Source:
www.bedtimestoriesonline.org
Reviewed by: Dedoyin
There was once a very rich
gentleman who lost his wife, and having loved her exceedingly, he was very
sorry when she died. Finding himself quite unhappy for her loss, he resolved to
marry a second time, thinking by this means he should be as happy as before.
Unfortunately, however, the lady he chanced to fix upon was the proudest and
most haughty woman ever known; she was always out of humour with every one;
nobody could please her, and she returned the civilities of those about her
with the most affronting disdain.
She had two daughters by a
former husband. These she brought up to be proud and idle. Indeed, in temper
and behaviour they perfectly resembled their mother; they did not love their
books, and would not learn to work; in short they were disliked by everybody.
The gentleman on his side too
had a daughter, who in sweetness of temper and carriage was the exact likeness
of her own mother, whose death he had so much lamented, and whose tender care
of the little girl he was in hopes to see replaced by that of his new bride.
However, scarcely was the
marriage ceremony over, before his wife began to show her real temper. She
could not bear the pretty little girl, because her sweet obliging manners made
those of her own daughters appear a thousand times the more odious and
disagreeable. She therefore ordered her to live in the kitchen; and, if ever
she brought anything into the parlour, always scolded her till she was out of
sight.
She made her work with the
servants in washing the dishes, and rubbing the tables and chairs; it was her
place to clean madam’s chamber, and that of her daughters, which was all inlaid,
had beds of the newest fashion, and looking-glasses so long and broad, that
they saw themselves from head to foot in them; while the little creature
herself was forced to sleep up in a sorry garret, upon a wretched straw bed,
without curtains, or anything to make her comfortable.
The poor child bore this with
the greatest patience, not daring to complain to her father, who, she feared,
would only reprove her, for she saw that his wife governed him entirely.
When she had done all her work
she used to sit in the chimney-corner among the cinders; so that in the house
she went by the name of Cinderbreech. The youngest of the two sisters, however,
being rather more civil than the eldest, called her Cinderella. And Cinderella,
dirty and ragged as she was, as often happens in such cases, was a thousand
times prettier than her sisters, dressed in all their splendour.
It happened that the king’s
son gave a ball, to which he invited all the persons of fashion in the country.
The two misses were of the number, for the king’s son did not know how
disagreeable they were, but supposed, as they were so much indulged, that they
were extremely amiable. He did not invite Cinderella, for he had never seen or
heard of her.
The two sisters began
immediately to be very busy in preparing for the happy day. Nothing could
exceed their joy. Every moment of their time was spent in fancying such gowns,
shoes, and head-dresses as would set them off to the greatest advantage.
All this was new vexation to
poor Cinderella, for it was she who ironed and plaited her sisters’ linen. They
talked of nothing but how they should be dressed: “I,” said the eldest, “will
wear my scarlet velvet with French trimming.”
“And I,” said the youngest,
“shall wear the same petticoat I had made for the last ball. But then, to make
amends for that, I shall put on my gold muslin train, and wear my diamonds in
my hair; with these I must certainly look well.” They sent several miles for
the best hair dresser that was to be had, and all their ornaments were bought
at the most fashionable shops.
On the morning of the ball,
they called up Cinderella to consult with her about their dress, for they knew
she had a great deal of taste. Cinderella gave them the best advice she could,
and even offered to assist in adjusting their head-dresses; which was exactly
what they wanted, and they accordingly accepted her proposal.
While Cinderella was busily
engaged in dressing her sisters, they said to her, “Should you not like,
Cinderella, to go to the ball?”
“Ah!” replied Cinderella, “you
are only laughing at me, it is not for such as I am to think of going to
balls.”
“You are in the right,” said
they, “folks might laugh indeed, to see a Cinderbreech dancing in a ball room.”
Any other than Cinderella
would have tried to make the haughty creatures look as ugly as she could; but
the sweet tempered girl on the contrary, did everything she could think of to
make them look well.
The sisters had scarcely eaten
anything for two days, so great was their joy as the happy day drew near. More
than a dozen laces were broken in endeavouring to give them a fine slender
shape, and they were always before the looking glass.
At length the much wished for
moment arrived; the proud misses stepped into a beautiful carriage, and,
followed by servants in rich liveries, drove towards the palace.
Cinderella followed them with
her eyes as far as she could; and when they were out of sight, she sat down in
a corner and began to cry. Her godmother, who saw her in tears, asked her what
ailed her. “I wish——I w-i-s-h—” sobbed poor Cinderella, without being able to
say another word.
The godmother, who was a
fairy, said to her, “You wish to go to the ball, Cinderella, is not this the
truth?” “Alas! yes,” replied the poor child, sobbing still more than before.
