In went the shepherd’s wife,
and she prepared quite a good supper for Fairyfoot
and gave it to him. But Fairyfoot was scarcely
hungry at all; he was so eager for the night to come,
so that he might see the fairies. When he went
to his loft under the roof, he thought at first that
he could not sleep; but suddenly his hand touched the
fairy whistle and he fell asleep at once, and did
not waken again until a moonbeam fell brightly upon
his face and aroused him. Then he jumped up and
ran to the hole in the wall to look out, and he saw
that the hour had come, and the moon was so low in
the sky that its slanting light had crept under the
oak-tree.
He slipped downstairs so lightly that
his master heard nothing, and then he found himself
out in the beautiful night with the moonlight so bright
that it was lighter than daytime. And there was
Robin Goodfellow waiting for him under the tree!
He was so finely dressed that, for a moment, Fairyfoot
scarcely knew him. His suit was made out of the
purple velvet petals of a pansy, which was far finer
than any ordinary velvet, and he wore plumes and tassels,
and a ruffle around his neck, and in his belt was
thrust a tiny sword, not half as big as the finest
needle.
“Take me on your shoulder,”
he said to Fairyfoot, “and I will show you the
way.”
Fairyfoot took him up, and they went
their way through the forest. And the strange
part of it was that though Fairyfoot thought he knew
ill the forest by heart, every path they took was
new to him, and more beautiful than anything he had
ever seen before. The moonlight seemed to grow
brighter and purer at every step, and the sleeping
flowers sweeter and lovelier, and the moss greener
and thicken Fairyfoot felt so happy and gay that he
forgot he had ever been sad and lonely in his life.
Robin Goodfellow, too, seemed to be
in very good spirits. He related a great many
stories to Fairyfoot, and, singularly enough, they
were all about himself and divers and sundry fairy
ladies who had been so very much attached to him that
he scarcely expected to find them alive at the present
moment. He felt quite sure they must have died
of grief in his absence.
“I have caused a great deal
of trouble in the course of my life,” he said,
regretfully, shaking his head. “I have sometimes
wished I could avoid it, but that is impossible.
Ahem! When my great-aunt’s grandmother
rashly and inopportunely changed me into a robin, I
was having a little flirtation with a little creature
who was really quite attractive. I might have
decided to engage myself to her. She was very
charming. Her name was Gauzita. To-morrow
I shall go and place flowers on her tomb.”
“I thought fairies never died,” said Fairyfoot.
“Only on rare occasions, and
only from love,” answered Robin. “They
needn’t die unless they wish to. They have
been known to do it through love. They frequently
wish they hadn’t afterward—in fact,
invariably—and then they can come to life
again. But Gauzita—”
“Are you quite sure she is dead?” asked
Fairyfoot.
“Sure!” cried Mr. Goodfellow,
in wild indignation, “why, she hasn’t seen
me for a couple of years. I’ve moulted twice
since last we met. I congratulate myself that
she didn’t see me then,” he added, in a
lower voice. “Of course she’s dead,”
he added, with solemn emphasis; “as dead as
a door nail.”
Just then Fairyfoot heard some enchanting
sounds, faint, but clear. They were sounds of
delicate music and of tiny laughter, like the ringing
of fairy bells.
“Ah!” said Robin Goodfellow,
“there they are! But it seems to me they
are rather gay, considering they have not seen me for
so long. Turn into the path.”
Almost immediately they found themselves
in a beautiful little dell, filled with moonlight,
and with glittering stars in the cup of every flower;
for there were thousands of dewdrops, and every dewdrop
shone like a star. There were also crowds and
crowds of tiny men and women, all beautiful, all dressed
in brilliant, delicate dresses, all laughing or dancing
or feasting at the little tables, which were loaded
with every dainty the most fastidious fairy could
wish for.
“Now,” said Robin Goodfellow,
“you shall see me sweep all before me.
Put me down.”
Fairyfoot put him down, and stood
and watched him while he walked forward with a very
grand manner. He went straight to the gayest and
largest group he could see. It was a group of
gentlemen fairies, who were crowding around a lily
of the valley, on the bent stem of which a tiny lady
fairy was sitting, airily swaying herself to and fro,
and laughing and chatting with all her admirers at
once.
