Classic Audiobook Collection - The Frog Prince and Other Stories by Walter Crane ~ Full Audiobook [folklore]
Episode Date: June 6, 2023The Frog Prince and Other Stories by Walter Crane audiobook. Genre: folklore In The Frog Prince and Other Stories, celebrated Victorian artist and storyteller Walter Crane brings a handful of beloved... fairy tales to life with a clear-eyed, lyrical simplicity and a painter's sense of wonder. At the heart of the collection is the classic Frog Prince: a proud young princess makes an impulsive promise to a strange, speaking frog, only to discover that a careless word can become a binding oath. Around this central tale, Crane's other stories explore the timeless logic of folklore - where ordinary homes and quiet forests can hide enchantment, where kindness can be tested, and where selfishness carries a price. Each episode turns on a sharp moral question: Will a character keep their promise when it becomes inconvenient? Will they choose compassion over disgust, honesty over pride, courage over comfort? With brisk pacing, vivid imagery, and a gentle but firm sense of consequence, these stories invite listeners of all ages into a world of transformations, riddles, and hard-won wisdom - and remind us that magic often begins the moment someone chooses to do the right thing. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 1 (00:09:47) Chapter 2 (00:29:18) Chapter 3 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The Frog Prince and other stories by Walter Crane.
Chapter 1. The Frog Prince
In the olden time when wishing was having, there lived a king whose daughters were all beautiful,
but the youngest was so exceedingly beautiful that the son himself, although he saw her
very often, was enchanted every time she came out into the sunshine.
Near the castle of this king was a large and gloomy forest,
and in the midst stood an old lime tree,
beneath whose branches splashed a little fountain.
So whenever it was very hot,
the king's youngest daughter ran off into this wood
and sat down by the side of this fountain,
and when she felt dull,
would often divert herself by throwing a golden ball up in the air and catching it,
And this was her favorite amusement.
Now one day it happened that this golden ball, when the king's daughter threw it into the air,
did not fall down into her hand, but on the grass, and then it rolled past her into the fountain.
The king's daughter followed the ball with her eyes, but it disappeared beneath the water,
which was so deep that no one could see to the bottom.
Then she began to lament and to cry louder and louder, and as she cried a voice called out,
Why weepest thou, O King's daughter?
Thy tears would melt even a stone to pity.
And she looked around to the spot whence the voice came, and saw a frog stretching his thick,
ugly head out of the water.
Ah, you old water-paddler, said she, was it you that spoke?
I am weeping for my golden ball, which has slipped away from me into the water.
Be quiet and do not cry, answered the frog.
I can give thee good advice.
But what wilt thou give me if I fetch thy plaything up again?
What will you have, dear frog? said she.
My dresses, my pearls, and jewels, are the golden crown which I wear.
The frog answered,
dresses or jewels or golden crowns are not for me.
But if thou wilt love me and let me be thy companion and playfellow,
and sit at thy table and eat from thy little golden plate,
and drink out of thy cup and sleep in thy little bed,
if thou wilt promise me all these,
then I will dive down and fetch up thy golden ball.
Oh, I will promise you all, said she.
if you will only get me my ball.
But she thought to herself,
What is the silly frog chattering about?
Let him remain in the water with his equals.
He cannot mix in society.
But the frog, as soon as he had received her promise,
drew his head under the water and dived down.
Presently he swam up again with the ball in his mouth
and threw it on the grass.
The king's daughter was full of joy
when she again saw her beautiful plaything
and taking it up, she ran off immediately.
"'Stop, stop!' cried the frog.
"'Take me with thee. I cannot run as thou canst.'
But all his croaking was useless. Although it was loud enough, the king's daughter did not hear it,
but hastening home soon forgot the poor frog, who was obliged to leap back into the fountain.
The next day, when the king's daughter was sitting at table with her father and all his courtiers,
and was eating from her own little golden plate.
Something was heard coming up the marble stairs.
Splish, splash, splish, splash.
And when it arrived at the top, it knocked at the door,
and a voice said,
Open the door, thou youngest daughter of the king.
So she rose and went to see who it was that called her.
But when she opened the door and caught sight of the frog,
she shut it again with great vehement.
and sat down at the table looking very pale.
But the king perceived that her heart was beating violently
and asked her whether it were a giant
who had come to fetch her away who stood at the door.
"'Oh, no,' answered she,
"'it is no giant but an ugly frog.'
"'What does the frog want with you?' said the king.