“Well, well, be a good girl,”
said the godmother, “and you shall go.” She then led Cinderella to her
bedchamber, and said to her: “Run into the garden and bring me a pumpkin.”
Cinderella flew like
lightning, and brought the finest she could lay hold of. Her godmother scooped
out the inside, leaving nothing but the rind; she then struck it with her wand,
and the pumpkin instantly became a fine coach gilded all over with gold.
She then looked into her
mouse-trap, where she found six mice all alive and brisk. She told Cinderella
to lift up the door of the trap very gently; and as the mice passed out, she
touched them one by one with her wand, and each immediately became a beautiful
horse of a fine dapple gray mouse colour.
“Here, my child,” said the
godmother, “is a coach and horses too, as handsome as your sisters’, but what
shall we do for a postillion?” “I will run,” replied Cinderella, “and see if
there be not a rat in the trap. If I find one, he will do very well for a postillion.”
“Well thought of, my child,” said her godmother; “make what haste you can.”
Cinderella brought the rat
trap, which, to her great joy, contained three of the largest rats ever seen.
The fairy chose the one which had the longest beard; and touching him with her
wand, he was instantly turned into a handsome postillion, with the finest pair
of whiskers imaginable.
She next said to Cinderella:
“Go again into the garden, and you will find six lizards behind the
watering-pot; bring them hither.” This was no sooner done, than with a stroke
from the fairy’s wand they were changed into six footmen, who all jumped up
behind the coach in their laced liveries, and stood side by side as cleverly as
if they had been used to nothing else the whole of their lives.
The fairy then said to
Cinderella: “Well, my dear, is not this such an equipage as you could wish for
to take you to the ball? Are you not delighted with it?”
“Y-e-s,” replied Cinderella
with hesitation, “but must I go thither in these filthy rags?”
Her godmother touched her with
the wand, and her rags instantly became the most magnificent apparel,
ornamented with the most costly jewels in the whole world. To these she added a
beautiful pair of glass slippers, and bade her set out for the palace.
The fairy, however, before she
took leave of Cinderella, strictly charged her on no account whatever to stay
at the ball after the clock had struck twelve, telling her that, should she
stay but a single moment after that time, her coach would again become a
pumpkin, her horses mice, her footmen lizards, and her fine clothes be changed
to filthy rags.
Cinderella did not fail to
promise all her godmother desired of her; and almost wild with joy drove away
to the palace. As soon as she arrived, the king’s son, who had been informed
that a great princess, whom nobody knew, was coming to the ball, presented
himself at the door of her carriage, helped her out, and conducted her to the
ball room. Cinderella no sooner appeared than everyone was silent; both the
dancing and the music stopped, and everybody was employed in gazing at the
uncommon beauty of this unknown stranger.
Nothing was heard but whispers
of “How handsome she is!” The king himself, old as he was, could not keep his
eyes from her, and continually repeated to the queen, that it was a long time
since he had seen so lovely a creature. The ladies endeavoured to find out how
her clothes were made, that they might get some of the same pattern for
themselves by the next day, should they be lucky enough to meet with such
handsome materials, and such good work-people to make them.
The king’s son conducted her
to the most honourable seat, and soon after took her out to dance with him. She
both moved and danced so gracefully, that everyone admired her still more than
before, and she was thought the most beautiful and accomplished lady they ever
beheld.
After some time a delicious
collation was served up; but the young prince was so busily employed in looking
at her, that he did not eat a morsel. Cinderella seated herself near her
sisters, paid them a thousand attentions, and offered them a part of the
oranges and sweetmeats with which the prince had presented her, while they on
their part were quite astonished at these civilities from a lady whom they did
not know.
As they were conversing
together, Cinderella heard the clock strike eleven and three quarters. She rose
from her seat, curtsied to the company, and hastened away as fast as she could.
As soon as she got home she flew to her godmother, and, after thanking her a
thousand times, told her she would give the world to be able to go again to the
ball the next day, for the king’s son had entreated her to be there. While she
was telling her godmother everything that had happened to her at the ball, the
two sisters knocked a loud rat-tat-tat at the door; which Cinderella opened.
“How late you have stayed!”
said she, yawning, rubbing her eyes, and stretching herself, as if just
awakened out of her sleep, though she had in truth felt no desire for sleep
since they left her.
“If you had been at the ball,”
said one of her sisters, “let me tell you, you would not have been sleepy.
There came thither the handsomest, yes, the very handsomest princess ever
beheld! She paid us a thousand attentions, and made us take a part of the
oranges and sweetmeats the prince had given her.”
