Cinderella
or the Little Glass Slipper
ONCE upon a time there lived a gentleman who married
twice. His second wife was a widow with two grown-up daughters, both somewhat past
their prime, and this woman would have been the proudest and most overbearing
in the world had not her daughters exactly resembled her with their fine airs
and insolent tempers. The husband, too, had by his first wife a child of his
own, a young daughter, and so good and so gentle that she promised to grow up
into the living image of her dead mother, who had been the most lovable of
women.
The
wedding festivities were no sooner over than the stepmother began to show
herself in her true colours. She could not endure the
girl’s good qualities, which by contrast rendered her own daughters the more
odious. She put her to drudge at the meanest household work, and thus she and
her precious darlings not only wreaked their spite but saved money to buy
themselves dresses and finery. It was the child who scoured the pots and pans,
scrubbed the floors, washed down the stairs, polished the tables, ironed the
linen, darned the stockings, and made the beds. She herself slept at the top of
the house in a garret, upon a wretched straw mattress, while her sisters had
apartments of their own with inlaid floors, beds carved and gilded in the
latest fashion, and mirrors in which they could see themselves from head to
foot.
Yet they
were so helpless, or rather they thought it so menial to do anything for
themselves, that had they but a ribbon to tie, or a
bow to adjust, or a bodice to be laced, the child must be sent for. When she
came it was odds that they met her with a storm of abuse, in this fashion:—
“What do
you mean, pray, by answering the bell in this state? Stand before the glass and
look at yourself! Look at your hands—faugh! How can you suppose we should allow
you to touch a ribbon, or even come near us, with such hands? Run downstairs,
slut, and put yourself under the kitchen pump”—and so on.
“How can I
help it?” thought the poor little drudge. “If I do not run at once when the
bell rings, they scold me for that. Yet they ring—both of them together
sometimes—a minute after setting me to rake out a grate
and sift the ashes. As for looking at myself in the glass, gladly would I do it
if they allowed me one. But they have told me that if
I had a glass I should only waste time in front of it.”
She kept
these thoughts to herself, however, and suffered her ill-usage patiently, not
daring to complain to her father, who would, more-over, have joined with the
others in chiding her, for he was wholly under his wife’s thumb; and she had
enough of chiding already. When she had done her work she used to creep away to
the chimney-corner and seat herself among the cinders, and from this the
household name for her came to be Cinder-slut; but the younger sister, who was
not so ill-tempered as the elder, called her
Cinderella. They were wise in their way to deprive her of a looking-glass; for
in truth, and in spite of her sorry rags, Cinderella was a hundred times more
beautiful than they with all their magnificent dresses.
It
happened that the King’s son gave a ball, and sent invitations through the
kingdom to every person of quality. Our two misses were invited among the rest,
for they cut a great figure in that part of the country. Mightily pleased they
were to be sure with their cards of invitation, all printed in gold and stamped
with the broad red seal of the Heir Apparent; and mightily busy they were,
discussing what gowns and head-dresses would best become them. This meant more
worry for Cinderella, for it was she who ironed her sisters’ linen, goffered their tucks and frills, pleated their wristbands,
pressed their trimmings of old lace and wrapped them away in tissue paper. A
score of times all this lace, piece by piece, had to be un-wrapped, inspected,
put away again; and after a trying-on, all the linen had to be ironed, goffered, crimped, or pleated afresh for them. They could
talk of nothing but their ball dresses.
“For my
part,” said the elder, “I shall wear a velvet cramoisie
trimmed à l’Anglaise”—for she had a passion for cramoisie, and could not perceive how ill
the colour went with her complexion. “I had thought
of cloth-of-gold, but there’s the cost of the underskirt to be considered; and
underskirts seem to grow dearer and dearer in these days. What a relief,” she
went on, “it must be to have money and not be forced to set one thing against
another!”
