<h2><SPAN name="THE_THREE_REMARKS" id="THE_THREE_REMARKS">THE THREE REMARKS</SPAN></h2>
<p><span class="upper">There</span> was once a
princess, the most
beautiful princess
that ever was seen.
Her hair was black
and soft as the raven’s
wing; her eyes
were like stars dropped in a pool of clear
water, and her speech like the first tinkling
cascade of the baby Nile. She was also
wise, graceful, and gentle, so that one would
have thought she must be the happiest
princess in the world.</p>
<p>But, alas! there was one terrible drawback
to her happiness. She could make
only three remarks. No one knew whether
it was the fault of her nurse, or a peculiarity
born with her; but the sad fact remained,
that no matter what was said to her, she
could only reply in one of three phrases.
The first was,—</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“What is the price of butter?”</p>
<p>The second, “Has your grandmother
sold her mangle yet?”</p>
<p>And the third, “With all my heart!”</p>
<p>You may well imagine what a great
misfortune this was to a young and lively
princess. How could she join in the sports
and dances of the noble youths and maidens
of the court? She could not always be
silent, neither could she always say, “With
all my heart!” though this was her favorite
phrase, and she used it whenever
she possibly could; and it was not at all
pleasant, when some gallant knight asked
her whether she would rather play croquet
or Aunt Sally, to be obliged to reply,
“What is the price of butter?”</p>
<p>On certain occasions, however, the
princess actually found her infirmity of
service to her. She could always put an
end suddenly to any conversation that did
not please her, by interposing with her
first or second remark; and they were
also a very great assistance to her when,
as happened nearly every day, she received
an offer of marriage. Emperors,
kings, princes, dukes, earls, marquises,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</SPAN></span>
viscounts, baronets, and many other lofty
personages knelt at her feet, and offered
her their hands, hearts, and other possessions
of greater or less value. But for
all her suitors the princess had but one
answer. Fixing her deep radiant eyes
on them, she would reply with thrilling
earnestness, “<em>Has</em> your grandmother sold
her mangle yet?” and this always impressed
the suitors so deeply that they
retired, weeping, to a neighboring monastery,
where they hung up their armor
in the chapel, and taking the vows, passed
the remainder of their lives mostly in
flogging themselves, wearing hair shirts,
and putting dry toast-crumbs in their beds.</p>
<p>Now, when the king found that all his
best nobles were turning into monks,
he was greatly displeased, and said to
the princess:—</p>
<p>“My daughter, it is high time that all
this nonsense came to an end. The next
time a respectable person asks you to
marry him, you will say, ‘With all my
heart!’ or I will know the reason why.”</p>
<p>But this the princess could not endure,
for she had never yet seen a man whom<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</SPAN></span>
she was willing to marry. Nevertheless,
she feared her father’s anger, for she knew
that he always kept his word; so that
very night she slipped down the back
stairs of the palace, opened the back door,
and ran away out into the wide world.</p>
<p>She wandered for many days, over
mountain and moor, through fen and
through forest, until she came to a fair
city. Here all the bells were ringing,
and the people shouting and flinging caps
into the air; for their old king was dead,
and they were just about to crown a new
one. The new king was a stranger, who
had come to the town only the day before;
but as soon as he heard of the old monarch’s
death, he told the people that he was a
king himself, and as he happened to be
without a kingdom at that moment, he
would be quite willing to rule over them.
The people joyfully assented, for the late
king had left no heir; and now all the
preparations had been completed. The
crown had been polished up, and a new
tip put on the sceptre, as the old king had
quite spoiled it by poking the fire with it
for upwards of forty years.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>When the people saw the beautiful
princess, they welcomed her with many
bows, and insisted on leading her before
the new king.</p>
<p>“Who knows but that they may be
related?” said everybody. “They both
came from the same direction, and both are
strangers.”</p>
<p>Accordingly the princess was led to the
market-place, where the king was sitting
in royal state. He had a fat, red, shining
face, and did not look like the kings whom
she had been in the habit of seeing; but
nevertheless the princess made a graceful
courtesy, and then waited to hear what
he would say.</p>
<p>The new king seemed rather embarrassed
when he saw that it was a princess who
appeared before him; but he smiled
graciously, and said, in a smooth oily
voice,—</p>
<p>“I trust your ’Ighness is quite well.
