“What pool—and what
red berries?” asked the second nightingale.
“Why, my dear,” said the
first, “is it possible you don’t know about
the pool where the red berries grow—the
pool where the poor, dear Princess Goldenhair met
with her misfortune?”
“Never heard of it,” said
the second nightingale, rather crossly.
“Well,” explained the
other, “you have to follow the brook for a day
and three-quarters, and then take all the paths to
the left until you come to the pool. It is very
ugly and muddy, and bushes with red berries on them
grow around it.”
“Well, what of that?”
said her companion; “and what happened to the
Princess Goldenhair?”
“Don’t you know that, either?” exclaimed
her friend.
“No.”
“Ah!” said the first nightingale,
“it was very sad. She went out with her
father, the King, who had a hunting party; and she
lost her way, and wandered on until she came to the
pool. Her poor little feet were so hot that she
took off her gold-embroidered satin slippers, and put
them into the water—her feet, not the slippers—and
the next minute they began to grow and grow, and to
get larger and larger, until they were so immense
she could hardly walk at all; and though all the physicians
in the kingdom have tried to make them smaller, nothing
can be done, and she is perfectly unhappy.”
“What a pity she doesn’t
know about this pool!” said the other bird.
“If she just came here and bathed them three
times in the water, they would be smaller and more
beautiful than ever, and she would be more lovely
than she has ever been.”
“It is a pity,” said her
companion; “but, you know, if we once let people
know what this water will do, we should be overrun
with creatures bathing themselves beautiful, and trampling
our moss and tearing down our rose-trees, and we should
never have any peace.”
“That is true,” agreed the other.
Very soon after they flew away, and
Fairyfoot was left alone. He had been so excited
while they were talking that he had been hardly able
to lie still. He was so sorry for the Princess
Goldenhair, and so glad for himself. Now he could
find his way to the pool with the red berries, and
he could bathe his feet in it until they were large
enough to satisfy Stumpinghame; and he could go back
to his father’s court, and his parents would
perhaps; be fond of him. But he had so good a
heart that he could not think of being happy himself
and letting others remain unhappy, when he could help
them. So the first thing was to find the Princess
Goldenhair and tell her about the nightingales’
fountain. But how was he to find her? The
nightingales had not told him. He was very much
troubled, indeed. How was he to find her?
Suddenly, quite suddenly, he thought
of the ring Gauzita had given him. When she had
given it to him she had made an odd remark.
“When you wish to go anywhere,”
she had said, “hold it in your hand, turn around
twice with closed eyes, and something queer will happen.”
He had thought it was one of her little
jokes, but now it occurred to him that at least he
might try what would happen. So he rose up, held
the ring in his hand, closed his eyes, and turned
around twice.
What did happen was that he began
to walk, not very fast, but still passing along as
if he were moving rapidly. He did not know where
he was going, but he guessed that the ring did, and
that if he obeyed it, he should find the Princess
Goldenhair. He went on and on, not getting in
the least tired, until about daylight he found himself
under a great tree, and on the ground beneath it was
spread a delightful breakfast, which he knew was for
him. He sat down and ate it, and then got up again
and went on his way once more. Before noon he
had left the forest behind him, and was in a strange
country. He knew it was not Stumpinghame, because
the people had not large feet. But they all had
sad faces, and once or twice, when he passed groups
of them who were talking, he heard them speak of the
Princess Goldenhair, as if they were sorry for her
and could not enjoy themselves while such a misfortune
rested upon her.
“So sweet and lovely and kind
a princess!” they said; “and it really
seems as if she would never be any better.”
The sun was just setting when Fairyfoot
came in sight of the palace. It was built of
white marble, and had beautiful pleasure-grounds about
it, but somehow there seemed to be a settled gloom
in the air. Fairyfoot had entered the great pleasure-garden,
and was wondering where it would be best to go first,
when he saw a lovely white fawn, with a golden collar
about its neck, come bounding over the flower-beds,
and he heard, at a little distance, a sweet voice,
saying, sorrowfully, “Come back, my fawn; I
cannot run and play with you as I once used to.
Do not leave me, my little friend.”
And soon from behind the trees came
a line of beautiful girls, walking two by two, all
very slowly; and at the head of the line, first of
all, came the loveliest princess in the world, dressed
softly in pure white, with a wreath of lilies on her
long golden hair, which fell almost to the hem of
her white gown.
She had so fair and tender a young
face, and her large, soft eyes, yet looked so sorrowful,
that Fairyfoot loved her in a moment, and he knelt
on one knee, taking off his cap and bending his head
until his own golden hair almost hid his face.
“Beautiful Princess Goldenhair,
beautiful and sweet Princess, may I speak to you?”
he said.
The Princess stopped and looked at
him, and answered him softly. It surprised her
to see one so poorly dressed kneeling before her, in
her palace gardens, among the brilliant flowers; but
she always spoke softly to everyone.
“What is there that I can do
for you, my friend?” she said.
“Beautiful Princess,”
answered Fairyfoot, blushing, “I hope very much
that I may be able to do something for you.”