"'Oh, dear father, when I was sitting yesterday playing by the fountain,
my golden ball fell into the water, and this frog fetched it up again because I cried so much.
But first I must tell you, he pressed me so much that I promised him he should be my companion.
I never thought he would come out of the water, but somehow he has jumped out and now he wants to come in here.
At that moment there was another knock, and a voice said,
King's daughter, youngest, opened the door.
Hast thou forgotten thy promises made at the fountain so clear,
Neat the lime-tree shade?
King's daughter, youngest, open the door.
Then the king said,
What you have promised that you must perform, go and let him in.
So the king's daughter went and opened the door,
and the frog hopped in after her right up to her chair,
and as soon as she was seated, the frog said,
Take me up.
But she hesitated so long that at last the king ordered her to obey.
And soon as the frog sat on the chair, he jumped onto the table and said,
Now push thy plate near me that we may eat together.
And she did so, but everyone saw very unwillingly.
The frog seemed to relish his dinner much,
But every bit that the king's daughter ate nearly choked her, till at last the frog said,
I have satisfied my hunger and feel very tired.
Will thou carry me upstairs now into thy chamber, and make thy bed ready that we may sleep together?
At this speech the king's daughter began to cry, for she was afraid of the cold frog,
and dared not touch him, and besides, he actually wanted to sleep in her own.
beautiful, clean bed.
But her tears only made the king very angry, and he said,
He who help you in the time of your trouble, must not now be despised.
So she took the frog up with two fingers and put him in a corner of her chamber.
But as she lay in her bed, he crept up to it and said,
I am so very tired that I shall sleep well.
Do take me up, or I shall tell your father.
This speech put the king's daughter in a terrible passion, and catching the frog up,
she threw him with all her strength against the wall, saying,
Now will you be quiet, you ugly frog?
But as he fell, he was changed from a frog into a handsome prince with beautiful eyes,
who, after a little while became, with her father's consent, her dear companion and betrothed.
Then he told her how he had been transformed by an evil witch,
and that no one but herself could have had the power to take him out of the fountain,
and that on the morrow they would go together into his own kingdom.
The next morning, as soon as the sun rose,
a carriage drawn by eight white horses with ostrich feathers on their heads and golden bridles,
drove up to the door of the palace,
and behind the carriage stood the trusty Henry, the servant of the young prince.
When his master had changed into a frog,
Trustee Henry had grieved so much that he had bound three iron bands round his heart,
for fear it should break with grief and sorrow.
But now that the carriage was ready to carry the young prince to his own country,
the faithful Henry helped the bride and bridegroom,
and placed himself in the seat behind,
full of joy at his master's release.
They had not proceeded far when the prince heard a crack
as if something had broken behind the carriage.
So he put his head out of the window and asked Henry what was broken,
and Henry answered,
It is not the carriage, my master,
but a band which I bound round my heart
when it was in such grief because you were changed into a frog.
Twice afterwards on the journey there was the same noise,
and each time the prince thought that it was some part of the carriage that had given way,
but it was only the breaking of the bands which bound the heart of the trusty Henry,
who was thenceforth free and happy.
End of The Frog Prince
Chapter 2 of The Frog Prince and other stories by Walter Crane.
This Libre Vox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 2. Princess Belle Etoual
Once upon a time there were three princesses named Rousset, Brunette, and Blondin,
who lived in retirement with their mother, a princess who had lost all her former grandeur.
One day an old lady called and asked for a dinner, as this princess was an excellent cook.
After the meal was over, the old woman, who was a fairy,
promised that their kindness should be rewarded
and immediately disappeared.
Shortly after, the king came that way
with his brother and the Lord Admiral.
They were all so struck with the beauty of the three princesses
that the king married the youngest,
Blondine, his brother married Brunette,
and the Lord Admiral married Rousset.
The good fairy, who had brought all this about,
also caused the young queen Blundine to have three lovely children,
two boys and a girl out of whose hair fell fine jewels.
Each had a brilliant star on their forehead
and a rich chain of gold around the neck.
At the same time, Brunette, her sister gave birth to a handsome boy.
Now, the young queen and Brunette were much attached to each other,
but Rousset was jealous of both,
and the old queen, the king's mother, hated them.
Brunette died soon after the birth of her son,
and the king was absent on a warlike expedition,
so Rousset joined the wicked old queen
in forming plans to injure Blondine.
