<h2><SPAN name="ETHELINDA_OR_THE_ICE_KINGS_BRIDE" id="ETHELINDA_OR_THE_ICE_KINGS_BRIDE"></SPAN>ETHELINDA<br/>OR,<br/>THE ICE KING'S BRIDE.</h2>
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<p class="minus"><span class="hide">E</span><b>THELINDA</b>
lived alone with her father, Count
Constant, in a quiet country place, which had
always been her home. Her mother was
dead, and her father had long before fallen under
the displeasure of his king, and was sentenced to exile
for life in this lonely spot. Their castle was gray and
venerable, half of it in ruins, and near by grew a grove
of melancholy pine-trees; while only some stunted
rose-bushes, and a black pool of water, in which swam
a few antiquated carp, relieved the monotony of the
grounds within the broken walls surrounding their
dwelling.</p>
<p>One day a train of liveried servants on horseback,
escorting a splendid carriage, stopped on the road
near the castle.</p>
<p>Some accident had happened to the springs of the<span class="pagenum">[131]</span>
vehicle, and the two passengers inside were forced to
take refuge in the house of Ethelinda's father.</p>
<p>Count Constant himself, dressed in a faded court
costume, but looking handsome and stately, came
forth to receive his unexpected guests. He aided first
a tall thin girl to descend from the broken carriage,
and then, an elderly dame, richly dressed, who, throwing
back her veil, revealed to him the face of his
greatest enemy—the vindictive Duchess Amoretta.
This person, whom he had not seen for years, had
once been in love with Count Constant, and it was because
he preferred to her the young lady who afterward
became his wife, that the Duchess had poisoned
the mind of his sovereign against him. To her he
owed his banishment from court, and the loss of his
estates. During his wife's lifetime he had heard nothing
of the Duchess, and now to have to give her the
shelter of his roof was a terrible ordeal.</p>
<p>The Duchess, however, was very kind and considerate
in her manner to him. She made many apologies
for the accident which had brought her there, and introduced
to him her only child, the Lady Finella, who
was, truth to tell, the most ill-tempered, pert minx ever
seen, and a complete contrast to lovely Ethelinda.<span class="pagenum">[132]</span></p>
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<p>During supper, which the poor Count's servants
tried to make presentable with a few eggs cooked in
an omelette, a bottle of good wine, and a dish of stewed
pigeons, the Duchess Amoretta was pleased with everything.
She praised the cookery, she praised the tattered<span class="pagenum">[133]</span>
tapestries on the wall, she praised the Count's
youthful looks, and she praised Ethelinda, till that
modest maiden was quite overwhelmed.</p>
<p>When the two young ladies had retired (Ethelinda
giving up her own little tower bedroom to her visitor,
and creeping off somewhere to lie on a threadbare
couch), the Duchess became confidential. She implored
the Count to believe that enemies had come between
them. She said that slanderers had arisen to
tell him the wicked stories he had heard. She told
him that her one desire was to see him restored to
rank and fortune. And at last she drew from her
pocket a paper signed by the King, in which the
Count Constant was promised a free pardon on condition
of his immediate marriage with the Duchess
Amoretta.</p>
<p>The wily Duchess had planned the whole affair to
get possession of her old lover again, and at first the
Count, seeing himself caught in a trap as it were, was
very angry.</p>
<p>Then the Duchess told him to think of his lovely
young daughter, wasting her youth in this desolate
spot. She promised to Ethelinda a life of happiness
and prosperity. She worked upon the poor father with<span class="pagenum">[134]</span>
such artful words and lying promises, that, at last,
Count Constant signed the contract, engaging to follow
her in a few days to the capital, and there to give her
his hand in marriage.</p>
<p>Ethelinda watched the fine chariot roll away with
their unwelcome guests, next morning, and when it
was out of sight, turned and threw herself upon her
father's neck and kissed him fondly.</p>
<p>"How glad I am to get rid of them, papa!" she cried.
"The daughter was so spoilt and haughty, and the
mother was even worse; somehow I could only shudder
when she kissed me, in spite of the beautiful bracelet
she put upon my arm on taking leave."</p>
<p>"The Duchess means to be your best friend, my
dear," her father said gravely, and went off to his study
with a care-worn face. In a few days, he set out upon
his journey to the capital, giving Ethelinda no idea of
what he meant to do there.</p>
<p>Winter had set in, and a great snow fell. All the
country-side was covered with a mantle of purest white.
