<h2><SPAN name="BLONDINA_OR_THE_TURKEY-QUEEN" id="BLONDINA_OR_THE_TURKEY-QUEEN"></SPAN>BLONDINA;<br/>OR,<br/>THE TURKEY-QUEEN.</h2>
<ANTIMG src="images/drop-a.jpg" width-obs="81" height-obs="82" alt="A" title="A" class="split">
<p class="minus"><span class="hide">A</span><b>CERTAIN</b>
king had two daughters, one of
them lovely and accomplished, and the other
an ugly, cross-tempered personage, who early
in life took to meddling with the black arts, and learned
a great deal more of magic than she did of any thing
else. Blondina, on the contrary—for so the pretty
princess was named—was the joy of all her nurses, and
governesses, and tutors, and music masters, from earliest
infancy. Her one fault was a tendency to laugh
aloud on the slightest provocation. At ten years old
she could speak many languages, play on all known
instruments, write essays and sermons, dance like a
sylph, sing like a nightingale, and make chocolate caramel.
Vixetta, the elder of the two sisters, before she
had reached the same age, had made short work of <i>her</i>
instructors, wearing out the health and spirits of a<span class="pagenum">[212]</span>
governess in a week, and driving twenty-four tutors into
the lunatic asylum, while her head-nurse was speedily
reduced to skin and bone, and took a permanent
situation as the living
skeleton in a dime-museum.</p>
<ANTIMG src="images/i050.jpg" width-obs="267" height-obs="387" alt="Vixetta" title="" class="split">
<p class="caption split">Vixetta</p>
<p>The poor king
remonstrated in vain
with his headstrong elder
daughter. Ordinary
scolding had not the
slightest effect upon her;
black marks and crosses
against her name in the
report-book only made
her laugh scornfully; and
any attempt at bodily
punishment ended in the
Princess Vixetta throwing
herself flat upon the
ground, turning purple in
the face, and foaming at the mouth with rage in a way
to daunt the stoutest spirit. So, for this reason, the
unfortunate girl was allowed to follow her own fancies,
stealing off at dusk nobody knew whither, although it<span class="pagenum">[213]</span>
was suspected that her favorite haunts were the black
depths of a pine forest near the palace—where the country
folk never cared to ramble, even in broad daylight—or
a certain ruined tower, filled with bats and owls and
serpents. One night a peasant, who approached this
tower in search of a lost cow, saw green lights dancing
madly around the broken walls, heard wild shrieks
of laughter issue from within, and, on venturing to
insert his inquisitive nose into a chink, had it tweaked
by two red-hot fingers; immediately afterward, he
averred, he had seen the Princess Vixetta, in true
witch-dress, shoot by him on a broom-stick, leaving a
trail of brimstone in her wake. On reaching home he
found his sheep dead, his best cows gone dry, and his
children ill of a fever. Such tales as these, of which
there were many current in the country-side, came from
time to time to the king's ears, and not being able to
gainsay them, <i>because of information he had got on his
own private account</i>, the unfortunate parent resigned
himself to sink slowly to the tomb. In fact he courted
death rather than shunned it. Whenever he took cold,
he would sit all night long, in wet shoes, in the draft
of two open windows; and if that did not make him
worse, would send away the doctors, refuse medicine,<span class="pagenum">[214]</span>
and try to beat his brains out on the marble floor of
the palace bedroom. At last, one day, he choked, on
too large a mouthful of beefsteak, and when the physicians
endeavored to relieve him, waved them away,
and cheerfully expired!</p>
<ANTIMG src="images/i051.jpg" width-obs="381" height-obs="374" alt="Blondina." title="" class="split">
<p class="caption split">Blondina.</p>
<p>The Princess Blondina was immediately proclaimed
queen in her father's stead. Nothing was heard but
praises of the charming new sovereign, who, after the<span class="pagenum">[215]</span>
period of mourning had passed away, ascended the
throne with much pomp and ceremony. All of this
was gall and worm-wood to the envious Vixetta, who,
but for the kindness of her sister, would have been
sent, by a vote of all the people, into exile in a
distant land. Blondina announced that the Princess
Vixetta should remain in her palace, and be offered an
opportunity to reform her bad ways. Vixetta, thereupon,
pretending to weep, promised to do better, and
to give up associating with her evil favorites, the
witches, warlocks, and magicians; but, in secret, her
time was spent in conjuring a method to get rid of her
beautiful sister, and to mount the throne in her stead.</p>
<p>One warm summer day, Queen Blondina had just
come in from rowing in her silver barge along the
windings of the little river which watered the palace
grounds. She rested for a while in the garden upon a
bank of roses, myrtles, jasmine, and lilies-of-the-valley,
while allowing her maids-of-honor to fan her with huge
fans of white ostrich plumes, and listening to the drip
of fountains of orange-flower water, and eau-de-cologne.
