Â
The
king did not move or answer her; so the prince, leaning on the arm of
Becasigue, approached a little closer to the false princess, hoping against
hope that his eyes had deceived him. But the longer he looked the more he
agreed with his father that there was treason somewhere, for in no single
respect did the portrait resemble the woman before him. Cerisette was so tall
that the dress of the princess did not reach her ankles, and so thin that her
bones showed through the stuff. Besides that her nose was hooked, and her teeth
black and ugly.
In his turn, the prince stood rooted to the spot. At last he spoke, and his words were addressed to his father, and not to the bride who had come so far to marry him.
Â
‘We have been deceived,’ he said, ‘and it will cost me my life.’ And he leaned so heavily on the envoy that Becasigue feared he was going to faint, and hastily laid him on the floor. For some minutes no one could attend to anybody but the prince; but as soon as he revived the lady in waiting made herself heard.
‘Oh, my lovely princess, why did we ever leave home?’ cried she. ‘But the king your father will avenge the insults that have been heaped on you when we tell him how you have been treated.’
Â
‘I will tell him myself,’ replied the king in wrath; ‘he
promised me a wonder of beauty, he has sent me a skeleton! I am not surprised
that he has kept her for fifteen years hidden away from the eyes of the world.
Take them both away,’ he continued, turning to his guards, ‘and lodge them in
the state prison. There is something more I have to learn of this matter.’
In his turn, the prince stood rooted to the spot. At last he spoke, and his words were addressed to his father, and not to the bride who had come so far to marry him.
Â
‘We have been deceived,’ he said, ‘and it will cost me my life.’ And he leaned so heavily on the envoy that Becasigue feared he was going to faint, and hastily laid him on the floor. For some minutes no one could attend to anybody but the prince; but as soon as he revived the lady in waiting made herself heard.
‘Oh, my lovely princess, why did we ever leave home?’ cried she. ‘But the king your father will avenge the insults that have been heaped on you when we tell him how you have been treated.’
Be the first to leave your comments