four always playing
together, anyway.
“It seemed as if the poor old
fairy godmother would go perfectly wild, and she almost
made the General crazy giving orders in one breath,
and taking them back in the next. She said that
now something had got to be done; she had stood it
long enough; and she was going to take the case into
her own hands. She saw that she should have no
peace of her life till the Prince and Princess and
the Khan and Khant were married. She sent for
the head Imam, and told him to bring those children
right in and marry them, and she would be responsible.
“The Imam put his head to the
floor — and it was pretty hard on him, for
he was short and stout, and he had to do it kind of
sideways — and said to hear was to obey;
but he could not marry them unless he knew which was
which.
“The fairy godmother screamed
out: ’I don’t care which is
which! Marry them all, just as they are!’
“But when she came to think
it over, she saw that this would not do, and so she
tried to invent some way out of the trouble. One
morning she woke up with a splendid idea, and she
could hardly wait to have breakfast before she sent
for the General-in-Chief. Her nerves were all
gone, and as soon as she saw him, she yelled at him:
’A sham battle — to-day — now — this
very instant! Right away, right away, right away!’
“The General got her to explain
herself, and then he understood that she wanted him
to have a grand review and sham battle of all the troops,
in honor of the Khan and Khant; and the whole court
had to be present, and especially the timidest of
the ladies, that would almost scare a person to death
by the way they screamed when they were frightened.
The General was just going to say that the guns and
cannon had all got rusty, and the powder was spoiled
from not having been used for so long, with the everlasting
cleaning up that had been going on; but the fairy godmother
stamped her foot and sent him flying. So the only
thing he could do was to set all the gnomes at work
making guns and cannon and powder, and about twelve
o’clock they had them ready, and just after lunch
the sham battle began.
“The troops marched and counter-marched,
and fired away the whole afternoon, and sprang mines
and blew up magazines, and threw cannon crackers and
cannon torpedoes. There was such an awful din
and racket that you couldn’t hear yourself think,
and some of the court ladies were made perfectly sick
by it. They all asked to be excused, but the fairy
godmother wouldn’t excuse one of them. She
just kept them there on the seats round the battle-field,
and let them shriek themselves hoarse. So many
of them fainted that they had to have the garden hose
brought, and they kept it sprinkling away on their
faces all the afternoon.
“But it was a failure as far
as the Khan and the Khant were concerned. The
fairy godmother expected that as soon as the loudest
firing began, the girl, whichever it was, would scream,
and so they would know which was which. But the
Khan and Khant’s father had been a famous warrior,
and he had been in the habit of taking his children
to battle with him from their earliest years, partly
because his wife was dead and he didn’t dare
trust them with the careless nurse at home, and partly
because he wanted to harden their nerves. So now
they just clapped their hands, and enjoyed the sham
battle down to the ground.
“About sunset the fairy godmother
gave it up. She had to, anyway. The troops
had shot away all their powder, and the gnomes couldn’t
make any more till the next day. So she set out
to return to the city, with all the court following
her diamond chariot, and I can tell you she felt pretty
gloomy. She told the Grand Vizier that now she
didn’t see any end to the trouble, and she was
just going into hysterics when a barefooted boy came
along driving his cow home from the pasture. The
fairy godmother didn’t mind it much, for she
was in her chariot; but the court ladies were on foot,
and they began to scream, ‘Oh, the cow! the cow!’
and to take hold of the knights, and to get on to the
fence, till it was perfectly packed with them; and
who do you think the fairy godmother found had scrambled
up on top of her chariot?”
The nephew and niece were afraid to
risk a guess, and the papa had to say:
“The Khant! The fairy godmother
pulled her inside and hugged her and kissed her, she
was so glad to find out that she was the one; and she
stopped the procession on the spot, and she called
up the Imam, and he married the Khant to Prince — ”
The papa stopped, and as the niece
and nephew hesitated, he said, very sternly, “Well?”
The fact is, they had got so mixed
up about the Khan and the Khant of Tartary that they
had forgotten which was Butterflyflutterby and which
was Flutterbybutterfly. They tried, shouting out
one the one and the other the other, but the papa
said:
“Oh no! That won’t
work. I’ve had that sort of thing tried
on me before, and it never works. I
heard you whispering what you would do, and you have
simply added the crime of double-dealing to the crime
of inattention. The story has stopped, and stopped
forever.”
The nephew stretched himself and then
sat up in bed. “Well, it had got to the
end, anyway.”
“Oh, had it? What
became of the wicked enchantress?” The nephew
lay down again, in considerable dismay.
“Uncle,” said the niece,
very coaxingly, “I didn’t say it
had come to the end.”
“But it has,” said the
papa. “And I’m mighty glad you forgot
the Prince’s name, for the rule of this story
is that it has to go on as long as any one listening
remembers, and it might have gone on forever.”
“I suppose,” the nephew said, “a
person may guess?”
“He may, if he guesses right.
If he guesses wrong, he has to be thrown from a high
tower — the same one the wicked enchantress
was thrown from.”
“There!” shouted the nephew;
“you said you wouldn’t tell. How high
was the tower, anyway, uncle? As high as the
Eiffel Tower in Paris?”
“Not quite. It was three feet and five
inches high.”
“Ho! Then the enchantress was a dwarf!”
“Who said she was a dwarf?”
“There wouldn’t be any use throwing her
from the tower if she wasn’t.”
“I didn’t say it was any use. They
just did it for ornament.”
This made the nephew so mad that he
began to dig the papa with his fist, and the papa
began to laugh. He said, as well as he could for
laughing: “You see, the trouble was to
keep her from bouncing up higher than the top of the
tower. She was light weight, anyway, because she
was a witch; and after the first bounce they had to
have two executioners to keep throwing her down — a
day executioner and a night executioner; and she went
so fast up and down that she was just like a solid
column of enchantress. She enjoyed it first-rate,
but it kept her out of mischief.”
“Now, uncle,” said the
niece, “you’re just letting yourself go.
What did the fairy godmother do after they all got
married?”
“Well, the story don’t
say exactly. But there’s a report that when
she became a fairy grandgodmother, she was not half
so severe about cleaning up, and let the poor old
General-in-Chief have some peace of his life — or
some war. There was a rebellion among the genii
not long afterwards, and the General was about ten
or fifteen years putting them down.”
The nephew had been lying quiet a
moment. Now he began to laugh.
“What are you laughing at?” demanded his
uncle.
“The way that Khant scrambled
up on top of the chariot when the cow came along.
Just like a girl. They’re all afraid of
cows.”
The tears came into the niece’s
eyes; she had a great many feelings, and they were
easily hurt, especially her feelings about girls.
“Well, she wasn’t afraid of the cannon,
anyway.”
“That is a very just remark,”
said the uncle. “And now what do you say
to breakfast?”
The children sprang out of bed, and
tried which could beat to the door. They forgot
to thank the uncle, but he did not seem to have expected
any thanks.