Suddenly, she espied a poor old tattered crone, carrying
a basket of luscious fruit, such as none of the
queen's own gardens or green-houses could produce.<span class="pagenum">[216]</span>
Pomegranates there were, dropping sweetest juices
when cleft in twain, purple figs that melted upon the
tongue, rosy nectarines, crimson plums frosted with
silvery dew, and bunches of grapes glowing like jewels
where the sunbeams touched their clusters. Queen
Blondina sat up, and exclaimed with delight, "Oh! Goody, pray set your basket down. My servants
will pay you handsomely for your lovely fruit."</p>
<p>"Willingly, your Majesty," said the old woman.
"You are welcome to the contents of my basket, if
you will but leave me the single hazel-nut at the very
bottom of it."</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i048.jpg" width-obs="600" height-obs="386" alt="Queen Blondina Resting in her Garden." title=""> <p class="caption">Queen Blondina Resting in her Garden.</p> </div>
<p>The queen consented, with a laugh at the absurdity
of her wanting that one insignificant little hazel-nut,
when such a delightful treat was at her service. Her
servants unpacked the basket, and there, sure enough,
at the bottom, was a tiny brown nut.</p>
<p>"Queer, that she should desire to keep back that one
little nut," thought the queen. "I wonder why? Can
it be so very delicious to the taste, or what? I wish I
could see its inside."</p>
<p>And so she went on, wondering, and exciting her
own imagination, till, pretty soon, Blondina would
have given all the rest of the basketful for the possession<span class="pagenum">[217]</span>
of that single mysterious nut! She began by offering
one gold piece, then another, till a glittering pile
lay at the crone's feet, but still the old woman held
out against parting with her treasure.</p>
<p>At last, Blondina burst into tears, when the crone
appeared to be melted by her sorrow, and, advancing,
whispered in her ear.</p>
<p>"If I give you this nut," she said, "it shall be on
one condition, only, your Majesty; and that is, that
you crack it in the presence of your prime minister
alone, in some remote corner of your palace."</p>
<p>Blondina gladly consented, and sending away her
attendants, took possession of the nut, and summoned
her prime minister to her side. This functionary was
a very stern and important officer of State, who had
been foremost in the movement to banish the Princess
Vixetta from the court. He arrived all breathless, at
the queen's behest, and in the meantime the old crone
had disappeared as mysteriously as she came. Blondina
ordered the prime minister to follow her to a
secluded summer-house, where, eagerly cracking the
nut with her royal high-heeled shoe, she found inside
only a few pinches of white powder, and a scroll containing
some fine writing in an unknown tongue.<span class="pagenum">[218]</span></p>
<p>"Thanks to my love of study, your Majesty," modestly
suggested the prime minister, "I have mastered
the only language you have left unacquired, which happens
to be Arabic. On this bit of paper, I can decipher
certain instructions to the finder."</p>
<p>"Tell me them, quickly, my dear lord," said the enchanted
princess, "and I will apply myself to the study
of Arabic to-morrow. So much for a neglected education,"
she added, with a sigh that she had left anything
so important undone; for, as I have said before,
this princess had a passion for acquiring languages.</p>
<p>"If the finder of this treasure desires to acquaint
himself with the language of the animal world, and to
take the form of any other living thing, he has only to
snuff up a pinch of the enclosed powder, bow to the
earth three times, and cry the name of the creature he
desires to become, followed by these exact words:—</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">'Kurri-kuree,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Changed would I be.'<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>"At once he will assume the likeness of the thing
named, and will understand all he hears going on
around him, remaining in that shape as long as he
may choose. Whenever he wishes to resume his own<span class="pagenum">[219]</span>
natural form, he has only to bow himself again three
times to the earth, and repeat the formula already
given. But let him, during the period of transformation,
especially beware of laughing aloud—or he will
inevitably forget the formula, and run the risk of remaining
as he has chosen to be."</p>
<p>"This is the most delightful thing I ever had happen
to me," said the merry young queen, clapping her
hands. "Come, my lord, I am dying to try the experiment.
