Название | The Green Fairy Book |
---|---|
Автор произведения | Various |
Жанр | Языкознание |
Серия | |
Издательство | Языкознание |
Год выпуска | 0 |
isbn | 4057664189486 |
Various
The Green Fairy Book
Published by Good Press, 2019
EAN 4057664189486
Table of Contents
PRINCE NARCISSUS AND THE PRINCESS POTENTILLA
PRINCE FEATHERHEAD AND THE PRINCESS CELANDINE
KING KOJATA (From the Russian)
PRINCE FICKLE AND FAIR HELENA (From the German)
THE STORY OF HOK LEE AND THE DWARFS
PRINCE VIVIEN AND THE PRINCESS PLACIDA
LITTLE ONE-EYE, LITTLE TWO-EYES, AND LITTLE THREE-EYES
ALLERLEIRAUH; OR, THE MANY-FURRED CREATURE
THE WAR OF THE WOLF AND THE FOX
THE STORY OF THE FISHERMAN AND HIS WIFE
THE BLUE BIRD
Once upon a time there lived a King who was immensely rich. He had broad lands, and sacks overflowing with gold and silver; but he did not care a bit for all his riches, because the Queen, his wife, was dead. He shut himself up in a little room and knocked his head against the walls for grief, until his courtiers were really afraid that he would hurt himself. So they hung feather-beds between the tapestry and the walls, and then he could go on knocking his head as long as it was any consolation to him without coming to much harm. All his subjects came to see him, and said whatever they thought would comfort him: some were grave, even gloomy with him; and some agreeable, even gay; but not one could make the least impression upon him. Indeed, he hardly seemed to hear what they said. At last came a lady who was wrapped in a black mantle, and seemed to be in the deepest grief. She wept and sobbed until even the King’s attention was attracted; and when she said that, far from coming to try and diminish his grief, she, who had just lost a good husband, was come to add her tears to his, since she knew what he must be feeling, the King redoubled his lamentations. Then he told the sorrowful lady long stories about the good qualities of his departed Queen, and she in her turn recounted all the virtues of her departed husband; and this passed the time so agreeably that the King quite forgot to thump his head against the feather-beds, and the lady did not need to wipe the tears from her great blue eyes as often as before. By