And ’ow did yer ’Ighness leave yer pa
and ma?”</p>
<p>At these words the princess raised her
head and looked fixedly at the red-faced
king; then she replied, with scornful
distinctness,—</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“What is the price of butter?”</p>
<p>At these words an alarming change came
over the king’s face. The red faded
from it, and left it a livid green; his teeth
chattered; his eyes stared, and rolled
in their sockets; while the sceptre dropped
from his trembling hand and fell at the
princess’s feet. For the truth was, this
was no king at all, but a retired butterman,
who had laid by a little money at his trade,
and had thought of setting up a public
house; but chancing to pass through this
city at the very time when they were
looking for a king, it struck him that he
might just as well fill the vacant place as
any one else. No one had thought of his
being an impostor; but when the princess
fixed her clear eyes on him and asked him
that familiar question, which he had been
in the habit of hearing many times a day
for a great part of his life, the guilty
butterman thought himself detected, and
shook in his guilty shoes. Hastily descending
from his throne, he beckoned
the princess into a side-chamber, and
closing the door, besought her in moving
terms not to betray him.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Here,” he said, “is a bag of rubies
as big as pigeon’s eggs. There are six
thousand of them, and I ’umbly beg your
’Ighness to haccept them as a slight token
hof my hesteem, if your ’Ighness will
kindly consent to spare a respeckable
tradesman the disgrace of being hexposed.”</p>
<p>The princess reflected, and came to the
conclusion that, after all, a butterman
might make as good a king as any one else;
so she took the rubies with a gracious little
nod, and departed, while all the people
shouted, “Hooray!” and followed her,
waving their hats and kerchiefs, to the
gates of the city.</p>
<p>With her bag of rubies over her shoulder,
the fair princess now pursued her journey,
and fared forward over heath and hill,
through brake and through brier. After
several days she came to a deep forest,
which she entered without hesitation, for
she knew no fear. She had not gone a
hundred paces under the arching limes,
when she was met by a band of robbers,
who stopped her and asked what she did
in their forest, and what she carried in her
bag. They were fierce, black-bearded<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</SPAN></span>
men, armed to the teeth with daggers,
cutlasses, pistols, dirks, hangers, blunderbusses,
and other defensive weapons; but
the princess gazed calmly on them, and
said haughtily,—</p>
<p>“Has your grandmother sold her mangle
yet?”</p>
<p>The effect was magical. The robbers
started back in dismay, crying, “The
countersign!” Then they hastily lowered
their weapons, and assuming attitudes
of abject humility, besought the princess
graciously to accompany them to their
master’s presence. With a lofty gesture
she signified assent, and the cringing,
trembling bandits led her on through the
forest till they reached an open glade,
into which the sunbeams glanced right
merrily. Here, under a broad oak-tree
which stood in the centre of the glade,
reclined a man of gigantic stature and
commanding mien, with a whole armory
of weapons displayed upon his person.
Hastening to their chief, the robbers
conveyed to him, in agitated whispers,
the circumstance of their meeting the
princess, and of her unexpected reply<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</SPAN></span>
to their questions. Hardly seeming to
credit their statement, the gigantic chieftain
sprang to his feet, and advancing
toward the princess with a respectful
reverence, begged her to repeat the remark
which had so disturbed his men. With
a royal air, and in clear and ringing tones,
the princess repeated,—</p>
<p>“<em>Has</em> your grandmother sold her mangle
yet?” and gazed steadfastly at the robber
chief.</p>
<p>He turned deadly pale, and staggered
against a tree, which alone prevented him
from falling.</p>
<p>“It is true!” he gasped. “We are
undone! The enemy is without doubt
close at hand, and all is over. Yet,”
he added with more firmness, and with
an appealing glance at the princess, “yet
there may be one chance left for us. If
this gracious lady will consent to go forward,
instead of returning through the
wood, we may yet escape with our lives.