They ordered Faintice, the old queen's waiting woman,
to strangle the queen's three children
and the son of Princess Brunette,
and bury them secretly.
But as she was about to execute this wicked order,
she was so struck by their beauty
and the appearance of the sparkling stars on their foreheads
that she shrank from the deed.
So she had a boat brought round to the beach
and put the four babes with some strings of jewels into a cradle
which she placed in the boat and then set it adrift.
The boat was soon far out at sea.
The waves rose.
the rain poured in torrents, and the thunder roared.
Faintice could not doubt that the boat would be swamped,
and felt relieved by the thought that the poor little innocence would perish,
for she would otherwise always be haunted by the fear
that something would occur to betray the share she had had in their preservation.
But the good fairy protected them,
and after floating at sea for seven days,
they were picked up by a corsair.
He was so struck by their beauty that he altered his course
and took them home to his wife who had no children.
She was transported with joy when he placed them in her hands.
They admired together the wonderful stars,
the chains of gold that could not be taken off their necks,
and their long ringlets.
Much greater was the woman's astonishment when she combed them,
for at every instant they rolled out of their hair, pearls, rubies, diamonds, and emeralds.
She told her husband of it, who was not less surprised than herself.
"'I am very tired,' said he, of a Corsair's life,
"'and if the locks of those little children continue to supply us with such treasures,
I will give up roaming the seas.'
The Corsair's wife, whose name was Corsine, was enchanted,
did it this, and loved the four infants so much the more for it.
She named the princess Belle Itual, her eldest brother, Petit Sol, the second, Herod,
and the son of Brunette Cherie.
As they grew older, the Corsair applied himself seriously to their education,
as he felt convinced there was some great mystery attached to their birth.
The Corsair and his wife had never told the story of the four children,
who passed for their own.
They were exceedingly united,
but Prince Cherie entertained for Princess Belle Etouille
a greater affection than the other two.
The moment she expressed a wish for anything,
he would attempt even impossibilities to gratify her.
One day Belle Etoual overheard the Corsair and his wife talking,
When I fell in with them, said the Corsair,
I saw nothing that could give me any idea of their birth.
I suspect, said Corcine, that Cherie is not their brother.
He has neither star nor neck chain.
Belle Etol immediately ran and told this to the three princes,
who resolved to speak to the corsair and his wife,
and asked them to let them set out to discover the secret of their birth.
After some remonstrance they gained their consent.
A beautiful vessel was prepared,
and the young princess and the three princes set out.
They determined to sail to the very spot where the Corsair had found them,
and made preparations for a grand sacrifice to the fairies for their protection and guidance.
They were about to emilate a turtle dove, but the princess saved its life and let it fly.
At this moment a siren issued from the water and said,
Cease your anxiety! Let your vessel go where it will.
land where it stops.
The vessel now sailed more quickly.
Suddenly they came inside of a city,
so beautiful,
that they were anxious their vessel should enter the port.
Their wishes were accomplished.
They landed, and the shore in a moment
was crowded with people
who had observed the magnificence of their ship.
They ran and told the king the news,
and as the grand terrace of the palace looked out upon the seashore,
he speedily repaired thither.
The princes, hearing the people say, there is the king, looked up and made a profound obeisance.
He looked earnestly at them, and was much charmed by the princess's beauty, as by the handsome
mean of the young princes.
He ordered his equerry to offer them his protection and everything that they might require.
The king was so interested about these four children that he went into the chamber of the queen,
his mother, to tell her of the wonderful stars which shone upon their foreheads and everything
that he admired in them. She was thunderstruck at it, and was terribly afraid that Faintice
had betrayed her, and sent her secretary to inquire about them. What he told her of their
ages confirmed her suspicions. She sent for Faintice, and threatened to kill her. Faintice, half
dead with terror, confessed all, but promised if she spared her that she would still find means
to do away with them.
The queen was appeased, and indeed, old faintice did all she could for her own sake.
Taking a guitar, she went and sat down opposite the princess's window and sang a song which
Belle Etois thought so pretty that she invited her into her chamber.
"'My fair child,' said Fainties,
"' Heaven has made you very lovely,
"'but you yet want one thing,
"'the dancing water.
"'If I had possessed it,
"'you would not have seen a white hair upon my head,
"'nor a wrinkle on my face.
"'Alas, I knew this secret too late.
"'My charms had already faded.'
"'But where,
"'Where shall I find this dancing water?' asked Belle It is in the luminous forest,' said Fainties.