“I,” said
the younger, “must make shift with my old underskirt; that is, unless I can
wheedle some money out of Papa”—for so, in their affection, they called their
stepfather. “Cinderella can take out the worst stains to-morrow with a little
eau-de-Cologne. I believe that, if she tries, she can make it look as good as
new; and, at all events, it will give her something to do instead of wasting an
afternoon. I don’t pretend that I like wearing an old underskirt, and I hope to
make dear Papa sensible of this; but against it I shall have the gold-flowered
robe, on which I am determined, and my diamond stomacher, which is somewhat
better than the common.”
“And I, of
course,” said the elder, “must wear my diamond spray. If only it had a ruby in
the clasp instead of a sapphire! Rubies go so much better with cramoisie. … I suppose there is no time now to ask the jeweller to reset it with a ruby.”
“But you
don’t possess a ruby, dear,” murmured her sister, who did possess one, and had
no intention of lending it. “And, besides, sapphires suit you so much better!”
They sent
for the best milliner they could find, to build their mob-caps in triple tiers;
and for the best hairdresser to arrange their hair; and their patches were
supplied by the shop to which all the Quality went. From time to time they
called up Cinderella to ask her advice, for she had excellent taste. Cinderella
advised them perfectly, and even offered her services to dress their hair for
them on the night of the ball. They accepted gladly enough.
Whilst she
was dressing them one asked her: “Cinderella, would you not like to be going to
the ball?”
“Alas! miss,” said Cinderella, “you are making fun of me. It is not
for the like of me to be there.”
“You are
right, girl. Folks would laugh indeed to see Cinder-slut at a ball!”
Any one but Cinderella would have pinned on their mob-caps
awry; and if you or I had been in her place, I won’t swear but that we might
have pushed in the pins just a trifle carelessly. But she had no malice in her
nature; she attired them to perfection, though they found fault with her all
the while it was doing, and quite forgot to thank her when it was done. Let it
be related, in excuse for their tempers, that they had passed almost two days
without eating, so eager were they and excited. The most of this time they had
spent in front of their mirrors, where they had broken more than a dozen laces
in trying to squeeze their waists and make them appear more slender. They were
dressed a full two hours before the time fixed for starting. But at length the
coach arrived at the door. They were tucked into it with a hundred precautions,
and Cinderella followed it with her eyes as long as she could; that is to say,
until the tears rose and blinded them.
She turned
away weeping, back to the house, and crept into her dear chimney-corner; where,
being all alone in the kitchen, she could indulge her misery.
A long
while she sat there. Suddenly, between two heavy sobs she looked up, her eyes
attracted by a strange blue glow on the far side of the hearth: and there stood
the queerest lady, who must have entered somehow without knocking.
Her
powdered hair was dressed all about her head in the prettiest of short curls,
amid which the most exquisite jewels—diamonds, and rubies, and
emeralds—sparkled against the firelight. Her dress had wide panniers bulging
over a skirt of lace flounces, billowy and delicate as sea-foam, and a stiff
bodice, shaped to the narrowest waist imaginable. Jewels flashed all over this
dress—or at least Cinderella supposed them to be jewels, though, on second
thoughts, they might be fireflies, butterflies, glowworms. They seemed at any
rate to be alive, and to dart from one point to another of her attire. Lastly,
this strange lady held in her right hand a short wand, on the end of which trembled
a pale bluish-green flame; and it was this which had first caught Cinderella’s
eye and caused her to look up.
“Good
evening, child,” said the visitor in a sharp clear voice, at the same time
nodding kindly across the firelight. “You seem to be in trouble. What is the
matter?”
“I wish,”
sobbed Cinderella. “I wish,” she began again, and again she choked. This was
all she could say for weeping.
“You wish,
dear, that you could go to the ball; is it not so?”
“Ah, yes!”
said Cinderella with a sigh.
