The Firelight Fairy Book
H >> Henry Beston >> The Firelight Fairy Book[Transcriber's Notes]
The spelling of "didn't" as "did n't", "center" as "centre" and other
such usages, has been maintained.
Here are the definitions of some unfamiliar (to me) words.
cataplasm (poultice)
Soft moist adhesive mass of meal or clay, usually heated, spread on
cloth, and applied to warm, moisten, or stimulate an aching or
inflamed part of the body.
doggerel
Irregularly fashioned verse of a humorous nature.
halberdiers
Guard armed with a halberd, a weapon having an ax-like blade and a
steel spike mounted on the end of a long shaft.
importuning
Beg for something persistently.
sedges
Grasslike plants of the family Cyperaceae, having solid stems and
three vertical rows of leaves.
seneschal
Official in a medieval noble household in charge of domestic
arrangements and the administration of servants.
[End Transcriber's Notes]
The FIRELIGHT FAIRY BOOK
By HENRY BESTON
ILLUSTRATIONS BY MAURICE E. DAY
LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY BOSTON
COPYRIGHT, 1919, BY THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY PRESS, Inc.
All rights reserved, including that of translation
into foreign languages, including the Scandinavian.
THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY PRESS PUBLICATIONS ARE PUBLISHED BY
LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY
IN ASSOCIATION WITH
THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY COMPANY
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
FOREWORD
THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE NAVY
WASHINGTON, September 7. 1922
DEAR HENRY:--
"Grown-ups" arrogate entirely too much to themselves. I know this is so.
I discovered it for a fact when I was not more than "knee-high to a
grasshopper" myself. I knew, for example, that a certain amount of dirt
on my face and hands in no way interfered with my enjoyment of my
supper. The fact that my finger nails were not all they should have been
had no bearing whatsoever upon the efficiency of those same fingers.
Washing not only took time from other important pursuits, but also was
mildly unpleasant. Nevertheless, my mother was not even open to
reasonable argument on the matter. Arbitrarily, with the despotism of an
early Roman Emperor, she rendered a dictum to the effect that I must
wash, and soapy and submissive I had to be before I could come to the
table. Again, any reasonable child can tell you that pleasure is the
main object of eating; therefore, in all logic, one should eat if one
feels like it at ten o'clock in the morning, or at three o'clock in the
afternoon, a jar of Guava jelly, a pound of chocolates, a paper of
ginger cookies, or whatever may appeal to one's aesthetic taste. This
method of procedure, naturally, might necessitate recourse to the
brown-wood family medicine closet. Certain discomfort might ensue. But
was not the pleasure worth it? Again my mother arbitrarily took the
matter into her own hands, disagreeing with me on fundamentals. She
maintained that eating was not for pleasure simply, but for nourishment.
Sundry unfortunate remarks were made containing references to gluttony.
The pantry was locked, and regular meals at regular periods were
prescribed. Indeed, poems with dreadful morals for those who ate between
meals were recited to me, endeavor being made thereby to substitute
terror for inclination.
Any reasonable child will find many such parallel instances of the
assumed omnipotence of "grownups." With this awful indictment before me,
you ask me, a "grown-up," to write an introduction for the "Firelight
Fairy Book," and thereby to assume the responsibility for passing
judgment upon it. There is but one circumstance that makes me willing to
do so. I believe that where any nice "grown-up" is concerned, if you
crack the hard outside shell with which circumstances have surrounded
him, beneath it you will find a child. Banking on this, I venture to say
that I thoroughly enjoyed the "Firelight Fairy Book." I liked
particularly the story of the poor little prince, whose sneezing had
such a disastrous effect; and the lost half hour is unquestionably an
accurate historical account, because no one could have described so
accurately, simply from imagination, what a lost temper looked like.
What makes me even more willing to advance my opinion is that I do not
stand alone. My conclusions are supported by a jury of my peers, for I
have given the book as a Christmas gift, not only to my own children,
but to other people's children, and to one of the prominent Senators of
the United States. They have universally acclaimed it, and who can
question the judgment of such a jury?
Good luck to the "Firelight Fairy Book." May it, like Scrooge's laugh in
the "Christmas Carol," "be the father of a long, long line of brilliant"
books of a like nature for the enjoyment of all true children, whether
they be still at day school, or sitting in the high places of the world.
Believe me,
Yours very truly,
THEODORE ROOSEVELT
HENRY BESTON, ESQ.
Topsfield, Mass.