“For me!” she exclaimed.
“Thank you, friend; what is it you can do?
Indeed, I need a help I am afraid no one can ever give
me.”
“Gracious and fairest lady,”
said Fairyfoot, “it is that help I think—nay,
I am sure—that I bring to you.”
“Oh!” said the sweet Princess.
“You have a kind face and most true eyes, and
when I look at you—I do not know why it
is, but I feel a little happier. What is it you
would say to me?”
Still kneeling before her, still bending
his head modestly, and still blushing, Fairyfoot told
his story. He told her of his own sadness and
loneliness, and of why he was considered so terrible
a disgrace to his family. He told her about the
fountain of the nightingales and what he had heard
there and how he had journeyed through the forests,
and beyond it into her own country, to find her.
And while he told it, her beautiful face changed from
red to white, and her hands closely clasped themselves
together.
“Oh!” she said, when he
had finished, “I know that this is true from
the kind look in your eyes, and I shall be happy again.
And how can I thank you for being so good to a poor
little princess whom you had never seen?”
“Only let me see you happy once
more, most sweet Princess,” answered Fairyfoot,
“and that will be all I desire—only
if, perhaps, I might once—kiss your hand.”
She held out her hand to him with
so lovely a look in her soft eyes that he felt happier
than he had ever been before, even at the fairy dances.
This was a different kind of happiness. Her hand
was as white as a dove’s wing and as soft as
a dove’s breast. “Come,” she
said, “let us go at once to the King.”
[Illustration: FAIRYFOOT LOVED
HER INA MOMENT, AND HE KNELT ON ONE KNEE.]
Within a few minutes the whole palace
was in an uproar of excitement. Preparations
were made to go to the fountain of the nightingales
immediately. Remembering what the birds had said
about not wishing to be disturbed, Fairyfoot asked
the King to take only a small party. So no one
was to go but the King himself, the Princess, in a
covered chair carried by two bearers, the Lord High
Chamberlain, two Maids of Honour, and Fairyfoot.
Before morning they were on their
way, and the day after they reached the thicket of
roses, and Fairyfoot pushed aside the branches and
led the way into the dell.
The Princess Goldenhair sat down upon
the edge of the pool and put her feet into it.
In two minutes they began to look smaller. She
bathed them once, twice, three times, and, as the
nightingales had said, they became smaller and more
beautiful than ever. As for the Princess herself,
she really could not be more beautiful than she had
been; but the Lord High Chamberlain, who had been
an exceedingly ugly old gentleman, after washing his
face, became so young and handsome that the First Maid
of Honour immediately fell in love with him.
Whereupon she washed her face, and became so beautiful
that he fell in love with her, and they were engaged
upon the spot.
The Princess could not find any words
to tell Fairyfoot how grateful she was and how happy.
She could only look at him again and again with her
soft, radiant eyes, and again and again give him her
hand that he might kiss it.
She was so sweet and gentle that Fairyfoot
could not bear the thought of leaving her; and when
the King begged him to return to the palace with them
and live there always, he was more glad than I can
tell you. To be near this lovely Princess, to
be her friend, to love and serve her and look at her
every day, was such happiness that he wanted nothing
more. But first he wished to visit his father
and mother and sisters and brothers in Stumpinghame!
so the King and Princess and their attendants went
with him to the pool where the red berries grew; and
after he had bathed his feet in the water they were
so large that Stumpinghame contained nothing like
them, even the King’s and Queen’s seeming
small in comparison. And when, a few days later,
he arrived at the Stumpinghame Palace, attended in
great state by the magnificent retinue with which the
father of the Princess Goldenhair had provided him,
he was received with unbounded rapture by his parents.
The King and Queen felt that to have a son with feet
of such a size was something to be proud of, indeed.
They could not admire him sufficiently, although the
whole country was illuminated, and feasting continued
throughout his visit.
But though he was glad to be no more
a disgrace to his family, it cannot be said that he
enjoyed the size of his feet very much on his own
account. Indeed, he much preferred being Prince
Fairyfoot, as fleet as the wind and as light as a
young deer, and he was quite glad to go to the fountain
of the nightingales after his visit was at an end,
and bathe his feet small again, and to return to the
palace of the Princess Goldenhair with the soft and
tender eyes. There everyone loved him, and he
loved everyone, and was four times as happy as the
day is long.
He loved the Princess more dearly
every day, and, of course, as soon as they were old
enough, they were married. And of course, too,
they used to go in the summer to the forest, and dance
in the moonlight with the fairies, who adored them
both.
When they went to visit Stumpinghame,
they always bathed their feet in the pool of the red
berries; and when they returned, they made them small
again in the fountain of the nightingales.
They were always great friends with
Robin Goodfellow, and he was always very confidential
with them about Gauzita, who continued to be as pretty
and saucy as ever.
“Some of these days,”
he used to say, severely, “I’ll marry another
fairy, and see how she’ll like that—to
see someone else basking in my society! I’ll
get even with her!”
But he never did.