She seemed to be enjoying herself
immensely; indeed, it was disgracefully plain that
she was having a great deal of fun. One gentleman
fairy was fanning her, one was holding her programme,
one had her bouquet, another her little scent bottle,
and those who had nothing to hold for her were scowling
furiously at the rest. It was evident that she
was very popular, and that she did not object to it
at all; in fact, the way her eyes sparkled and danced
was distinctly reprehensible.
[Illustration: ALMOST IMMEDIATELY
THEY FOUND THEMSELVES IN A BEAUTIFUL LITTLE DELL.]
“You have engaged to dance the
next waltz with every one of us!” said one of
her adorers. “How are you going to do it?”
“Did I engage to dance with
all of you?” she said, giving her lily stem
the sauciest little swing, which set all the bells
ringing. “Well, I am not going to dance
it with all.”
“Not with me?”
the admirer with the fan whispered in her ear.
She gave him the most delightful little
look, just to make him believe she wanted to dance
with him but really couldn’t. Robin Goodfelllow
saw her. And then she smiled sweetly upon all
the rest, every one of them. Robin Goodfellow
saw that, too.
“I am going to sit here and
look at you, and let you talk to me,” she said.
“I do so enjoy brilliant conversation.”
All the gentlemen fairies were so
much elated by this that they began to brighten up,
and settle their ruffs, and fall into graceful attitudes,
and think of sparkling things to say; because every
one of them knew, from the glance of her eyes in his
direction, that he was one whose conversation was
brilliant; every one knew there could be no mistake
about its being himself that she meant. The way
she looked just proved it. Altogether it was
more than Robin Goodfellow could stand, for it was
Gauzita who was deporting herself in this unaccountable
manner, swinging on lily stems, and “going on,”
so to speak, with several parties at once, in a way
to chill the blood of any proper young lady fairy—who
hadn’t any partner at all. It was Gauzita
herself.
He made his way into the very centre of the group.
“Gauzita!” he said.
He thought, of course, she would drop right off her
lily stem; but she didn’t. She simply stopped
swinging a moment, and stared at him.
“Gracious!” she exclaimed. “And
who are you?”
“Who am I?” cried Mr. Goodfellow, severely.
“Don’t you remember me?”
“No,” she said, coolly; “I don’t,
not in the least.”
Robin Goodfellow almost gasped for
breath. He had never met with anything so outrageous
in his life.
“You don’t remember me?”
he cried. “Me! Why, it’s impossible!”
“Is it?” said Gauzita,
with a touch of dainty impudence. “What’s
your name?”
Robin Goodfellow was almost paralyzed.
Gauzita took up a midget of an eyeglass which she
had dangling from a thread of a gold chain, and she
stuck it in her eye and tilted her impertinent little
chin and looked him over. Not that she was near-sighted—not
a bit of it; it was just one of her tricks and manners.
“Dear me!” she said, “you
do look a trifle familiar. It isn’t, it
can’t be, Mr. ——, Mr. ——,”
then she turned to the adorer, who held her fan, “it
can’t be Mr. ——, the one who
was changed into a robin, you know,” she said.
“Such a ridiculous thing to be changed into!
What was his name?”
“Oh, yes! I know whom you
mean. Mr. ——, ah—Goodfellow!”
said the fairy with the fan.
“So it was,” she said,
looking Robin over again. “And he has been
pecking at trees and things, and hopping in and out
of nests ever since, I suppose. How absurd!
And we have been enjoying ourselves so much since he
went away! I think I never did have so
lovely a time as I have had during these last two
years. I began to know you,” she added,
in a kindly tone, “just about the time he went
away.”
“You have been enjoying yourself?”
almost shrieked Robin Goodfellow.
“Well,” said Gauzita,
in unexcusable slang, “I must smile.”
And she did smile.
“And nobody has pined away and died?”
cried Robin.
“I haven’t,” said
Gauzita, swinging herself and ringing her bells again.
“I really haven’t had time.”
Robin Goodfellow turned around and
rushed out of the group. He regarded this as
insulting. He went back to Fairyfoot in such a
hurry that he tripped on his sword and fell, and rolled
over so many times that Fairyfoot had to stop him
and pick him up.
“Is she dead?” asked Fairyfoot.
“No,” said Robin; “she isn’t.”