HOW THE NEW FAIRY TALES CAME TO BE WRITTEN
Some twenty years ago, in a pleasant old town by the sea, lived a lad
who was very, very fond of fairy tales. When he had read all the
fairy-books which his parents and his uncles and his cousins and his
sisters and his aunts had been kind enough to give him, he turned to the
town library and read every single fairy tale he could find mentioned in
the catalogue. But there was an end even to this treasure; and, finally,
a day came when the fairy-tale lover could find no new tales to read.
Every Christmas he would peek at the new books in the bookshops, only to
find the same old stories printed, with new pictures, meant to please
grown-ups. What could be the matter? Had the fairies all gone away, or
locked the doors of Fairyland? Where, where, where were the new stories,
and why, why, why did n't people write them?
Some years passed. One pleasant summer day, as the fairy-tale lover sat
reading a book beneath the low spreading branches of an oak tree, he
heard a hum of wings, and looking up startled from his book, he
discovered the Fairy Goldenwand standing close by.
"Are you still seeking new fairy tales?" said the Fairy Goldenwand.
"Yes," said the reader.
"Will you write them down if I tell you some really new ones?" said the
Fairy.
"Oh yes, indeed," said the reader. "And I'll put them into a book; and
next Saturday Mr. Day, the artist, will come down; we shall have tea
here under the oak tree,--do you like hot buttered toast?--and you must
tell him all about the fashions in Fairyland."
"Oh, that will be fine!" said the Fairy Goldenwand. "I knew you would
n't mind my appearing so suddenly. Ever so many things have happened in
Fairyland since the last books were written, and we all think it's a
dreadful shame that children have n't heard about them. Just imagine
boys and girls not knowing about the adventures of the Prince in Lantern
Land! Shall I tell you the story?"
And that's the way the author heard about the Shepherd of Clouds,
Florian, Marianna, Giles, Bobo, and all the other new friends. That you
may long enjoy their adventures is the wish of
HENRY BESTON
MAURICE E. DAY
THE FAIRY GOLDENWAND
The Parson Capen Home
Topsfield, Massachusetts
CONTENTS
THE QUEEN OF LANTERN LAND
THE ADVENTURES OF FLORIAN
THE SELLER OF DREAMS
THE TREASURE CASTLE
PRINCE SNEEZE
MARIANNA
THE LOST HALF-HOUR
THE ENCHANTED ELM
THE BIRD-BOY
THE MASTER MARINER
THE MARVELOUS DOG AND THE WONDERFUL CAT
THE SHEPHERD OF CLOUDS
THE CITY UNDER THE SEA
ILLUSTRATIONS
THE QUEEN OF LANTERN LAND
The Prince begins his journey through the caverns
THE ADVENTURES OF FLORIAN
Over hill, over dale, Florian followed the magic ball
THE SELLER OF DREAMS
"How much does a dream cost?" asked Peter
"A golden florin," answered the Seller of Dreams
THE TREASURE CASTLE
The three rogues were locked in the flying room
PRINCE SNEEZE
The chest of secrets was made of black stone
MARIANNA
Into the world went Marianna and the yellow bird
THE LOST HALF-HOUR
Just as the dragon's mouth was at its widest
THE ENCHANTED ELM
The maiden watched the woodcutters coming through the wood
THE BIRD-BOY
Every year, on the Bird-Boy's birthday, a great gray bird was seen
THE MASTER MARINER
Splash! and the Master Mariner fell into the sea
THE MARVELOUS DOG AND THE WONDERFUL CAT
The Dog and the Cat studying their lessons
THE SHEPHERD OF CLOUDS
It was Giles's task to open the door of the cloud-bowl
THE CITY UNDER THE SEA
For three days the Merchant pursued the ship with the fiery sails
THE QUEEN OF LANTERN LAND
Once upon a time the youngest son of a king became filled with the
desire to go abroad and see the world. He got his father's permission to
depart, kissed his parents good-bye, mounted his black horse, and
galloped away down the high road. Soon the gray towers of the old castle
in which he was born hid themselves behind him.
The Prince journeyed on, spending the days in traveling, and the nights
in little wayside inns, till one day he found himself in the heart of
the Adamant Mountains. The great, red granite crags of the surrounding
peaks rose out of the gleaming snow like ugly fingers, and the slopes of
giant glaciers sparkled in the sun like torrents of diamonds. The Prince
sat down by some stunted trees whose tops had long before been broken
off by an avalanche, and began to eat the bit of bread and cheese which
he had stored in his pocket. His black horse, meanwhile, ate the grass
which grew here and there along the mountain path. And as the Prince sat
there in the bright sun and the silence of the mountains, he became
aware of a low, continuous roaring.