Noble princess!” and here he and the
whole band assumed attitudes of supplication,
“consider, I pray you, whether
it would really add to your happiness to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</SPAN></span>
betray to the advancing army a few poor
foresters, who earn their bread by the
sweat of their brow. Here,” he continued,
hastily drawing something from a hole
in the oak-tree, “is a bag containing ten
thousand sapphires, each as large as a
pullet’s egg. If you will graciously deign
to accept them, and to pursue your
journey in the direction I shall indicate,
the Red Chief of the Rustywhanger will
be your slave forever.”</p>
<p>The princess, who of course knew that
there was no army in the neighborhood,
and who moreover did not in the least
care which way she went, assented to the
Red Chief’s proposition, and taking the
bag of sapphires, bowed her farewell
to the grateful robbers, and followed their
leader down a ferny path which led to the
farther end of the forest. When they
came to the open country, the robber
chieftain took his leave of the princess,
with profound bows and many protestations
of devotion, and returned to his
band, who were already preparing to
plunge into the impenetrable thickets of
the midforest.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The princess, meantime, with her two
bags of gems on her shoulders, fared
forward with a light heart, by dale and
by down, through moss and through
meadow. By-and-by she came to a fair
high palace, built all of marble and
shining jasper, with smooth lawns about
it, and sunny gardens of roses and gillyflowers,
from which the air blew so sweet
that it was a pleasure to breathe it. The
princess stood still for a moment, to taste
the sweetness of this air, and to look her
fill at so fair a spot; and as she stood
there, it chanced that the palace-gates
opened, and the young king rode out with
his court, to go a-catching of nighthawks.</p>
<p>Now when the king saw a right fair
princess standing alone at his palace-gate,
her rich garments dusty and travel-stained,
and two heavy sacks hung upon her
shoulders, he was filled with amazement;
and leaping from his steed, like the gallant
knight that he was, he besought her to tell
him whence she came and whither she
was going, and in what way he might
be of service to her.</p>
<p>But the princess looked down at her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</SPAN></span>
little dusty shoes, and answered never a
word; for she had seen at the first glance
how fair and goodly a king this was, and
she would not ask him the price of butter,
nor whether his grandmother had sold her
mangle yet. But she thought in her heart,
“Now, I have never, in all my life, seen
a man to whom I would so willingly say,
‘With all my heart!’ if he should ask
me to marry him.”</p>
<p>The king marvelled much at her silence,
and presently repeated his questions, adding,
“And what do you carry so carefully
in those two sacks, which seem over-heavy
for your delicate shoulders?”</p>
<p>Still holding her eyes downcast, the
princess took a ruby from one bag, and
a sapphire from the other, and in silence
handed them to the king, for she willed
that he should know she was no beggar,
even though her shoes were dusty. Thereat
all the nobles were filled with amazement,
for no such gems had ever been seen in
that country.</p>
<p>But the king looked steadfastly at the
princess, and said, “Rubies are fine, and
sapphires are fair; but, maiden, if I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</SPAN></span>
could but see those eyes of yours, I warrant
that the gems would look pale and dull
beside them.”</p>
<p>At that the princess raised her clear
dark eyes, and looked at the king and
smiled; and the glance of her eyes pierced
straight to his heart, so that he fell on his
knees and cried:</p>
<p>“Ah! sweet princess, now do I know
that thou art the love for whom I have
waited so long, and whom I have sought
through so many lands. Give me thy
white hand, and tell me, either by word
or by sign, that thou wilt be my queen
and my bride!”</p>
<p>And the princess, like a right royal
maiden as she was, looked him straight
in the eyes, and giving him her little
white hand, answered bravely, “<em>With
all my heart!</em>”</p>
<hr class="l1" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</SPAN></span></p>
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