igio--"
But here the baby was brought in by the nurse, and the queen almost
devoured it with kisses. And so the fairies were not invited! It was an
extraordinary thing, but none of the nobles could come to the christening
party when they learned that the fairies had not been asked. Some were
abroad; several were ill; a few were in prison among the Saracens; others
were captives in the dens of ogres. The end of it was that the king and
queen had to sit down alone, one at each end of a very long table,
arrayed with plates and glasses for a hundred guests--for a hundred
guests who never came!
"Any soup, my dear?" shouted the king, through a speaking-trumpet; when,
suddenly, the air was filled with a sound like the rustling of the wings
of birds.
_Flitter_, _flitter_, _flutter_, went the noise; and when the queen
looked up, lo and behold! on every seat was a lovely fairy, dressed in
green, each with a _most interesting-looking parcel_ in her hand. Don't
you like opening parcels? The king did, and he was most friendly and
polite to the fairies. But the queen, though she saw them distinctly,
took no notice of them. You see, she did not believe in fairies, nor in
her own eyes, when she saw them. So she talked across the fairies to the
king, just as if they had not been there; but the king behaved as
politely as if they were _real_--which, of course, they were.
When dinner was over, and when the nurse had brought in the baby, all the
fairies gave him the most magnificent presents. One offered a purse
which could never be empty; and one a pair of seven-leagued boots; and
another a cap of darkness, that nobody might see the prince when he put
it on; and another a wishing-cap; and another a carpet, on which, when he
sat, he was carried wherever he wished to find himself. Another made him
beautiful for ever; and another, brave; and another, lucky: but the last
fairy of all, a cross old thing, crept up and said, "My child, you shall
be _too_ clever!"
This fairy's gift would have pleased the queen, if she had believed in
it, more than anything else, because she was so clever herself. But she
took no notice at all; and the fairies went each to her own country, and
none of them stayed there at the palace, where nobody believed in them,
except the king, a little. But the queen tossed all their nice boots and
caps, carpets, purses, swords, and all, away into a dark lumber-room;
for, of course, she thought that they
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