"There must be a waterfall near-by," said the Prince to himself. "I'll
go and see it."
So, casting another look at his steed, who was contentedly browsing, the
Prince climbed up the mountainside in the direction of the sound.
The Prince climbed and climbed, he went in this direction and in that,
yet the sound never grew any louder or fainter. Suddenly he realized
that he was hopelessly lost. The little path up which he had ridden had
vanished completely, and he had not the slightest idea in which
direction it lay. He called aloud, but only the mountain echoes answered
mockingly.
Night came, and the Prince took shelter behind a great rock. All the
next day he labored to find the path, but in vain. He grew very hungry
and cold. Every once in a while he would hear the roaring of the
waterfall, which seemed to have grown louder.
Another day dawned, and another day again. The Prince was getting very
weak. He knew that he was approaching the mysterious cataract, for the
noise of the water was now tremendous, and heaven and earth were full of
its roar. The third night came, and the full moon rose solemnly over the
snow-clad summits of the lonely and mysterious mountains. Suddenly the
Prince, walking blindly on, staggered through a narrow passage-way
between two splintered crags, and found himself face to face with the
mystery.
He stood on the snowy floor of a vast amphitheatre whose walls were the
steep sides of the giant mountains. Farthest away from him, and opposite
the moon, the wall of the bowl appeared as a giant black precipice,
whose top seemed to reach almost to the moon-dimmed stars; and over this
precipice a broad river was endlessly pouring, shining in the night like
the overflow of an ocean of molten silver. Though now very weak from
lack of food, and dizzy with the roaring of the cataract, the Prince
made his way to the shore of the foaming and eddying lake into which the
water was falling. Great was his surprise to discover that the overflow
of this lake disappeared into the earth through a long, low opening in
the cliff behind the fall. Greater still was his surprise to see a
strange many-colored light burning within the cave.
The Prince made his way toward the light, along a narrow beach of white
sand lying between the wall of the cavern and the racing waters of the
mysterious river, and found that the glow came from a magnificent
lantern studded with emeralds, topazes, amethysts, and rubies, which
hung by a chain from the roof of the grotto. Directly under this
lantern, drawn up on the sand, lay a little boat with a lantern fastened
to the bow. The Prince pushed the boat into the river, and got into it,
and the swift current seized him and hurried him away.
At first the cavern grew higher and wider; then it shrank again, and the
boat, borne along with incredible speed, shot down a rocky passageway
into the very heart of the earth. The passageway broadened once more,
and the boat rode gently through monstrous caves whose roofs were upheld
by twisted columns taller than the tallest tree. There were times when
all was so still that the Prince could easily have imagined himself back
in the solitude of the mountains; there were times when the foaming and
roaring of the underground river grew so deafening that the Prince
feared lest he might be approaching the brink of a subterranean
cataract.
Many hours passed. The Prince did not know whether it was night or day.
At length, while the boat was gliding through a vast hall, he fell
asleep. When he awoke, he found that the boat was floating on the black,
glassy surface of an immense underground ocean. All signs of the cavern
had disappeared. Far away, over the edge of this ocean, a strange,
beautiful glow mounted into the starless sky of the underworld. And
while the Prince was gazing at the glow, the boat swung into a new
current, and was borne swiftly toward the light. In a short time the
light grew so wide and bright that one would have believed that a
strange, golden sun had risen. The boat passed between two giant marble
pillars supporting enormous crystal globes filled with a golden fire,
and the Prince found himself in the harbor of Lantern Land.
A city lay before him, a strange golden city edging the shore of a vast,
semi-circular bay. Because in the centre of the earth there is neither
sun nor moon, the people have to be continually burning lights; and so
many and so great were the lanterns of Lantern Land that the town was as
bright as day. The edge of the harbor was marked with a row of golden
lanterns; there were immense lanterns at every six paces along the
streets; a lantern hung from every house; and the church-towers, instead
of having bells in them, had great golden lamps which illumined
everything for some distance about. Moreover, every inhabitant of
Lantern Land carried a lantern with him wherever he went, the rich
carrying golden lanterns set with transparent precious stones, the poor
carrying lights of ordinary glass.
Soon the Prince saw a magnificent ship coming out to meet him. The prow
was carved in the shape of a dragon's head, and a beautiful lantern hung
from its jaws. Overcome by hunger and fatigue, the poor Prince fell
insensible to the floor of his little boat. When he came to his senses
again, he was lying between sheets of the whitest, most delicate linen
in a great four-poster bed, in a room in the royal palace.