Ethelinda loved the frost and snow, and every day she
put on her little brown hood and cloak with the scarlet
lining, and set out for a walk in the forest, carrying a
bagful of crumbs, which she would scatter for her<span class="pagenum">[135]</span>
favorite little birds. One day, while thus employed,
she met an old woodman gathering sticks.</p>
<p>"Good-morning, daddy," said the girl in a pleasant
tone.</p>
<p>"It's not a good morning with me, girl," the old
man answered, crossly. "I'm frozen and starving too,
thanks to this accursed snow."</p>
<p>"Don't speak ill of my dear snow," said Ethelinda,
helping him to make his fagot. "Isn't it keeping the
ground warm, and sheltering our roots and seeds for
the spring-time? Come to the castle, if you will, and
you shall have hot soup and a corner of the kitchen-fire.
But you won't be allowed to abuse the beautiful
work of the frost, in my hearing, that I'll promise
you."</p>
<p>"Bravely said, fair maiden!" the old man exclaimed,
dropping his bundle of sticks, and vanishing behind a
screen of closely woven fir-trees. A moment later
Ethelinda saw a sleigh containing a solitary traveller,
drawn by a fleet black horse, dash by her like the
wind. The sleigh was shaped like a silver swan and
the bridle of the horse glittered with gems. The
traveller appeared to be a tall and stately youth, with
long fair locks and glowing cheeks. He was half hidden<span class="pagenum">[136]</span>
behind robes of snowy down, and as he shot swiftly
by, leaving in his wake a breath of icy wind, Ethelinda
fancied she heard him say, "We will meet again, dear
lady, we will meet again!"</p>
<p>When, wondering over this incident, she reached
the castle, it was to find there a letter from her father,
commanding her immediate attendance at court, and
announcing to her his marriage, which had already
taken place.</p>
<p>Poor Ethelinda, full of astonishment, and fearing she
knew not what, bade farewell to her dear home and
journeyed to the castle of the Duchess Amoretta. Here
she was received with tenderness by her father, who
commended her in loving accents to the care of her
new mother. Ethelinda could not help shuddering
more than before when the dreadful, painted old Duchess
stooped down to kiss her. She dared not look her
father in the face, but it was easy to see that he was
more unhappy in his new splendor than ever he had
been in exile and in poverty. Ethelinda sighed deeply,
and, looking around, encountered the snaky eyes of her
new step-sister, fixed on her with wicked triumph.</p>
<p>And now, how changed was Ethelinda's life. Little
by little, her father's companionship was withdrawn<span class="pagenum">[137]</span>
from her; his time was spent away from home, and
soon, a war breaking out, Count Constant made haste
to draw his sword in his king's service. A great battle
ensued, and one of the first to fall, while gallantly
fighting, was Ethelinda's father. He murmured a blessing
on his child, and saying he was glad to go, died
upon the battle-field, in the arms of his attendant.</p>
<p>The Duchess Amoretta, who by this time was
heartily tired of having Ethelinda on her hands, now
treated the poor girl with positive cruelty. A few
months after the Count's death, she made up her mind
to marry again, and in order to rid herself of her
troublesome step-daughter, consulted with her own
child, who was skilled in all sorts of wicked devices.</p>
<p>They built a summer-house extending over the river,
and made in the floor of it a trap-door covered with
moss and flowers, while beautiful vines grew around
the pillars, and a fountain played in the centre. Into
this pretty spot they invited Ethelinda to wander when
ever she wished to be alone.</p>
<p>One day the poor girl went inside the summer-house,
and began to weep for her father. Suddenly, a hand
was extended by some one concealed behind the
trellis-work of vines, and she was rudely pushed, so<span class="pagenum">[138]</span>
that she fell with all her weight upon the concealed
trap-door, and instantly plunged into the rushing
river below. One cry she uttered, and then to her astonishment,
although it was the morning of a balmy
summer's day, an icy breath blew over her, and above
the surface of the river there arose a bridge of glittering
ice, which she was enabled to cross in safety to
the bank.</p>
<p>Making her way back to the house of her step-mother,
Ethelinda was received with anger and astonishment.
How she could have escaped, neither of
her enemies could imagine. Ethelinda told nobody
of the wonderful ice-bridge, which at the moment of
her setting foot on shore had vanished like frost before
the sun. A few days after, she desired to take her
usual bath in the marble bath-room assigned to her
use. No sooner had she entered the door than two
strong women flew out from behind a curtain, and,
seizing her by the shoulders, thrust her into a tank of
boiling water they had prepared for the unfortunate
girl.</p>
<p>Ethelinda saw that she was about to die a terrible
death, and gave herself up for lost, when suddenly the
icy wind she had twice felt before, blew over her. As<span class="pagenum">[139]</span>
the two furies plunged her into the tank, and rushed
away, leaving her to her fate, she felt, instead of the
scalding heat she expected, the delicious warmth of a
tepid bath close round her limbs.</p>
<p>Again was she saved from evil by some unseen power;
but now she knew what a terrible enemy was in pursuit
of her, and determined to fly from the castle that
very night. She hid in a little closet on the staircase,
and, when night came, glided past the sleepy servants
on guard, and escaped through the great gate into the
open country.</p>
<p>Swift as her feet could carry her, Ethelinda fled.