Suppose we become two turkeys, and
wander into the barn-yard. Nothing could please me
more than a little adventure of that kind. Besides,
you forget I have never studied Turkish, and this will
be an excellent opportunity."</p>
<p>The prime minister, who was a man of sober years,
beyond the taste for such mad-cap frolics, remonstrated
in vain with his wilful mistress. Blondina would have
her way; and, in a short time, behold both queen and
minister indulging in a solemn pinch of white snuff,
and pronouncing distinctly the magic formula, while
inclining themselves humbly to the earth!</p>
<p>At once, Blondina's gown of silken tissue was exchanged
for a suit of neat brown mottled feathers, while
the prime minister became just such a huge and unwieldy<span class="pagenum">[220]</span>
gobbler as would take first prize in a Christmas
poultry show!</p>
<p>"Oh! what splendid fun!" the queen began, dying
to laugh at her companion. But reflecting upon the
possible consequences of this indiscretion, she became
grave and silent, while the humiliated prime minister
waddled after her into the barn-yard, whither his perverse
little sovereign now took her way, leaving the
hazel-nut securely hidden in a corner of the summer-house.</p>
<p>In the multitude of feathered folk assembled in the
enclosure, our two turkeys passed almost unnoticed at
first. They were surprised to find very much the
same sort of talk going on among their new friends,
as among those they had left. The same struggle for
prizes and for place, the same greedy rapacity, the
same love of gossip and display. Two new peacocks
had that day been added to the collection, and were
strutting up and down like fashionable loungers, discussing
all the affairs of the nation and the conduct of
the rulers; and, in listening to their discourse, the queen
found herself much enlightened about many of her
subjects, and their doings.</p>
<p>"As to her Majesty, Queen Blondina," said one of<span class="pagenum">[221]</span>
the peacocks, sending his tail up in a magnificent fan
when he saw the admiring gaze of two young guinea
hens bent upon him, "I have reason to believe that this
unfortunate young woman is doomed soon to fall a
victim to the wiles of that powerful enchantress, her
sister, who, as is well known to all of us, has just become
the sovereign of the underground fraternity of
magicians, against whose spells all other witches and
warlocks can do nothing."</p>
<p>Blondina strained her ears to catch the answer; but
the two talkers had passed on, and she heard a sharp
voice say close beside her, "Come now, no struggling, if you please, Mr. Mole.
I have not tasted so much as a mouse to-day, and you
have crossed my path in the nick of time."</p>
<p>"Dear Miss Tame Owl," pleaded the little velvet-coated
victim, held tight in the claws of a spinster-owl, domesticated
in the barn-yard by Blondina's special
orders, "I must entreat you to let me off this time;
I was hurrying to my daughter's wedding, and mistook
the way, straying into this dreadful place by the
most unfortunate mischance. Consider the feelings
of my family, who are all assembled and expecting
me."<span class="pagenum">[222]</span></p>
<p>"Come now, no nonsense," said the cross old thing.
"My mouth is fairly watering for you."</p>
<p>She was about to cut short the victim's observations
in the most abrupt manner by taking him bodily into
her crop, when Blondina interposed, and flying at the
owl, boxed her ears soundly. At this, the venerable
lady was so unpleasantly taken by surprise, that she
opened her mouth to gasp, and out fell the mole, who
instantly scuttled away, but not without bestowing
upon his turkey benefactress the most ardent thanks.
After this little incident, Blondina's attention was distracted
by a variety of curious studies in fowl-life, and
she forgot all about her companion, the prime minister,
until, chancing to look around, she beheld him the
centre of an admiring throng of ducks, geese, and
chickens, whose numbers were constantly increasing.
"How grand he is!" "How big!" "How noble!"
echoed on every side; and the prime minister, who
was very vain, drooped his wings, set up his tail, and
puffed himself into a magnificent fluffy ball. "Never
have we beheld a turkey of so majestic a bearing!"
