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Fairies I Have Met.
by Maud Margaret Key Stawell.
_DEDICATION_
Before Penelope could toddle she lived far away among the oleanders. The sunbeams who came down to see the oleanders saw Penelope too. She sat on the gra.s.s and played with them, and they loved her very much.
One day the sunbeams were sad.
"Penelope is going to England," they said to each other.
"I am going to England with her," said Sunbeam the First.
"How?" asked the others.
"I shall hide in her hair," said Sunbeam the First.
"Then," said Sunbeam the Second, "I shall go too. I shall hide behind her eyelashes."
"And I," said Sunbeam the Third, "shall hide in her heart."
So Penelope went to England, with one sunbeam in her hair, and one in her eyes, and one in her heart.
When she was old enough to talk she spoke to the sunbeams.
"Shall you always stay in my hair?" she asked Sunbeam the First.
"That is more than I can say," he answered. "Perhaps when you are old I shall be obliged to go away."
Then Penelope asked Sunbeam the Second--
"Shall you always stay in my eyes?"
"I hope so," said Sunbeam the Second; "but perhaps if you are unhappy I shall be obliged to go away."
Then the corners of Penelope's mouth began to droop a little.
"Dear Sunbeam," she said to Sunbeam the Third, "shall you be always in my heart?"
"Yes, if you keep me there," said Sunbeam the Third.
"How can I keep you there?" asked Penelope.
"You must love the fairies," said the sunbeam, "and understand them when they speak to you. If you love the fairies even when you are old, I shall stay in your heart always."
These stories have been written for Penelope, so that she may love the fairies, and keep the sunbeam always in her heart.
_THE BIRD OF SHADOWS AND THE SUN-BIRD_
Little Agatha lived in the days when castles were as common in the land as cottages are now, and when there were plenty of magicians always ready to help people out of difficulties.
One of the castles was Agatha's home. It stood on a hill and was surrounded by a dark wood. Agatha was a lonely little girl: she had no sisters or brothers to play with. She used to stand at the narrow window in the castle tower and look out into the wood, and long to run about with other little girls. If you had seen her you would have thought her a very funny figure in her long gown reaching nearly to the ground, and a close cap over her curls.
In the evening Agatha could see very little when she stood at the window, but still she stood there and looked at the dark wood. It was then that the nightingale, the Bird of Shadows, sang to her; and this was what she liked better than anything else. She thought the nightingale's voice was lovely to hear, and she wondered why it was so sad.
Evening after evening the lonely little girl looked out through the tower window listening to the nightingale, till she felt that he was her friend. Sometimes she spoke to him.
"How much I should like to fly out of the window and be a nightingale too!" she said. "Then we would play together in the wood, and I should have a voice like yours--ever so sweet and ever so sad."
Sometimes she tried to sing, but she found her voice was not in the least like the nightingale's.
Every day she became more anxious to be a nightingale, until at last she thought about it always, and yet seemed no nearer to her wish. She hoped sometimes that her curls might turn into feathers; but after several weeks of wishing she saw that the curls were still made of yellow hair.
She began to be afraid she would never be anything but a little girl.
One day she heard some of the maids talking together. They were speaking of the Wise Man, the Magician, who lived in the dark cave on the side of the hill, and could do the most wonderful things. In fact, they said, there was hardly anything he couldn't do; you had only to tell him what you wanted most and he could manage it for you.
"Perhaps he could turn me into a nightingale," thought Agatha. "I'll go and ask him, anyway."
So while the maids were still talking she slipped out of the castle, and through the wood, and down the hill, till she came to the dark cave. Her long frock caught on the brambles as she went, and her hands were a good deal scratched, and once she tripped and fell. But of course she did not mind anything of that kind, because she was thinking all the time about the nightingale.
Agatha walked into the cave without knocking, and found the Magician at home. I dare say you know that all good Magicians have kind faces and long white beards. This one was a good Magician, so he had a kind face and a long white beard. Agatha was not in the least afraid of him. She told him at once why she had come.
"Please," she said, "I want to be a nightingale."
"A nightingale, my dear?" said the Wise Man. "That is a very strange thing for you to want to be! Don't you know that the nightingale is the Bird of Shadows, who sings by night and is very sad?"
"I shouldn't mind that a bit," said Agatha, "if I could only fly about and sing with a beautiful voice."
"Well, then," said the Wise Man, "if you don't mind being sad, this is what you must do. Every day you must come here to see me, and each time you must bring me one of the pearls from your necklace."
Agatha clasped her hands tightly round her neck, as if to save her pearls. She wore them in a chain, and the chain was so long that it pa.s.sed twice round her neck and then fell in a loop that reached nearly to her waist.
"Oh, must it be my pearls?" she asked eagerly. "Would nothing else do instead? I have some very nice things at home--really nice things. I have some lovely toys, and a gold chain, and a pony, and--oh, lots of things. Wouldn't you like some of those?"
"No," said the Wise Man, "I must have the pearls if you want to fly about and sing with a beautiful voice. Nothing else will do. For every pearl you bring me I will give you a feather from the nightingale, the Bird of Shadows."
Agatha went home slowly, still clasping her pearls tightly in her hands.
She liked them better than anything she had. She liked to watch the soft lights and shades on them, and to think of the wonderful sea they came from. She did not feel sure that it was worth while to give them up, even for the sake of being a bird and learning to sing.