Thanks to his kind hosts, the Prince soon recovered his strength. When
he was completely himself again, he was summoned to an audience with the
Queen of Lantern Land.
The Queen, a very beautiful young woman, wearing a wonderful lantern
crown, sat on an ebony throne. On each side of the throne stood a tall
soldier, clad in scarlet and holding a long ebony staff surmounted by a
round lantern lit by a golden flame.
The Prince dropped on his knee, and thanked the Queen for her kindness
and hospitality.
"You are the first stranger to come to Lantern Land for a thousand
years," said the young Queen. "If it is not asking too much from a
guest, pray how did you happen to find the river of the underworld?"
So the Prince told her that he was a king's son, and described his
adventures in the mountains. You may be sure the Queen was glad to hear
of his royal birth, for she had fallen in love with him at first sight.
A month passed. The Prince remained a guest in the palace. All kinds of
festivities were given in his honor; there were wonderful dances,
masquerades, picnics, and theatricals going on all the time. One day the
Prince and the Queen, accompanied by a little group of courtiers, rode
to the frontier of Lantern Land. The lovers galloped ahead of the party
and reached a little hill beyond which there were no more lanterns.
Ahead of them the rolling land, sweeping farther and farther away from
the light, grew darker and darker, till it finally plunged into the
eternal night of the underworld.
The Prince looked at the Queen, and saw that she was weeping.
"Dear love, why do you weep?" asked the Prince, who felt sad to see
tears in his lady's lovely eyes.
"I weep to think that in spite of our love we must soon part forever,"
said the Queen.
"Part forever? Dear lady, what can you mean?" said the anxious Prince.
"A cruel fate hangs over us," replied the lady. "Know, dear Prince, that
I am promised in marriage to the Enchanter Dragondel, and that in
exactly eight days, he will come here to claim my hand."
"The Enchanter Dragondel--who is he?" said the Prince.
"Alas," said the Queen, "the Enchanter Dragondel is the most powerful
magician of all the underworld. He is about eight feet tall, has cruel
sunken eyes that burn like dull fires, and dresses entirely in black. We
met at a ball given by the King of the Goblins. Dragondel pursued me
with compliments. A few days afterwards, an iron boat arrived in the
port of Lantern Land, having on board a giant blue dog who is
Dragondel's younger brother. This terrible animal, from whose sight the
people of Lantern Land fled screaming, made his way to the palace, and
dropped at my feet a jeweled casket, which he carried between his jaws.
The casket contained Dragondel's request for my hand, and added that,
were I to refuse him, he would let loose a legion of ghosts and other
winged spirits against the lanterns of Lantern Land. I had a vision of
Lantern Land in darkness; of my poor subjects dying of fear and
starvation. Rather than let this vision come true, I accepted the
Enchanter. Soon I shall never see you again, for Dragondel will come and
take me to his awful castle which lies on an island in the dark ocean.
Nor will you ever be able to save me, for Dragondel has so bewitched the
waves that a terrible whirlpool forms on the sea when a boat approaches
the enchanted castle, and engulfs it."
"But I can fight Dragondel," said the Prince, like the brave youth that
he was.
"That would be of little use," replied the Queen, "for you would be
changed into a stone the instant you crossed swords with him. Tomorrow,
the blue dog arrives to remind me of my obligation, and to carry back to
the island some of the palace servants who are to make Dragondel's
castle ready for my coming."
The other members of the party now rode up, and the Queen dabbed her
eyes with her handkerchief, and pretended not to have been crying. The
Prince and the Queen felt very unhappy as they rode home.
On the next day, sure enough, the iron boat arrived, and the blue dog,
who was as large as a lion, went to the Queen's palace, and bade her
make ready for the coming wedding. A dozen of the Queen's servants were
then ordered to go with the blue dog to Dragondel's castle. Among these
servants, disguised as a kitchen lad, was the Prince; for he had
determined to see if there was not some way in which the young Queen
could be rescued from the wicked magician.
The boat neared the island, but no terrible whirlpool formed in the
enchanted sea. At last the boat reached Dragondel's castle. It stood on
the top of a high lonely rock against whose steep sides the waves of the
underground ocean were forever foaming and breaking, and it was half in
ruins and was very poorly lighted.
The Prince took his place in the kitchen, and sought for an opportunity
to prevent the marriage of Dragondel and the Queen.
For four days of the precious week, however, the poor Prince was kept so
busy baking and making pastries for the coming of the bride that he did
not have an instant to ask questions or do anything else.