cried a gushing goose-widow, and a pair of young lady
ducklings rolled up their eyes in rapture and nodded
assent. The prime minister was in his glory.<span class="pagenum">[223]</span></p>
<p>"Yes, I am indeed the champion," he said, swelling
into a balloon of feathers. Just then, Queen Blondina's
own pet kitten, Floss, wandered across the yard,
and having no especial occupation in view, charged at
full scamper upon the prime minister, who, alas! for
his boasted dignity, subsided ingloriously, and, shutting
himself up tight, fairly turned tail and ran away,
looking so excessively crest-fallen and foolish that
Blondina could not resist bursting into a long and
merry peal of laughter.</p>
<p>"What have you done, your Majesty?" cried the
alarmed prime minister, now remembering himself, as
together they took refuge in a neighboring field. "Is
it possible you can have forgotten; and, for my part, I
saw nothing to laugh about. I never imagined a more
dreadful beast than that unmannerly little pet of yours
which attacked me."</p>
<p>The queen broke out afresh into laughter, and
laughed until she cried. Then, seeing the discomfiture
of the prime minister, she decided that she had for
to-day had enough of the animal world, and would indulge
no more in such amusements until to-morrow.</p>
<p>"I beg ten thousand pardons, my dear lord," she
said, shaking with suppressed laughter. "But if you<span class="pagenum">[224]</span>
could only have seen yourself! Ha, ha! However,
we have nothing now to do but bow three times, thus"—suiting
the action to the word, "and say—Kik-kuk-kik!
Dear me, what is it we must say? I can't
for the life of me remember it."</p>
<p>The prime minister was as much at a loss.</p>
<p>"Perhaps your Majesty has forgotten <i>the price you
were to pay for a laugh</i>," he observed, bitterly.</p>
<p>Blondina looked at him in blank horror. Too truly
had she forgotten the formula, and turkeys they must
remain!</p>
<p>And now, how sad their plight! In the midst of
their other tribulations, hunger assailed them, and
they could not eat the food provided for the rest. So
they wandered into the fields and forest, picking at
berries here and there; though, when evening came,
footsore and weary, they determined to go back into the
palace barn-yard, and see what was taking place there.</p>
<p>They found all the animals and fowls excited over
the events of the day, and soon heard the news that
Queen Blondina had died suddenly that morning,
leaving a will appointing her sister to reign in her
stead.</p>
<p>Next day a funeral took place, when the coffin was<span class="pagenum">[225]</span>
filled by a lovely waxen image of the late queen, and
was placed in the vault beside her father. The false
Vixetta, dressed in mourning, had followed weeping
after it.</p>
<p>Blondina and the prime minister now saw that they
were indeed under the spell of a powerful enchantress,
and resolved to travel to the dwelling of a certain
wise woman in search of advice.</p>
<p>After a long journey, the two turkeys reached the
hut of the wise woman, and told her their pitiful
tale.</p>
<p>"Unfortunately, I have no power against Queen
Vixetta since she has become the sovereign of the underground
band," said the wise woman. "But, if you
could gain an entrance to one of their Friday councils,
you might pick up something to your advantage there."
And then, as wise women speak but once in twenty-four
hours, she shut the door in their faces, and left them
to their fate.</p>
<p>Blondina and the prime minister repaired to the
ruined tower whither Vixetta was wont to go on Fridays;
and there, hiding behind a wall, they saw the wicked
sorceress arrive and, lifting a trap-door in the cellar,
disappear from sight. While they remained above,<span class="pagenum">[226]</span>
lamenting their hard fate, Blondina saw a tiny black
object emerge from the ground at her feet, then another
and another, till a troop of them were assembled.
These were moles, and their leader, addressing the
queen, informed her that he it was she had saved from
the crop of the owl.</p>
<p>"We have heard of your distressing predicament,
your Majesty," the mole added, with deep respect;
"and hasten to offer our services to conduct you to the
council chamber of the underground band."</p>
<p>Blondina thanked the mole fervently, and found,
upon following him, that with his companions he had
burrowed a long and beautifully smooth tunnel. Glow-worms
were ranged along the sides to light the way,
and every thing was arranged for her comfort. After a
considerable time had elapsed, the travellers reached a
gallery leading directly into a vaulted chamber where
the witches and warlocks sat, each upon a cushion
formed of a huge and swollen toad. In their midst,
upon a throne made of serpents intertwined, sat the
Queen Vixetta, around whose brow flickered a wreath
of blue flames. Ah! she was a terrible witch to look
upon. Blondina shuddered to remember the kisses
she had often innocently pressed upon that skinny<span class="pagenum">[227]</span>
forehead and those lips of
lurid red. Vixetta was in
high spirits; she and her
familiars hatched mischief
together, and gloated over
their evil doings in fiendish
glee. Then Vixetta listened
to the reports of each of the
wicked creatures in turn;
and, to Blondina's astonishment,
in the narrators of
these tales of witchcraft she
recognized more than one
of the most respected of
her own subjects. Some of
them were crones ancient
and palsied, others were
young and blooming girls
Vixetta had led astray;
among the warlocks were
the gray-haired miller, the
good sexton, and a courtier
in whom the queen had
placed peculiar confidence. All were attended by<span class="pagenum">[228]</span>
black deformed creatures, half cat, half human being.