“Well,
then,” said the visitor, “be a good girl, dry your tears,
and I think it can be managed. I am your godmother, you must know, and in
younger days your mother and I were very dear friends.” She omitted, perhaps
purposely, to add that she was a Fairy; but Cinderella was soon to discover
this too. “Do you happen to have any pumpkins in the garden?” her godmother
asked.
Cinderella
thought this an odd question. She could not imagine what pumpkins had to do
with going to a ball. But she answered that there were plenty in the garden—a
whole bed of them in fact.
“Then let
us go out and have a look at them.”
They went
out into the dark garden to the pumpkin patch, and her godmother pointed to the
finest of all with her wand.
“Pick that
one,” she commanded.
Cinderella
picked it, still wondering. Her godmother opened a fruit knife that had a
handle of mother-of-pearl. With this she scooped out the inside of the fruit
till only the rind was left; then she tapped it with her wand, and at once the
pumpkin was changed into a beautiful coach all covered with gold.
“Next we
must have horses,” said her godmother mother. “The question is, Have you such a
thing as a mouse trap in the house?”
Cinderella
ran to look into her mouse trap, where she found six mice all alive. Her
godmother, following, told her to lift the door of the trap a little way, and
as the mice ran out one by one she gave each a tap with her wand, and each
mouse turned at once into a beautiful horse—which made a fine team of six
horses, of a lovely grey, dappled with mouse colour.
Now the
trouble was to find a coachman.
“I will go
and see,” said Cinderella, who had dried her tears and was beginning to find
this great fun, “if there isn’t such a thing as a rat in the rat trap. We can
make a coachman of him.”
“You are
right, dear,” said her godmother; “run and look.”
Cinderella
fetched her the rat trap. There were three large rats
in it. The Fairy chose one of the three because of his enormous whiskers, and at
a touch he was changed into a fat coachman.
Next she
said: “Go to the end of the garden; and there in the corner of the wall behind
the watering-pot, unless I am mistaken, you will find six lizards. Bring them
to me.”
Cinderella
had no sooner brought them than her godmother changed them into six footmen,
who climbed up at once behind the coach with their bedizened liveries, and
clung on as though they had been doing nothing else all their lives.
The Fairy
then said to Cinderella: “Hey now, child! This will do to go to the ball with,
unless you are hard to please.”
“Indeed,
yes,” answered Cinderella. “But how can I go, as I am, in these horrid
clothes?”
“You might
have given me credit for thinking of that too!” Her godmother
did but touch her with her wand, and on the instant her rags were
transformed into cloth of gold and silver, all be-spangled with precious
stones. She felt her hair creeping up into curls, and tiring and arranging
itself in tiers, on the topmost of which a double ostrich feather grew from a
diamond clasp that caught the rays of the old lady’s wand and shot them about
the garden, this way and that, making the slugs and snails crawl to shelter.
“But the
chief mark of a lady,” said her godmother, eying her with approval, “is to be
well shod,” and so saying she pulled out a pair of glass slippers, into which
Cinderella poked her toes doubtfully, for glass is not as a rule an
accommodating material for slippers. You have to be measured very carefully for
it.
But these
fitted to perfection: and thus arrayed from top to toe, Cinderella had nothing
more to do but kiss her godmother, thank her, and step into the coach, the six
horses of which were pawing the cabbage beds impatiently.
“Good-bye,
child!” said her godmother. “But of one thing I must warn you seriously. I have
power to send you thus to the ball, but my power lasts only until midnight. Not
an instant beyond midnight must you stay there. If you over-stay the stroke of
twelve, your coach will become but a pumpkin again, your horses will change
back into mice, your footmen into lizards, and your
ball dress shrink to the same rags in which I found you.”
Cinderella
promised that she would not fail to take her departure before midnight: and,
with that, the coachman cracked his whip and she was driven away, beside
herself with joy.
