Once upon a time there lived a King and Queen who had no children.
They longed very much for a child; and when at last they had a
little daughter they were both delighted, and great rejoicings took
place.
When the time came for the little Princess to be christened, the
King made a grand feast and invited all but one of the fairies in
his kingdom to be godmothers. There happened to be thirteen fairies
in the kingdom; but as the King had only twelve gold plates, he had
to leave one of them out.
The twelve fairies that were invited came to the christening, and
presented the little Princess with the best gifts in their
possession. One gave her beauty, one gave her wisdom, another grace,
another goodness, until all but one had presented their offerings.
Just as the last fairy was about to step forward and offer her gift,
there came a tremendous knocking at the door, and before anybody
could get there to open it, it was burst open, and in came the
thirteenth fairy, in a furious rage at not having been invited to
the feast.
When she saw all the gifts which the other fairies had presented the
child, she laughed and exclaimed:
"A lot of good all this beauty and virtue and wealth will do to you,
my pretty Princess! You shall pay for the slight your Royal Father
has put upon me!" Then, turning to the terrified King and Queen, she
said, in a loud voice:
"When the Princess is fifteen years old she shall prick her finger
with a spindle and die!" Having said this she flew away as noisily
as she came.
The King and Queen were in despair, and the courtiers stood aghast
at the terrible disaster; while the little Princess began to cry
piteously, as if she knew the fate in store for her. Then the
twelfth fairy stepped forward.
"Do not be afraid," she said, "I have not yet given my gift. I
cannot undo the wicked spell, but I can soften the evil. The
Princess, on her fifteenth birthday, shall prick her finger with a
spindle, but she shall not die. Instead, she shall fall asleep for a
hundred years."
"Alas!" cried the Queen, "what comfort will that be to us? Long
before the hundred years are past we shall be dead, and our darling
child will be as lost to us as if she were indeed to die!"
"I can make that right," said the fairy. "When the Princess falls
asleep, you shall sleep, too; and awaken with her when the hundred
years are passed."
But the King still hoped to save his daughter from such a terrible
misfortune. So he ordered all the spinning-wheels in his kingdom to
be burnt or destroyed, and made a law that no one was to use one on
pain of instant death. But all his care was useless. On her
fifteenth birthday the Princess slipped away from her attendants,
and wandered all through the Palace. At last she came to a tower
which she had never seen before, and, wondering what it contained,
she climbed the stairs. From a room at the top came a curious
humming noise, and the Princess, wondering what it could be, pushed
open the door and stepped inside.
There sat an old woman, bent with age, working at a strangely shaped
wheel. The Princess was full of curiosity.
"What is that funny-looking thing?" she asked.
"It is a spinning-wheel, Princess," answered the old woman, who was
no other than the wicked fairy in disguise.
"A spinning-wheel—what is that? I have never heard of such a thing,"
said the Princess. She stood watching for a few minutes, then she
added:
"It looks quite easy. May I try to do it?"
"Certainly, gracious lady," said the wicked fairy, and the Princess
sat down and tried to turn the wheel. But no sooner did she lay her
hand upon it than the spindle, which was enchanted, pricked her
finger, and the Princess fell back against a silk-covered couch—fast
asleep.
In a moment a deep silence fell upon all who were in the castle. The
King fell asleep in the midst of his councillors, the Queen with her
ladies-in-waiting. The horses in the stable, the pigeons on the
roof, the flies upon the walls, even the very fire upon the hearth
fell asleep, too. The meat which was cooking in the kitchen ceased
to frizzle; and the cook, who was just about to box the kitchen
boy's ears, fell asleep with her hand outstretched, and began to
snore aloud. The butler who was tasting the ale, fell asleep with
the jug at his lips.
A great hedge sprang up around the castle, which, as the years
passed on, grew and grew until it formed an impenetrable barrier
around the sleeping Palace. The old people of the country died, and
their children grew up and died also, and their children, and their
children, and the story of the sleeping Princess became a legend,
handed down from one generation to another; and a cloud of mystery,
as thick and impenetrable as the hedge of thorns, lay over the old
castle. Many brave and gallant Princes tried to force their way
through the magic hedge, in order to solve the mystery and to see
for themselves the beautiful maiden who lay in an enchanted sleep
behind that thorny barrier. But the thorns caught them, and held
them from going forward or back, and the gallant youths perished
miserably in the thickets.
After many, many years there came a King's son into that country,
who heard the story of the Princess and the hedge of briers; and he
made up his mind to try and force his way to the castle to awake the
sleeping Princess. People told him of the fate of the other Princes,
who had also attempted this difficult task; but the Prince would not
be warned.
"I have made up my mind to see this maiden of whose beauty I have
heard so many wonderful tales," he cried. "I will force a way
through the hedge of thorns and awake this Sleeping Beauty, or die
in the attempt!"
Now, it happened that this day was the last day of the hundred
years; and when the Prince came to the thicket that surrounded the
castle and began to push his way through, he found that the briers
yielded readily to his touch. The thorns had all blossomed into
roses that scented the air with fragrance as he went by. Primroses
sprang up before his feet and made a pathway to lead him straight to
the castle gates; and the birds suddenly broke forth into singing,
as if to tell the world that the hundred years of enchantment were
over, and the Princess about to be awakened from her long sleep.
The Prince passed through the council chamber, where the King and
his councillors were sleeping; through the room where the Queen and
her ladies slept. He passed on from hall to hall, climbed from stair
to stair, until at last he reached the tower chamber where the
sleeping Princess lay. For a moment he stood and gazed in wonder at
her lovely face; then he sank on his knees beside her, and kissed
her as she lay asleep.
Instantly the spell was broken. The King and Queen awoke, and all
the courtiers with them; the horses neighed in the stables, and
shook their glossy manes; the pigeons cooed upon the roof; the flies
on the wall moved again; the fire burnt up brightly; and the meat in
the kitchen began to frizzle once more as the spit turned round. The
cook gave the kitchen boy the tremendous box on the ear that she had
started to give him a hundred years ago, and everything and
everybody went on just as usual, as if nothing at all out of the
common had occurred.
And up in the tower chamber the Princess opened her eyes to meet the
gaze of the Prince, who had dared to risk his life for her sake.
What they said to each other nobody quite knows, for nobody was
there to hear or see. But whatever it was, it must have been
something very satisfactory; for very soon after they were married,
and lived happily ever afterwards.