The Princess and the Pea
by Hans Christian Andersen
Illustrated by Edmund Dulac
Illustrated by Edmund Dulac
There was once a prince, and he
wanted a princess, but then she must be a real Princess. He travelled right
around the world to find one, but there was always something wrong. There were
plenty of princesses, but whether they were real princesses he had great
difficulty in discovering; there was always something which was not quite right
about them. So at last he had come home again, and he was very sad because he
wanted a real princess so badly.
One evening there was a terrible
storm; it thundered and lightninged and the rain poured down in torrents;
indeed it was a fearful night.
In the middle of the storm somebody
knocked at the town gate, and the old King himself sent to open it.
It was a princess who stood outside,
but she was in a terrible state from the rain and the storm. The water streamed
out of her hair and her clothes; it ran in at the top of her shoes and out at
the heel, but she said that she was a real princess.
‘Well we shall soon see if that is
true,’ thought the old Queen, but she said nothing. She went into the bedroom,
took all the bed clothes off and laid a pea on the bedstead: then she took
twenty mattresses and piled them on top of the pea, and then twenty feather
beds on top of the mattresses. This was where the princess was to sleep that
night. In the morning they asked her how she slept.
‘Oh terribly bad!’ said the princess.
‘I have hardly closed my eyes the whole night! Heaven knows what was in the
bed. I seemed to be lying upon some hard thing, and my whole body is black and
blue this morning. It is terrible!’
They saw at once that she must be a
real princess when she had felt the pea through twenty mattresses and twenty
feather beds. Nobody but a real princess could have such a delicate skin.
So the prince took her to be his
wife, for now he was sure that he had found a real princess, and the pea was
put into the Museum, where it may still be seen if no one has stolen it.
Now this is a true story.
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