"'You have three brothers. Does not any one of them love you sufficiently to go and fetch some?'
"'My brothers all love me,' said the princess,
but there is one of them who would not refuse me anything.'
The perfidious old woman retired, delighted at having been so successful.
The princess, returning from the chase, found Belle etoile engrossed by the advice of faintice.
Her anxiety about it was so apparent that Cherie, who thought of nothing but pleasing her,
soon found out the cause of it, and in spite of her entreaties, he mounted his white horse
and set out in search of the dancing water.
When suppertime arrived and the princess did not see her brother Cherie, she could neither eat
nor drink, and desired he might be sought for everywhere, and sent messengers to find him and bring
him back.
The wicked Fantisse was very anxious to know the result of her advice, and when she heard that
Cherie had already set out, she was delighted and reported to the queen-mother all that had
passed.
"'I admit, madam,' said she, "'that I can no longer doubt that they are the same four children
but one of the princes is already gone to seek the dancing water,
and will no doubt perish in the attempt,
and I shall find similar means to do away with all of them.'
The plan she had adopted with regard to Prince Cherie was one of the most certain,
for the dancing water was not easily to be obtained.
It was so notorious from the misfortunes which occurred to all who sought it
that everyone knew the road to her.
it. He was eight days without taking any repose but in the woods. At the end of this period,
he began to suffer very much from the heat. But it was not the heat of the sun, and he did not know
the cause of it, until from the top of a mountain he perceived the luminous forest. All the trees
were burning without being consumed, and casting out flames to such a distance that the country
around was a dry desert.
At this terrible
scene he descended, and
more than once gave himself up
for lost. As he
approached this great fire,
he was ready to die of thirst,
and perceiving a spring
falling into a marble basin,
he alighted from his horse,
approached it, and stooped to take
up some water in the little golden vase
which he had brought with him, when
he saw a turtle dove drowning
in the fountain.
Sherry took pity on it and saved it.
My Lord Cherie, said she.
I am not ungrateful.
I can guide you to the dancing water,
which without me you could never obtain
as it rises in the middle of the forest
and can only be reached by going underground.
The dove then flew away
and summoned a number of foxes, badgers, moles,
snails, ants, and all sorts of creatures that burrow in the earth.
Cherie got off his horse at the entrance of the subterranean passage they made for him,
and groped his way after the kind dove, which safely conducted him to the fountain.
The prince filled his golden vase and returned the same way he came.
He found Belle Etois, sorrowfully seated under some trees,
but when she saw him she was so pleased that she scarcely knew how to
welcome him. Old Fantiste learned from her spies that Cherie had returned, and that the princess,
having washed her face with the dancing water, had become more lovely than ever. Finding this,
she lost no time in artfully making the princess sigh for the wonderful singing apple.
Prince Sherry again found her unhappy, and again found out the cause, and once more set out on his
white horse, leaving a letter for Belle Etouille.
In the meanwhile, the king did not forget the lovely children, and reproach them for never
going to the palace.
They excused themselves by saying that their brother's absence prevented them.
Prince Cherie, at break of day, perceived a handsome young man from whom he learned where
the singing apple was to be found, but after traveling some time without seeing any sign of
he saw a poor turtle-dove fall at his feet almost dead.
He took pity on it and restored it, when it said,
"'Good-day, handsome, Cherie, you are destined to save my life,
and I to do you signal service.
You are come to seek for the singing apple.
It is guarded by a terrible dragon.'
The dove then led him to a place where he found a suit of armor, all of glass,
and by her advice he put it on and boldly went to meet the dragon.
The two-headed monster came bounding along, fire issuing from his throat,
but when he saw his alarming figure multiplied in the prince's mirrors,
he was frightened in his turn.
He stopped, and looking fiercely at the prince, apparently laden with dragons,
he took flight and threw himself into a deep chasm.
The prince then found the tree, which was surrounded with human bones,
and breaking off an apple, prepared to return to the princess.
She had never slept during his absence, and ran to meet him eagerly.
When the wicked faintice heard the sweet singing of the apple,
her grief was excessive, for instead of doing harm to these lovely children,
she only did them good by her perfidious counsels.
She allowed some days to pass by without showing herself, and then once more made the princess
unhappy by saying that the dancing water and the singing apple were useless without the
little green bird that tells everything.
Cherie again set out, and after some trouble learnt that this bird was to be found at the
top of a frightful rock in a frozen climate.