In the centre of the circle was a fire, and before it they
set up the very waxen image of the queen which had
been buried in her stead. Into this little imps were
ordered to thrust sharp blades and needles in the region
of the heart, while Vixetta pronounced a spell, at
which all the others laughed rejoicingly.</p>
<ANTIMG src="images/i052.jpg" width-obs="242" height-obs="611" alt="" title="" class="splitr">
<p>"I'll warrant my lady Blondina will be cured of her
love of laughing, after this—as well as of her curiosity.
Long may she wander in her present shape," said the
sorceress. "It was a merry trick I played her and
that audacious old prime minister, who sought to do
me harm."</p>
<p>"And what, pray, was the rhyme your Majesty bid
them recall?" asked the courtier warlock, grinning maliciously.</p>
<p>"A simple one," replied the sorceress, "and you will
remember it was once a password in our band,—</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">'Kurri-kuree,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Changed would I be.'"<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>Blondina almost betrayed herself in her delight. She
repeated the words again and again, in mind, keeping
profoundly silent until the witch-revels were at an end;<span class="pagenum">[229]</span>
and at cock-crow the unholy gang broke up, vanishing
like smoke through a trap-door in the ceiling of the vault.</p>
<p>"And now, dear little mole, take us back again,"
said the turkey-queen, who longed to breathe the free
air of heaven and to break her awful spell.</p>
<p>"May it please your Majesty," said the mole, looking
very unhappy, "there is a new difficulty. Yonder
image of you which they consumed in the fire, is a
fresh enchantment that dooms you to remain perpetually
in the place where you now are; and I find by
consultation with a friend of mine, a bat who lives in
this cave, and who is the most kind and obliging person,
that on only one condition can you now leave
this spot, and that, I hardly dare name to you."</p>
<p>"Summon this bat to appear before me immediately,"
cried the wretched queen, who, finding that
her feet were stuck fast to the earth, was truly overwhelmed,
while the prime minister gave himself up to
complete despair.</p>
<p>The bat appeared, and a more repulsive huge creature
it is impossible to picture; but his voice was gentle
and his manner most humble and conciliatory. He
began to apologize for presenting himself before the
queen, when she interrupted him impetuously.<span class="pagenum">[230]</span></p>
<p>"Quick—quick! tell me the condition on which I
may leave this horrible place, where I shall die if I remain
a moment longer. Who are you? why are you
here? and why should we trust in you when every
living thing in this foul spot is devoted to the service
of the evil one?"</p>
<p>"I, like yourself, am a victim of, not a partner in,
crime, your Majesty," said the bat, with dignity. "If
you will permit——"</p>
<p>"But I can't stop to listen to anything," sobbed the
poor little turkey-queen. "Get me into the daylight
somehow or other, and then I will hear you gladly.
Oh! kind Mr. Bat, forgive my unkind words; only free
me from this living tomb, if it be possible."</p>
<p>"You have been told that it is possible, lady," said
the bat, pathetically; "but, to be brief, since you insist
upon it—only by promising your fair hand in marriage
to——"</p>
<p>"To whom?" cried Blondina, in astonishment</p>
<p>"To me," said the bat, withdrawing more into the
shadows of the vault.</p>
<p>Blondina screamed with horror.</p>
<p>"Oh! never, never," she exclaimed, bursting again
into tears of anguish.<span class="pagenum">[231]</span></p>
<p>The mole, the bat and the turkey prime minister
consulted together in low whispers; and the last-named
gentleman, addressing the queen, set before her the
hopeless situation in which she now was, and urged her
to accept the proposition of the bat.</p>
<p>"Hear me, too, fair queen," said the voice of the
bat. "I swear that if you consent, you shall never regret
it. Only trust me, and all will go well. In consigning
me to this spot, your wicked sister, who, in
my former estate desired to marry me herself, in spite
of my aversion for her, swore that never should I be
free from her enchantment, until a beautiful young
bride should come to the rescue and promise to marry
me, as I am, without asking any questions. Then, and
then only, I might escape, taking my bride and her
attendants with me."</p>
<p>"But your appearance—pardon me," said poor
Blondina; "it is too dreadful for anything."</p>
<p>"Trust me," repeated the bat; and, in desperation,
Blondina murmured a promise to be his bride.</p>
<p>Instantly the bat flew with alacrity into a corner
of the vault, and, bringing thence a bunch of mistletoe,
angelica, and mountain-ash, waved it thrice in a
circle around Blondina, who up to that moment had<span class="pagenum">[232]</span>
remained as if rooted to the spot where she stood.
