<h2>Briar Rose</h2>
<p><span class="dropcap">A</span> LONG time ago there lived a King and Queen, who
said every day, ‘If only we had a child’; but for
a long time they had none.</p>
<p>It fell out once, as the Queen was bathing, that a frog crept
out of the water on to the land, and said to her: ‘Your wish
shall be fulfilled; before a year has passed you shall bring a
daughter into the world.’</p>
<p>The frog’s words came true. The Queen had a little girl
who was so beautiful that the King could not contain himself
for joy, and prepared a great feast. He invited not only his
relations, friends, and acquaintances, but the fairies, in order
that they might be favourably and kindly disposed towards
the child. There were thirteen of them in the kingdom, but
as the King had only twelve golden plates for them to eat
from, one of the fairies had to stay at home.</p>
<p>The feast was held with all splendour, and when it came
to an end the fairies all presented the child with a magic gift.
One gave her virtue, another beauty, a third riches, and so on,
with everything in the world that she could wish for.</p>
<p>When eleven of the fairies had said their say, the thirteenth
suddenly appeared. She wanted to revenge herself for not
having been invited. Without greeting any one, or even
glancing at the company, she called out in a loud voice:
‘The Princess shall prick herself with a distaff in her fifteenth
year and shall fall down dead’; and without another word
she turned and left the hall.</p>
<p>Every one was terror-struck, but the twelfth fairy, whose
wish was still unspoken, stepped forward. She could not
cancel the curse, but could only soften it, so she said: ‘It
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18"></SPAN></span>
shall not be death, but a deep sleep lasting a hundred years,
into which your daughter shall fall.’</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN name="ill05" id="ill05"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/ill05.png" width-obs="303" height-obs="425" alt="The fairy casts her curse" /></div>
<p class="caption">‘The Thirteenth Fairy.’</p>
<p>The King was so anxious to guard his dear child from the
misfortune, that he sent out a command that all the distaffs
in the whole kingdom should be burned.</p>
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<ANTIMG src="images/pl02.jpg" width-obs="395" height-obs="600" alt="The King could not contain himself for joy." /></div>
<p>As time went on all the promises of the fairies came true.
The Princess grew up so beautiful, modest, kind, and clever
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that every one who saw her could not but love her. Now it
happened that on the very day when she was fifteen years
old the King and Queen were away from home, and the
Princess was left quite alone in the castle. She wandered
about over the whole place, looking at rooms and halls as she
pleased, and at last she came to an old tower. She ascended
a narrow, winding staircase and reached a little door. A
rusty key was sticking in the lock, and when she turned it
the door flew open. In a little room sat an old woman with
a spindle, spinning her flax busily.</p>
<p>‘Good day, Granny,’ said the Princess; ‘what are you
doing?’</p>
<p>‘I am spinning,’ said the old woman, and nodded her head.</p>
<p>‘What is the thing that whirls round so merrily?’ asked
the Princess; and she took the spindle and tried to spin too.</p>
<p>But she had scarcely touched it before the curse was fulfilled,
and she pricked her finger with the spindle. The instant she
felt the prick she fell upon the bed which was standing near,
and lay still in a deep sleep which spread over the whole castle.</p>
<p>The King and Queen, who had just come home and had
stepped into the hall, went to sleep, and all their courtiers with
them. The horses went to sleep in the stable, the dogs in the
yard, the doves on the roof, the flies on the wall; yes, even
the fire flickering on the hearth grew still and went to sleep,
and the roast meat stopped crackling; the cook, who was
pulling the scullion’s hair because he had made some mistake,
let him go and went to sleep. The wind dropped, and on the
trees in front of the castle not a leaf stirred.</p>
<p>But round the castle a hedge of briar roses began to grow
up; every year it grew higher, till at last it surrounded the
whole castle so that nothing could be seen of it, not even the
flags on the roof.</p>
<p>But there was a legend in the land about the lovely sleeping
Briar Rose, as the King’s daughter was called, and from time
to time princes came and tried to force a way through the
hedge into the castle. They found it impossible, for the
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thorns, as though they had hands, held them fast, and the
princes remained caught in them without being able to free
themselves, and so died a miserable death.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN name="ill06" id="ill06"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/ill06.png" width-obs="402" height-obs="340" alt="The castle surrounded by briars" /></div>
<p class="caption">But round the castle a hedge of briar roses began to grow up.</p>
<p>After many, many years a Prince came again to the country
and heard an old man tell of the castle which stood behind the
briar hedge, in which a most beautiful maiden called Briar
Rose had been asleep for the last hundred years, and with
her slept the King, Queen, and all her courtiers. He knew
also, from his grandfather, that many princes had already
come and sought to pierce through the briar hedge, and had
remained caught in it and died a sad death.</p>
<p>Then the young Prince said, ‘I am not afraid; I am determined
to go and look upon the lovely Briar Rose.’</p>
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<SPAN name="pl03" id="pl03"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG src="images/pl03.jpg" width-obs="446" height-obs="600" alt="The young Prince said, 'I am not afraid; I am determined to go and look upon the lovely Briar Rose.'" /></div>
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The good old man did all in his power to dissuade him, but
the Prince would not listen to his words.</p>
<p>Now, however, the hundred years were just ended, and the
day had come when Briar Rose was to wake up again. When
the Prince approached the briar hedge it was in blossom, and
was covered with beautiful large flowers which made way for
him of their own accord and let him pass unharmed, and then
closed up again into a hedge behind him.</p>
<p>In the courtyard he saw the horses and brindled hounds
lying asleep, on the roof sat the doves with their heads under
their wings: and when he went into the house the flies were
asleep on the walls, and near the throne lay the King and
Queen; in the kitchen was the cook, with his hand raised
as though about to strike the scullion, and the maid sat with
the black fowl in her lap which she was about to pluck.</p>
<p>He went on further, and all was so still that he could hear
his own breathing. At last he reached the tower, and opened
the door into the little room where Briar Rose was asleep.
There she lay, looking so beautiful that he could not take
his eyes off her; he bent down and gave her a kiss. As he
touched her, Briar Rose opened her eyes and looked lovingly
at him. Then they went down together; and the King woke
up, and the Queen, and all the courtiers, and looked at each
other with astonished eyes. The horses in the stable stood
up and shook themselves, the hounds leaped about and
wagged their tails, the doves on the roof lifted their heads
from under their wings, looked round, and flew into the
fields; the flies on the walls began to crawl again, the fire in
the kitchen roused itself and blazed up and cooked the food,
the meat began to crackle, and the cook boxed the scullion’s
ears so soundly that he screamed aloud, while the maid finished
plucking the fowl. Then the wedding of the Prince and
Briar Rose was celebrated with all splendour, and they lived
happily till they died.</p>
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