In the
royal palace, and in the royal gardens, over which shone the same stars which
had looked down upon Cinderella’s pumpkins, the ball was at its height: with
scores and scores of couples dancing on the waxed floor to the music of the
violins; and under the trees, where the music throbbed in faint echoes, other
scores of couples moving, passing and repassing,
listening to the plash of the fountains and inhaling the sweet scent of the
flowers.
Now, as
the King’s son walked among his guests, word was brought to him by his
Chamberlain that a grand Princess, whom nobody knew, had just arrived and
desired admission.
“She will
not tell her name,” said the Chamberlain; “but that she is a Princess and of
very high dignity cannot be doubted. Apart from her beauty and the perfection
of her address (of which your Royal Highness, perhaps, will allow me to be no
mean judge), I may mention that the very jewels in her hair are worth a whole
province.”
The King’s
son hastened to the gate to receive the fair stranger, handed her down from the
coach, and led her through the gardens, where the guests drew apart and gazed
in wonder at her loveliness. Still escorted by him she entered the ballroom,
where at once a great silence fell, the dancing was broken off, the violins
ceased to play—so taken, so ravished was everybody by the vision of this
unknown one. Everywhere ran the murmur, “Ah! how
beautiful she is!” The King himself, old as he was, could not take his eyes off
her, and confided to the Queen in a low voice that it was long since he had
seen so adorable a creature.
All the
ladies were busily studying her headdress and her ball-gown, that they might
order the like next day for themselves, if only (vain hope!) they could find
materials so exquisite and dressmakers clever enough.
The King’s
son took her to the place of honour, and afterwards
led her out to dance. She danced so gracefully that all admired her yet the
more. A splendid supper was served, but the young Prince ate nothing of it, so
intent was he on gazing upon her.
She went
and sat by her sisters, who bridled with pleasure at the honour.
She did them a thousand civilities, sharing with them the nectarines and
citrons which the Prince brought her; and still not recognising
her, they marvelled at this, being quite unused (as
they never deserved) to be selected for attentions so flattering.
The King’s
son now claimed her for another dance. It had scarcely come to an end when
Cinderella heard the clock strike the quarter to twelve; whereupon she
instantly desired her partner to lead her to the King and Queen. “For I must be
going,” she said.
“It is
cruel of you to go so early,” he protested. “But at least you will come again
to-morrow and grant me many dances?”
“Is there
to be another ball, then, to-morrow?” she asked.
“To-morrow, yes; and as many morrows as you wish, if only you will
come.”
“Ah, if I
could!” sighed Cinderella to herself: for she was young, and it seemed to her
that she could never have enough of such evenings as this, though they went on for ever and ever.
The Prince
led her to the daïs where sat the King and Queen. She
made a deep reverence before them, a slighter but no less gracious one to the company,
and withdrew. Although she had given no orders, her coach stood waiting for
her. Slipping in, she was whisked home in the time it would take you to wink an
eye.
She had
scarcely entered the house, however, before she received a shock. For on the threshold
of the kitchen, glancing down to make sure that her ball gown was not
disarranged by this rapid journey, she perceived that it had vanished—changed
back to the rags of her daily wear. But there, in the light of the hearth,
stood her godmother, who smiled so pleasantly that Cinderella choked down her
little cry of disappointment.
“Well, child? And how have you fared?”
“Godmama, I have never been so happy in all my life! And it
is all thanks to you!” But after thanking her, Cinderella could not help
confessing how she longed to go to the ball next evening. The King’s son had
begged her to come again, and oh! if she had been able
to promise!
“As to
that, child,” said her godmother, “we will see about it when the time comes.
But it has been lonely, keeping watch and sitting up for you. Will you not
reward me by telling all about it?”
Cinderella
needed no such invitation; she was dying to relate her adventures. She talked
and talked, her godmother still smiling and questioning. For two hours, maybe,
she talked and was still recollecting a score of things to tell when her
sisters’ coach rumbled up to the gate, and almost at once there came a loud
ring at the bell. She stared and rubbed her eyes, for at the first sound of it
her godmother had vanished!