In the morning hours of the fifth day there was a terrible moaning and
roaring outside, and the cooks rushed to the kitchen windows. An unhappy
fishing boat had been swept by the wind too near Dragondel's castle, the
enchanted whirlpool had formed, and caught the boat in its awful circle.
Now it went slowly round the outer edge, now, going faster and faster,
it slid down the side of the awful funnel, and finally it vanished. An
instant later, the whirlpool had disappeared, leaving the sea roaring
and foaming.
The Prince shuddered.
"Well you may shudder," said the chief cook, "for such would have been
your fate if our master's brother had not carried with him the talisman
which rules the whirlpool."
"Talisman? What talisman?" said the Prince affecting stupidity.
"Why the little golden hand, you fool," said the chief cook.
"My! it must be a great big hand to be able to quiet that whirlpool,"
said the Prince.
"Big indeed, you ninny!" growled the cook. "Why, the magic hand is only
as big as a baby's hand. I've seen it many times. The master carries it
in his pocket, and puts it under his pillow while he sleeps."
So, later on, when his work was done, and everybody had gone to bed, the
Prince, in the hope of stealing the talisman, tried to make his way to
Dragondel's bedchamber. But when he reached the foot of the stairs which
led to the Enchanter's room, he found it guarded by two black panthers
which stared at him with insolent yellow eyes and switched their long
tails. The Prince went outdoors, to see if there was any hope of
climbing to the room along the outer wall, and found that the windows of
Dragondel's chamber overlooked a cliff falling thousands of feet sheer
to the dark sea. Far, far away, the Prince saw the glow of Lantern Land.
Only a short time remained to him in which to save his beloved lady of
the lanterns.
As he wandered about, very sick at heart, he saw a little black cat
running madly back and forth along the edge of a steep cliff from one of
whose crevices came a persistent, unhappy mewing. The poor cat was a
mother-cat, and was trying to rescue a kitten of hers that had fallen
down between the rocks. At great risk of being dashed to pieces himself,
the brave Prince climbed down the precipice, rescued the kitten, and
gave it back to its anxious mother.
"Thank you, brave youth," said the old cat.
"May it some day be within my power to help you as you have helped me."
"You can help me this very moment," said the Prince. And he told the cat
who he was, why he had come to the castle, and of his desire to get
possession of the talisman.
"I will help you get the talisman," said the cat. "The panthers will let
me pass, for they are cousins of mine. But you must make another little
golden hand to take the place of the one I shall steal; for if Dragondel
misses the golden hand, he will summon his demons to find it, and we
shall both lose our lives. Go now to the kitchen, carve a small hand
with the fingers close together and the thumb lying close to the
fingers, gild it over with the gold dust you have had given you for the
pastry icings, and bring it to me tomorrow night at this very hour."
So the Prince worked the rest of the night carving and gilding the
little golden hand, and on the next night he gave it to the cat. The cat
took it in her mouth as she would have a mouse, walked coolly by the
panthers, and entered Dragondel's room. She had just succeeded in
getting the true hand out from under the magician's pillow when
Dragondel woke up. The cat was clever enough to pretend to be engaged in
a mouse-hunt, so the Enchanter paid no attention to her and fell asleep
once more. When the cat, however, got under Dragondel's couch again, the
two hands lay side by side and she could not remember just which one was
the talisman and which one the false hand. So because she had to act
quickly, she put one of the hands under the pillow, brought the other to
the Prince and told him her story. But so well matched were the little
hands, that even the Prince was far from certain that he had not got his
own hand back again.
And now came the seventh day, the day on which Dragondel, the blue dog,
and all the wicked Enchanter's friends were to sail to Lantern Land for
the marriage ceremony. The iron ship, made gay with a thousand small
scarlet lanterns, stood ready to carry them over. The Enchanter and his
company got in, and the vessel left the island.
The Prince stood watching the ship from the top of the cliffs. What
anxiety was in his heart! If Dragondel still possessed the true
talisman, he would cross the whirlpool safely, and marry the beautiful
Queen of Lantern Land.
The vessel sped on. It was now at some distance from the island.
"All is lost," thought the Prince with a sinking heart; "Dragondel has
the true talisman." And in his bitterness he was about to throw the
little golden hand which lay in his pocket down into the sea.
Suddenly the air became filled with a terrible moaning; the sea became
troubled; the whirlpool awoke. And the Prince saw the red lights of the
Enchanter's ship whirled round and round, faster and faster, till they
disappeared forever in the waters of the sunless sea.