So the boy went on farther still, and he came to another turn in the road. A girl with her flock of geese stood there, and the boy spoke to her. "I am taking a journey to a castle," he said. "Can you tell me how to find one?"
The girl laughed. "You"ll know it by the garden," she said. "All castles have very pretty gardens."
So the boy went farther still, and where the road curved he met an old granny walking toward him with her knitting in her hand.
"Please, granny," said the boy. "I am taking a journey to find a castle. Can you direct me to one?"
The granny looked down through her spectacles at the boy. "Perhaps you will come to a castle beyond the last turn in the road," she said, pointing behind her. "They say there are castles hidden hereabouts.
You"ll know it by the fine feasts they give every day at sundown, and the king and queen will be waiting at the door to welcome you."
"How shall I know the king and queen? Do they always wear crowns?"
asked the little boy.
"Not always," said the granny, "but you can tell a true king and queen because they are so good and wise and kind."
So the boy thanked the granny and went on, but it was growing late in the day and he was tired. The bend in the road seemed a very long way off and he had to sit down several times before he reached it. His feet ached and his back was tired when he came to it, but when he turned and came out on the other side, he saw something wonderful.
Just a little way ahead lay the castle.
He could be quite sure that it was a castle because the roof shone with gold in the setting sun and in front lay a pretty garden of flowers of all kinds; pink roses, and tall white lilies, and purple violets. In the doorway stood two people waiting; they must be the king and queen, thought the little boy. As he ran and came nearer, he could smell the feast--a savoury meat pie, and freshly baked cake, and sweet fruits.
The boy ran faster and came to the gate and went up the walk. At the doorway he stopped. Why, it was his own house that he had come back to by way of the turns in the road. This was his own pretty garden that he saw, and his own fine supper that he smelled. His own dear father and mother waited in the door, with their arms outstretched to greet him.
"You are the king and queen," shouted the boy, "always good and kind!"
"And this is our castle," laughed his mother. "Come in, my little Prince. The feast is waiting for you."
THE CHILDREN
THE PLAYMATES
There was once a Prince and he was very lonely, because he had no sisters or brothers in the palace with whom to play. And one day his father and mother, the King and Queen, decided that they would send to some neighboring Kingdoms to borrow a little Princess, who should come and live at the palace, and be the sister and the playmate of the Prince.
So they sent for one of the Court Messengers, and then they called the Prince to tell him that he was going to have a little Princess to be his playmate.
They talked the matter over with the Court Wise-Man that the Messenger might understand just what sort of little Princess he should bring, and make no mistake about it.
"She must be sweet tempered," said the King.
"And I should like her to have blue eyes and yellow hair and curls,"
said the Queen.
"And if I may be so bold as to make a suggestion," said the Court Wise-Man, "she should be rich, for she and the Prince will need a great many new toys."
They never thought to ask the Prince what his choice of a little Princess would be. But the Prince did not wait to be asked.
"I want only a little Princess who can make mola.s.ses pop-corn b.a.l.l.s,"
he said.
The King and the Queen and the Court Wise-Man were aghast at this.
They knew that the Prince was very fond of mola.s.ses pop-corn b.a.l.l.s, but the palace Cook always made him some every Sat.u.r.day morning, enough to last a whole week. But the Prince went on, and explained.
"The Princess who comes to play with me must be able to do what I want her to, and I want her to make my pop-corn b.a.l.l.s fresh every day.
Don"t bring any Princess who can"t," he said.
So they all knew that the matter was decided, for the Prince had a very strong mind of his own. The Court Messenger started out to find a little Princess who was sweet tempered, and had blue eyes, and yellow hair that curled, and was rich, and knew how to make mola.s.ses pop-corn b.a.l.l.s.
He thought that he would find the right Princess overnight, but it came to be weeks and weeks and she was still as far away as ever. The Princesses who were sweet tempered were apt to have brown hair and hazel eyes, and if there was a sweet tempered one with blue eyes and yellow hair that curled she belonged in a Kingdom where there was very little money. And none of the Princesses had even so much as heard of mola.s.ses pop-corn b.a.l.l.s. The Court Messenger grew so worried that he could neither eat nor sleep, but one day as he wandered about in foreign places he smelled something like mola.s.ses boiling. He followed the odor and he came to a rich appearing palace. In he went, without waiting to knock, and beside the kitchen fireplace he discovered a Princess with blue eyes and yellow hair that curled. She was stirring mola.s.ses in a kettle with one hand, and shaking a corn popper with the other.
"What are you making?" begged the Messenger in great excitement.
"Mola.s.ses pop-corn b.a.l.l.s," said the little Princess.
"Are you sweet tempered?" asked the Messenger.
"I never cry, or scold," said the little Princess.
"Then come with me and be the Prince"s playmate," said the Messenger.
"We must have a Princess who will make him pop-corn b.a.l.l.s every day."
The little Princess looked up in surprise. "Can the Prince play to me on a jews-harp?" she asked.
"I do not think his Highness can," said the Messenger.
"Then I can"t go with you," said the little Princess. "I will go only to a Prince who can play on a jews-harp."
"I won"t learn to play on a jews-harp," said the little Prince when they told him about it.
So he was without a sister and a playmate, and every day he grew more lonely and more unhappy. But he thought a great deal and at last he said:
"I should like to have that little Princess very much. Will you ask her if she will come if she does not have to make mola.s.ses pop-corn b.a.l.l.s?"
Now, all this time, the Princess had been thinking too. When the Court Messenger gave her the Prince"s message, she smiled and said she would come. "The Prince need not play to me on a jews-harp if he does not want to," she said.
So they packed her clothes in ten trunks, and she rode in a gold chariot to the palace of the Prince. The doors were opened wide to greet her, and through them came the sound of the merriest music. The Princess clasped her hands in happiness.
"_Who_ is playing the jews-harp?" she asked. "I am _so_ fond of one."
Just then the Prince came in. It had been he who was playing. He had learned how for her pleasure.
"What are you carrying in that basket?" he asked of the little Princess.
"Some mola.s.ses pop-corn b.a.l.l.s that I made for you," she said. "And I will make you some to-morrow, dear Prince."