Out of the city, into the deep woods, under the cold
glitter of the watching stars, the poor girl ran, every
moment fancying that she heard the messengers of the
cruel Duchess behind her. At last she fell down exhausted,
saying to herself, "Better to die here from
cold and starvation, than to be foully murdered by
that wicked woman." She lay for a moment resting
upon a bank of soft moss, and felt a sudden blast of
icy wind.</p>
<p>Then was heard the cracking of a whip, and out of
the woods came a sleigh driven by a solitary traveller.</p>
<p>Ethelinda had a vague idea that she had seen him<span class="pagenum">[140]</span>
once before, but fainted away, and knew nothing more
until she awoke to find herself in the sleigh, gliding
swiftly along, wrapped in warmest robes of snowy fur.</p>
<p>"Save me, save me from the Duchess!" she murmured
in a terrified voice.</p>
<p>"Sleep, poor child, you are safe now," a kind voice
sounded in her ear. "Are you warm? Are you comfortable?"</p>
<p>"Very warm, very comfortable," Ethelinda answered,
a strange drowsiness coming over her.</p>
<p>She slept again, and the black horse harnessed to
the sleigh bounded forward like the wind. And now
they passed through vast forests of pine and fir, into
the regions of perpetual snow. For Ethelinda's guide
was the young monarch of the frozen zone, and ruler
of all ice and frost. Long had he loved the young girl
secretly, and long had he vowed to make her his bride.</p>
<p>They stopped once, and now the sleigh was drawn
by a span of magnificent reindeer, pure white, with
collars of jewels, having their great antlers tipped with
sparkling gems. Over snowy mountain peaks they
glided, past chains of icebergs, with many a frozen sea
shining far below like a sapphire. It was piercingly
cold, and yet Ethelinda did not suffer. The only thing<span class="pagenum">[141]</span>
she could not control was her power of speech. Not a
word could she utter, and the stranger, too, spoke no
more, but smiled on her kindly, from time to time, as
he drove ahead.</p>
<p>At last they reached a superb palace, built of ice,
the roof fringed with icicles. An arch of many-colored
lights spanned the roof, and from every door and
window streamed forth a brilliant illumination.</p>
<p>"Welcome home!" said the stranger. "This is my
palace, and you shall be my queen, fair maiden; for I
am the King of the North Pole, and never, till now,
have I seen one worthy to share my throne."</p>
<p>A train of milk-white bears with golden chains
around their necks came out to receive the king and
Ethelinda. They entered the palace, which blazed
with splendid jewels on roof and walls. The throne
was made of a single opal, and the queen's crown, which
was immediately placed on Ethelinda's head, was composed
of a circlet of diamonds, each one as large as a
robin's egg.</p>
<p>The marriage took place at once; and Ethelinda's
husband proved so kind and loving, that she soon forgot
her early sorrows, and became as happy as all
queens are supposed to be. Her fame spread into<span class="pagenum">[142]</span>
many countries; and after a time, some celebrated
traveller, who visited her court, went back to the city
where Ethelinda's wicked step-mother still lived and
flourished, and gave the Duchess a message from the
beautiful Queen of the North Pole.</p>
<p>"Tell her that I forgive her all her unkindness to
me," Ethelinda had charged him to say, "since it was
the means of securing to me my present joy, and the
love of my dearest husband."</p>
<p>Ethelinda even sent gifts to her step-mother and sister;
to each a jewelled necklace of immense value, and a
robe woven from the down of the King's own eider-ducks,
which only sovereigns might wear. The Duchess
and Finella eagerly seized the presents, but they almost
died of spite to hear of Ethelinda's good luck. Night
and day they wondered how they, too, might have
similar fortune; and at length the Duchess determined
to dress her daughter in coarse clothes like those Ethelinda
had worn when found by the King of the North
Pole, and to make her sally forth to the border of the
forest.</p>
<p>Snow was falling fast when the young woman
reached the wood. She was dreadfully cold, and began
complaining and quarrelling, as usual. She did<span class="pagenum">[143]</span>
not hear the approach of a sleigh until it was close beside
her. There sat a handsome youth, driving a fleet
coal-black steed. He politely invited her to take a
drive, and, with many groans over her stiff limbs, she
got in. They flew over the ground, and for not a single
minute did Finella cease finding fault with everything.