He sat down on a small mushroom and
clasped his hands about his knees and looked mad—just
mad. Angry or indignant wouldn’t express
it.
“I have a great mind to go and be a misanthrope,”
he said.
“Oh! I wouldn’t,”
said Fairyfoot. He didn’t know what a misanthrope
was, but he thought it must be something unpleasant.
“Wouldn’t you?” said Robin, looking
up at him.
“No,” answered Fairyfoot.
“Well,” said Robin, “I
guess I won’t. Let’s go and have some
fun. They are all that way. You can’t
depend on any of them. Never trust one of them.
I believe that creature has been engaged as much as
twice since I left. By a singular coincidence,”
he added, “I have been married twice myself—but,
of course, that’s different. I’m a
man, you know, and—well, it’s different.
We won’t dwell on it. Let’s go and
dance. But wait a minute first.” He
took a little bottle from his pocket.
“If you remain the size you
are,” he continued, “you will tread on
whole sets of lancers and destroy entire germans.
If you drink this, you will become as small as we
are; and then, when you are going home, I will give
you something to make you large again.”
Fairyfoot drank from the little flagon, and immediately
he felt himself growing smaller and smaller until
at last he was as small as his companion.
“Now, come on,” said Robin.
On they went and joined the fairies,
and they danced and played fairy games and feasted
on fairy dainties, and were so gay and happy that
Fairyfoot was wild with joy. Everybody made him
welcome and seemed to like him, and the lady fairies
were simply delightful, especially Gauzita, who took
a great fancy to him. Just before the sun rose,
Robin gave him something from another flagon, and
he grew large again, and two minutes and three seconds
and a half before daylight the ball broke up, and
Robin took him home and left him, promising to call
for him the next night.
Every night throughout the whole summer
the same thing happened. At midnight he went
to the fairies’ dance; and at two minutes and
three seconds and a half before dawn he came home.
He was never lonely any more, because all day long
he could think of what pleasure he would have when
the night came; and, besides that, all the fairies
were his friends. But when the summer was coming
to an end, Robin Goodfellow said to him: “This
is our last dance—at least it will be our
last for some time. At this time of the year
we always go back to our own country, and we don’t
return until spring.”
This made Fairyfoot very sad.
He did not know how he could bear to be left alone
again, but he knew it could not be helped; so he tried
to be as cheerful as possible, and he went to the
final festivities, and enjoyed himself more than ever
before, and Gauzita gave him a tiny ring for a parting
gift. But the next night, when Robin did not come
for him, he felt very lonely indeed, and the next
day he was so sorrowful that he wandered far away
into the forest, in the hope of finding something to
cheer him a little. He wandered so far that he
became very tired and thirsty, and he was just making
up his mind to go home, when he thought he heard the
sound of falling water. It seemed to come from
behind a thicket of climbing roses; and he went towards
the place and pushed the branches aside a little,
so that he could look through. What he saw was
a great surprise to him. Though it was the end
of summer, inside the thicket the roses were blooming
in thousands all around a pool as clear as crystal,
into which the sparkling water fell from a hole in
the rock above. It was the most beautiful, clear
pool that Fairyfoot had ever seen, and he pressed
his way through the rose branches, and, entering the
circle they inclosed, he knelt by the water and drank.
Almost instantly his feeling of sadness
left him, and he felt quite happy and refreshed.
He stretched himself on the thick perfumed moss, and
listened to the tinkling of the water, and it was not
long before he fell asleep.
When he awakened the moon was shining,
the pool sparkled like a silver plaque crusted with
diamonds, and two nightingales were singing in the
branches over his head. And the next moment he
found out that he understood their language just as
plainly as if they had been human beings instead of
birds. The water with which he had quenched his
thirst was enchanted, and had given him this new power.
“Poor boy!” said one nightingale,
“he looks tired; I wonder where he came from.”
“Why, my dear,” said the
other, “is it possible you don’t know that
he is Prince Fairyfoot?”
“What!” said the first
nightingale—“the King of Stumpinghame’s
son, who was born with small feet?”
“Yes,” said the second.
“And the poor child has lived in the forest,
keeping the swineherd’s pigs ever since.
And he is a very nice boy, too—never throws
stones at birds or robs nests.”
“What a pity he doesn’t
know about the pool where the red berries grow!”
said the first nightingale.