At length at dawn of day he perceived the rock, which was very high and very steep,
and upon the summit of it was the bird, speaking like an oracle, telling wonderful things.
He thought that with a little dexterity it would be easy to catch it, for it seemed very tame.
He got off his horse and climbed up very quietly.
He was so close to the green bird that he thought he could lay hands.
on it when suddenly the rock opened, and he fell into a spacious hall and became as motionless as a
statue. He could neither stir nor utter a complaint at his deplorable situation. Three hundred knights
who had made the same attempt were in the same state. To look at each other was the only thing
permitted them. The time seemed so long to Belle Etoil, and still no sign of
of her beloved Cherie that she fell dangerously ill,
and in the hopes of curing her, Petit Saleh resolved to seek him.
But he, too, was swallowed up by the rock and fell into the great hall.
The first person he saw was Cherie, but he could not speak to him,
and Prince Harrow, following soon after, met with the same fate as the other two.
When Fantis was aware that the third prince was gone,
She was exceedingly delighted at the success of her plan,
and when Belle Ettoil, inconsolable at finding not one of her brother's return,
reproached herself for their loss, and resolved to follow them,
she was quite overjoyed.
The princess was disguised as a cavalier,
but had no further armor than her helmet.
She was dreadfully cold as she drew near the rock,
but seeing a turtle dove lying on the snow,
she took it up, warmed it, and restored it to life.
And the dove, reviving, Galey said,
I know you, in spite of your disguise,
follow my advice.
When you arrive at the rock,
remain at the bottom,
and begin to sing the sweetest song you know.
The green bird will listen to you.
You must then pretend to go to sleep.
When it sees me, it will come down to peck me.
and at that moment you will be able to seize it.
All this fell out, as the dove foretold.
The green bird begged for liberty.
First, said Belet-Tuil, I wish that thou wouldst restore my three brothers to me.
Under my left wing there is a red feather, said the bird.
Pull it out and touch the rock with it.
The princess hastened to do as she was instructed.
The rock split from top to the rock.
bottom. She entered with a victorious heir, the hall, in which stood the three princes with
many others. She ran towards Cherie, who did not know her in her helmet and male attire,
and could neither speak nor move. The green bird then told the princess, she must rub the eyes
and mouth of all those she wished to disenchant with the red feather, which good office
she did to all. The three princes and Belle Etouille hastened,
to present themselves to the king,
and when Belle etoile showed her treasures,
the little green bird told him
that the prince's petite soul and Heru
and the princess Beletois were his children,
and that Prince Cherie was his nephew.
Queen Blondean, who had mourned for them all these years,
embraced them,
and the wicked queen-mother and old faintis were justly punished,
and the king, who thought his nephew's sheriff,
the handsomest man at court, consented to his marriage with Belle Etoil, and lastly to make
everyone happy, the king sent for the corsair and his wife, who gladly came.
End of Chapter 2. Princess Belle Etoll.
Chapter 3 of The Frog Prince and Other Stories by Walter Crane.
This Libre Vox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 3 Aladdin and the Wonderful Lamb
Aladdin was the son of a poor tailor in an eastern city.
He was a spoiled boy and loved play better than work,
so that when Mustafa his father died, he was not able to earn his living,
and his poor mother had to spend cotton all day long to procure food for their support.
But she dearly loved her son, knowing that he had to spend cotton.
had a good heart, and she believed that as he grew older he would do better, and become at last
a worthy and prosperous man.
One day when Aladdin was walking outside the town, an old man came up to him, and looking
very hard in his face, said he was his father's brother, and had long been away in a distant
country, but that now he wished to help his nephew to get on.
He then put a ring on the boy's finger, telling him that no harm could happen to him so long as he wore it.
Now, this strange man was no uncle of Aladdin, nor was he related to him at all,
but he was a wicked magician who wanted to make use of the lad's services, as we shall see presently.
The old man led Aladdin a good way into the country, until they came to a very lonely spot
between two lofty black mountains.
Here he lighted a fire, and threw into it some gum, all the time repeating many strange words.
The ground then opened just before them, and a stone-trap-door appeared.
After lifting this up, the magician told Aladdin to go below, down some broken steps,
and at the foot of these he would find three halls, in the last of which was a door,
to a garden full of beautiful trees.
This he was to cross,
and after mounting some more steps,
he would come to a terrace
when he would see a niche
in which there was a lighted lamp.
He was then to take the lamp,
put out the light,
empty the oil, and bring it away with him.