She abused her mother for exposing her to
this dreadful cold, and vowed she should have rheumatism
and lumbago and pleurisy and influenza, all
together, next day. Her feet had chilblains already,
and her hands were so chapped they would never be fit
to be seen. In this agreeable strain, she went on till her
companion, growing impatient of her whining tones,
blew a sudden breath upon her—when, behold! all the
girl's conversation was frozen on her tongue, a few cross
words, like icicles, clinging to the tip of it!</p>
<p>When they stopped at the palace door, the King of the
North Pole (for he it was who had picked up Ethelinda's
step-sister), instead of having her conducted in state to
her apartments by a train of snow-white bears with
golden chains about their necks, gave the cross girl in
charge to an old brown bear of a housekeeper, with
instructions to keep her locked up until the Queen
should choose to set her free.<span class="pagenum">[144]</span></p>
<p>Ethelinda's kind heart softened toward her step-sister;
and, begging the King to forgive her, the Queen
hastened to set the prisoner at liberty. Finella, dressed
in the Queen's own robes, was taken into the royal
nurseries to see two splendid rosy babies, rolling upon
soft furs, and romping with a gentle little bear-cub,
who was their playmate.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i032.jpg" width-obs="459" height-obs="276" alt="The princes & their playmate." title=""> <p class="caption">The princes & their playmate.</p> </div>
<p>When the step-sister saw these treasures, she conceived
a wicked scheme of punishing Ethelinda through
her love for them. So, pretending to repent of her past
follies and unkindness, Finella was allowed by the King
and Queen to live in comfort in their home.</p>
<p>On the night of some festivity (I believe it was a<span class="pagenum">[145]</span>
special illumination by the Northern Lights), the King
and Queen went off sleighing in style, through their
dominions, leaving the babies in charge of their deceitful
step-aunt, who always kissed them and caressed
them, before folks, as though she loved them fondly.</p>
<p>As soon as the parents had disappeared, Finella
ordered another sleigh to be harnessed, and taking
the babies in her arms set forth. She attempted to
guide the reindeer, but, in an instant, the great creatures
were off like the wind, and soared up into the
air, as the King himself had trained them to do. And
now, how terrified was the wicked Finella! She knew
no words with which to stop her fiery steeds, and
presently sank, breathless and giddy, into the bottom
of the sleigh. Higher, faster they went; the babies,
like true sons of the frozen North, crowing with delight
in the piercing atmosphere.</p>
<p>The sleigh stopped upon an iceberg, and there in
the centre of the glittering blue pyramid sat the imprisoned
older brother of the King of the North Pole.
This wretch had been sentenced to be shut up there,
because he had tried to kill his father, the late King.
All of his body was changed to ice, excepting his heart,
which burnt like fire. The reindeer Finella had taken<span class="pagenum">[146]</span>
were those accustomed to be driven by the King whenever
he went to visit his wicked brother, whose eyes
sparkled as he saw the little princes within his power.
At last, he thought, he had a chance to be even with
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his enemies. He
gnashed his teeth,
shook his chains,
and stretched out
his long arms, inviting
the travellers
to come into
his castle.</p>
<p>"I have golden
apples and many
pretty things for
boys in here," he
said deceitfully;
but just as Finella,
seeing her opportunity,
was pushing
the children out of the sleigh into the grasp of
their cruel uncle, the reindeer set up a peculiar cry
which could be heard half round the globe.</p>
<p>Instantly a chill wind blew, and riding on the wings<span class="pagenum">[147]</span>
of a mighty sea-gull came the King of the North
Pole. Fire flashed from his angry eyes, and his face
was so terrible that the wicked sister and brother
cowered and cringed before it. Snatching his babies
in his arms, he replaced them unharmed in the sleigh.
For a moment, he seemed about to crush both culprits
to fragments in his wrath; but, relenting, he pronounced
their sentence—and Finella was condemned
to be the bride of the imprisoned brother. "Your fate
is just," said the King of the North Pole, to the wretch
within the iceberg; "I could not, if I tried, think of
any worse punishment than to give you a complaining
woman to share your exile."</p>
<p>And so Ethelinda was rid of her false step-sister,
and from that day forth nothing occurred to disturb
the serenity of the King's household.</p>
<p>As for the old Duchess (whose daughter had got a
bridegroom she had not reckoned on in the northern
country), she, like her hopeful child, lived and scolded
forever and a day.<span class="pagenum">[148]</span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i034.jpg" width-obs="595" height-obs="528" alt="Emma Carried Off by the Sea-King." title=""> <p class="caption">Emma Carried Off by the Sea-King.</p> </div>
<hr class="chapter">
<p><span class="pagenum">[149]</span></p>
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