Cinderella
ran and opened the door to her sisters. “What a long time you have stayed,”
said she, yawning, rubbing her eyes, and stretching herself as though she had
just waked out of sleep. (She had felt, however, no
inclination at all to sleep since their departure!)
“If you
had been at the ball,” said the elder sister, “you would not have felt tired.
One of the guests was the loveliest Princess—oh, the loveliest you ever could
see! She showed us a thousand civilities. She gave us nectarines and citrons.”
Cinderella
contained her joy. Upstairs, while she unplaited her
sisters’ hair and unlaced their bodices, she asked the name of the Princess.
But they answered that no one knew her; that the King’s son was wild about her,
and would give everything in the world to discover who she was. Cinderella
smiled. She no longer felt any temptation at all to be clumsy with the
hairpins.
“Why
then,” she said, “she must be beautiful indeed. And she went away, you say,
without telling her name? Is no one going to see her again?”
“As for
that she may come again to the ball to-morrow. I am told that the Prince begged
it, almost with tears in his eyes … For there is to be another ball to-morrow,
and we are going!”
Cinderella
had quite well expected some such rebuff, and was glad enough to get it, for it
would have been very awkward if her sister had been willing to lend the gown.
The next
evening the two sisters were at the ball; and so was Cinderella, but in even
finer attire than before. Her godmother had spared no pains, and as for the
expense, that hardly needs to be considered when you can turn pumpkins into
gilt coaches, cobwebs into Valenciennes lace, and
beetles’ wings into rubies, with the tap of a wand.
The King’s
son in his impatience flew to her coach door as soon as she arrived. Throughout
the evening he never left her side, nor ceased to make
pretty speeches; and she, pretty maid, was far from finding his behaviour tiresome—so far, indeed, that she forgot her
godmother’s warning. The end was, that in the midst of a dance she heard the
stroke of a clock, looked up, was dismayed to find it the first stroke of
twelve when she believed it yet an hour short of midnight, and made her escape
as lightly as a deer. The Prince followed, but could not catch her. Only she dropped
one of her glass slippers, which he picked up and treasured.
With the
last stroke of twelve, coach and footmen had whisked away, and poor Cinderella,
barefoot now as well as in rags, panted home-ward over roads where the flints
cut her until she bled, and the owls and great moths blundered out of the
bushes against her face. To make matters worse, a thunderstorm broke before she
had ran half the distance, and she arrived home in a terrible plight, muddy,
drenched to the skin, and almost more dead than alive. In one thing only she
was fortunate: she had outstripped her sisters, whose coach on the way home
lost a wheel—and I have a suspicion that Cinderella’s godmother had something
to do with this misadventure too.
At all
events when Cinderella opened the kitchen door the little lady stood as she had
stood the night before, in the glow of the hearth, awaiting her.
“Well,
child,” she said, frowning, yet the frown was not altogether unkindly, “it is
easily seen that you have forgotten my warning and have suffered for it. But
what is that you are clutching?”
Poor
Cinderella drew from under her be-draggled bodice a crystal slipper, fellow to
the missing one. It was the one remnant of all her finery, and somehow,
scarcely knowing why, she had hugged it to her while she ran and never let it
slip in all her stumblings.
Her
godmother gazed at her with a queer expression, that began by being a frown,
yet in the end had certainly changed into a shrewd smile.
“You have
been careless,” she said. “Yet I am pleased to see that you have managed to
keep, at any rate, one-half of your godmother’s gift.”
I think she meant by this that whereas all the rest of Cinderella’s adornment
had been contrived out of something other than it was, the two glass slippers
had been really produced out of the Fairy’s pocket. They alone had not vanished
at the stroke of midnight. “But what has become of the other one?” her
godmother asked.