Cinderella could scarcely
contain herself for joy. She asked her sisters the name of this princess, to which
they replied, that nobody had been able to discover who she was; that the
king’s son was extremely grieved on that account, and had offered a large
reward to any person who could find out where she came from.
Cinderella smiled, and said:
“How very beautiful she must be! How fortunate you are! Ah, could I but see her
for a single moment! Dear Miss Charlotte, lend me only the yellow gown you wear
every day, and let me go to see her.”
“Oh! yes, I warrant you; lend
my clothes to a Cinderbreech! Do you really suppose me such a fool? No, no;
pray, Miss Forward, mind your proper business, and leave dress and balls to
your betters.” Cinderella expected some such answer, and was by no means sorry,
for she would have been sadly at a loss what to do if her sister had lent her
the clothes that she asked of her.
The next day the two sisters
again appeared at the ball, and so did Cinderella, but dressed much more
magnificently than the night before. The king’s son was continually by her
side, and said the most obliging things imaginable to her. The charming young
creature was far from being tired of all the agreeable things she met with.
On the contrary, she was so
delighted with them that she entirely forgot the charge her godmother had given
her. Cinderella at last heard the striking of a clock, and counted one, two,
three, on till she came to twelve, though she thought that it could be but
eleven at most. She got up and flew as nimbly as a deer out of the ball-room.
The prince tried to overtake her; but poor
Cinderella’s fright made her run the faster. However, in her great hurry, she
dropped one of her glass slippers from her foot, which the prince stooped down
and picked up, and took the greatest care of it possible.
Cinderella got home tired and
out of breath, in her old clothes, without either coach or footmen, and having
nothing left of her magnificence but the fellow of the glass slipper which she
had dropped.
In the meanwhile, the prince
had inquired of all his guards at the palace gates, if they had not seen a
magnificent princess pass out, and which way she went? The guards replied, that
no princess had passed the gates; and that they had not seen a creature but a
little ragged girl, who looked more like a beggar than a princess.
When the two sisters returned
from the ball, Cinderella asked them if they had been as much amused as the
night before, and if the beautiful princess had been there? They told her that
she had; but that as soon as the clock struck twelve, she hurried away from the
ball room, and in the great haste she had made, had dropped one of her glass
slippers, which was the prettiest shape that could be; that the king’s son had
picked it up, and had done nothing but look at it all the rest of the evening;
and that everybody believed he was violently in love with the handsome lady to
whom it belonged.
This was very true; for a few
days after, the prince had it proclaimed, by sound of trumpet, that he would
marry the lady whose foot should exactly fit the slipper he had found.
Accordingly the prince’s messengers took the slipper, and carried it first to
all the princesses, then to the duchesses, in short, to all the ladies of the
court.
But without success. They then
brought it to the two sisters, who each tried all she could to squeeze her foot
into the slipper, but saw at last that this was quite impossible. Cinderella
who was looking at them all the while, and knew her slipper, could not help
smiling, and ventured to say, “Pray, sir, let me try to get on the slipper.”
The gentleman made her sit down; and putting the slipper to her foot, it
instantly slipped in, and he saw that it fitted her like wax.
The two sisters were amazed to
see that the slipper fitted Cinderella; but how much greater was their
astonishment when she drew out of her pocket the other slipper and put it on!
Just at this moment the fairy entered the room, and touching Cinderella’s
clothes with her wand, made her all at once appear more magnificently dressed
than they had ever seen her before.
The two sisters immediately
perceived that she was the beautiful princess they had seen at the ball. They
threw themselves at her feet, and asked her forgiveness for the ill treatment
she had received from them.
Cinderella helped them to
rise, and, tenderly embracing them, said that she forgave them with all her
heart, and begged them to bestow on her their affection. Cinderella was then
conducted, dressed as she was, to the young prince, who finding her more
beautiful than ever, instantly desired her to accept of his hand.
The marriage ceremony took
place in a few days; and Cinderella, who was as amiable as she was handsome,
gave her sisters magnificent apartments in the palace, and a short time after
married them to two great lords of the court.
Lesson: Dedoyin
The tale teaches the virtue of
love, obedience, hope, endurance. It also teaches that a kind heart and good
nature will eventually bring us good favour in all circumstances, if only we
can persist in such good behavior.
Never underestimate anyone: a
pauper today can be a royal tomorrow. An ordinary person can be made a ruler by
a twist of fate.
Also, we must learn to be
positive and hopeful in our thoughts. We see that Cinderella was prepared (a
state of hopefulness) and when opportunity presented itself, she also played
her part by being obedient and having the other glass slipper nearby to dispel
any doubts.
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