The spell broke, and Blondina, starting joyfully forward,
repeated, at his request, the same ceremony of
disenchantment for the bat, as also for the prime minister;
and all three of them, accompanied by the faithful
mole, took their way to the upper regions without
delay. Upon reaching the meadow where they had
entered the underground passage, Blondina and the
prime minister lost no time in running back to the
summer-house, where, regaining the hidden hazel nut,
they safely and joyfully resumed their own true shapes.</p>
<p>"And now, gentle lady," said the bat, who had flown
after them, keeping his distance modestly, "I pray
you to perform for me another kindly action. Close
your eyes, and sprinkle me with this powder, at the
same time touching my head with the witch-defying
plants. Then, kindle a fire with these fagots of wood
left here by your gardener, and cast me into the hottest
portion of it."</p>
<p>Blondina shrank from the task, but, finding the bat
as determined as he was calm and dignified, obeyed him
without another word of protest. Aided by the now
alert and cheerful prime minister, she kindled a fire
upon the hearth of the little summer-house; and when<span class="pagenum">[233]</span>
it blazed high, and hot coals fell into the centre, she
followed the bat's directions to the letter. Immediately
there was a loud explosion; the hideous bat skin
split asunder and shrivelled up, revealing a beautiful
young prince, who stepped unsinged from the ring of
flame, and bent his knee before the Queen Blondina.
She recognized in him a playmate of her childhood,
Prince Florizel, son of a neighboring monarch, who
years before had disappeared from his father's court,
and had been mourned as dead by his sorrowing relatives.
To enchant him, in punishment for his scorn
of her, had been one of the first acts of Vixetta's acquired
magic; and to accomplish it, the wretched girl
had bargained away her entire life to the service of
the Evil One.</p>
<p>Blondina greeted Florizel with the utmost pleasure
and assured him of her willingness to fulfil the pledge
she had made to the dreaded bat-lover. They returned
to the palace, and on being observed by the
attendants, who, believing them to be ghosts, ran terrified
away, had some difficulty in persuading people
that they were alive and in the flesh. Then, what joy
reigned over the palace. Quickly the news spread
through the city and kingdom. The indignant people<span class="pagenum">[234]</span>
flocked around the apartments of Vixetta, who was
still asleep after her orgies of the previous night, and,
summoning her to come forth, declared that she should
instantly be put to death in the presence of her victims.
The miserable sorceress fell upon her knees, and
begged for her life. Again the generous Blondina
entreated that her sister might be spared; but Prince
Florizel interfered, and insisted that, for the future
safety of his queen, Vixetta should then and there be
compelled to take a pinch of the magic powder and
change herself into a bat. This was done, and the
sorceress, flying from the window, was never heard of
more.</p>
<p>Blondina gave her hand and heart to Prince Florizel,
as soon as he returned from a visit to his parents, who
were overjoyed to regain their long-lost son and heir.
The marriage took place with great magnificence, and
the royal couple lived in peace for the remainder of
their long and useful lives. They would often walk
in the direction of the poultry-yard, and Blondina loved
to tell her husband of all the things she had heard and
seen there when in her turkey shape.</p>
<p>But the prime minister, after he had weeded out
of the kingdom certain obnoxious individuals strongly<span class="pagenum">[235]</span>
resembling the warlocks seen at the underground
council, preferred to assume a dignified forgetfulness
of all that had passed during his enforced experience
as a feathered biped. To the latest day of his life
he would always cross the road to avoid meeting a
turkey-gobbler, and for the race of pet kittens he continued
to maintain the most unconquerable dislike.</p>
<p>By the laws of the kingdom, to kill or injure a mole
was made a capital offence; and once every year a little
blind gentleman in a fine black velvet coat arrived at
the palace to pay his respects to their majesties, who
received him with every mark of favor and affection.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum">[237]</span></p>
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