Cinderella
did not know for certain, but fancied that she must have dropped it in her
hurry to escape from the palace.
“Yes, you
are careless,” repeated the Fairy; “but decidedly you are not unlucky.”
And with
that she vanished, as the bell sounded announcing the sisters’ return.
They were
not in the best of humours, to begin with. Cinderella
asked them if they had again found the ball enjoyable, and if the beautiful
lady had been there. They told her yes; but that on the stroke of twelve she
had taken flight, and so hurriedly that she had let fall one of her small glass
slippers, the prettiest in the world, which the King’s son had picked up. They
added, that this indeed was the first cause of their delay; for, seeking their
carriage, they had found the entry blocked, and the Prince in the wildest state
of mind, demanding of the guards if they had not seen a Princess pass out. The
guards answered that they had seen no one pass out but a ragged girl, who
looked more like a country wench than a Princess. Amid this to-do, the sisters
had with difficulty found their coach; and then, within two miles of home, a
wheel had come off and the coach had lurched over, in a thunderstorm, too; and
they had been forced to walk the rest of the way, the one with a bruised
shoulder, and the other (which was worse) with a twisted ankle. But, after all,
the dance had been worth these mischances and
sufferings; and, said they, harking back, the Prince was undoubtedly deep in
love, for they had left him gazing fondly at the slipper, and little
doubt—mysteriously as she chose to behave—he would make every effort to find
the beautiful creature to whom it belonged.
They told
the truth, too. For a few days after, the King’s son had it proclaimed by sound
of trumpet that he would marry her whose foot the slipper exactly fitted.
At first
they tried it on the Princesses of the Court:
Then on
the Duchesses:
Then on
the Marchionesses:
Then on
the Countesses and Viscountesses:
Then on
the Baronesses:
And so on,
through all the ladies of the Court, and a number of competitors, who, though they
did not belong to it, yet supposed that the smallness of their feet was an
argument that their parents had very unjustly come down in the world. The Prime
Minister, who carried the glass slipper on a velvet cushion, was kept very busy
during the next few weeks.
At length
he called on Cinderella’s two sisters, who did all
they could to squeeze a foot into the slipper, but by no means could they
succeed.
Cinderella,
who was looking on and admiring their efforts, said laughingly:—
“Let me
see if it will fit me.”
Her
sisters began to laugh and mock at her, but the Prime Minister, who had come to
make trial of the slipper, looked at Cinderella attentively, and seeing how
good-looking she was, said that it was but just—he had orders to try it upon
every one.
He asked
Cinderella to sit down, and drawing the slipper upon her little foot, he saw
that it went on easily, and fitted the foot like wax. Great was the
astonishment of the two sisters; but it was greater when Cinderella pulled from
her pocket the other little slipper and put it upon the other foot. On top of
this came a rap at the door, and in walked the Fairy Godmother, who, by a touch
of her wand upon Cinderella’s clothes, made them still more magnificent than
they had been before.
And now
her two sisters knew Cinderella to be the same beautiful creature they had seen
at the ball. They threw themselves at her feet, begging her pardon for all the
ill-usage they had made her suffer. Cinderella raised and kissed them, saying
that she forgave them with all her heart, and entreated them to be loving to her always.
They led
her to the young Prince, arrayed as she was. He thought her lovelier than ever,
and, a few days after, they were married. Cinderella, who was as good as she
was beautiful, lodged her two sisters in the palace, and married them that same
day to two great Lords of the Court.
MORAL
Better than wealth or art,
Jewels or a painted face,
It is when a natural heart
Inhabits its natural place
And beats at a natural pace.
ANOTHER
Yet youth that is poor of purse,
No matter how witty or handsome,
Will find its talents no worse
For a godmamma to advance ’em.
Quiller-Couch, Sir Arthur. The Sleeping Beauty and Other Tales From the Old French. Edmund Dulac, illustrator. New York: Hodder
& Stoughton, 1910.
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