Aladdin found all the magician had told him to be true.
He passed quickly but cautiously
through the three halls,
so as not even to touch the walls with his clothes as the magician had directed.
He took the lamp from the niche, threw out the oil, and put it in his bosom.
As he came back through the garden, his eyes were dazzled with the bright-colored fruits on the trees,
shining like glass. Many of these he plucked and put it in his pockets,
and then returned with the lamp and called upon his uncle to help him up the broken steps.
"'Give me the lamp!' the old man said Angus.
Not till I get out safe, cried the boy.
The magician in a passion then slammed down the trap-door, and Aladdin was shut up fast enough.
While crying bitterly, he by chance rubbed the ring, and a figure appeared before him
saying, I am your slave, the genius of the ring. What do you desire?
Aladdin told the genius of the ring that he only wanted to be set free and to be taken
back to his mother.
In an instant he found himself at home, very hungry, and his poor mother was much pleased
to see him again.
He told her all that had happened.
She then felt curious to look at the lamp he had brought, and began rubbing it to make
it shine brighter.
Both were quite amazed at seeing rise before them a strange figure.
This proved to be the genius of the lamp, who asked for their commands.
On hearing that food was what they most wanted, a black slave instantly entered with the choicest fair upon a dainty dish of silver and with silver plates for them to eat from.
Aladdin and his mother feasted upon the rich fare brought to them, and sold the silver dish and plates, on the produce of which they lived happily for some weeks.
Aladdin was now able to dress well, and in taking his usual walk, he one day chanced to see the Sultan's daughter,
coming with her attendants from the baths.
He was so much struck with her beauty,
that he fell in love with her at once,
and told his mother that she must go to the Sultan
and ask him to give the princess to be his wife.
The poor woman said he must be crazy,
but her son not only knew what a treasure he had got in the magic lamp,
but he had also found out how valuable were the shining fruits he had gathered,
which he thought at the time to be only colored glass.
At first he sent a bowl full of these jewels, for so they were, to the Sultan,
who was amazed at their richness, and said to Aladdin's mother,
Your son shall have his wish.
If he can send me in a week forty bowls like this, carried by twenty white and twenty black slaves,
handsomely dressed.
He thought by this to keep what he had got, and to hear no more of Aladdin.
But the genius of the lamp soon brought the bowls of jewels and the slaves,
and Aladdin's mother went with them to the Sultan.
The Sultan was overjoyed at receiving these rich gifts,
and at once agreed that the Princess Bulbul should be the wife of Aladdin.
The happy youth then summoned the genius of the lamp to assist him,
and shortly set out for the palace.
He was dressed in a handsome suit of clothes,
and rode a beautiful horse.
By his side marched a number of attendants,
scattering handfuls of gold among the people.
As soon as they were married,
Aladdin ordered the genius of the lamp
to build, in the course of a night,
a most superb palace,
and there the young couple lived quite happily for some time.
One day when Aladdin was out hunting with the sultan,
the wicked magician,
who had heard of his good luck
and wished to get hold of the magic lamp,
cried out in the streets,
"'No lamps for old ones.'
A silly maid in the palace heard this,
got leave of the princess to change Aladdin's old lamp,
which he had seen on a cornice where he always left it,
for a new one.
And so the magician got possession of it.
As soon as the magician had safely got the lamp,
he caused the genius to remove the palace
and bull-bull within it to Africa.
Aladdin's grief was very great, and so was the rage of the Sultan of the loss of the Princess,
and poor Aladdin's life was in some danger, for the Sultan threatened to kill him
if he did not restore his daughter in three days.
Aladdin first called upon the genius of the ring to help him, but all he could do was
to take him to Africa.
The Princess was rejoiced to see him again, but was very sorry to find that she had been
the cause of all their trouble by part of her.
with the wonderful lamp.
Aladdin, however,
consoled her and told her that he
had thought of a plan for getting it back.
He then left her and soon returned
with a powerful sleeping draft
and advised her to receive the magician
with pretended kindness
and pour it into his wine at dinner that day
so as to make him fall sound asleep
when they could take the lamp from him.
Everything happened as they expected.
The magician drank the wine, and when Aladdin came in he found that he had fallen back lifeless on the couch.
Aladdin took the lamp from his bosom and called upon the genius to transport the palace, the princess, and himself back to their native city.
The Sultan was much astonished and pleased at their return, as he had been provoked at the loss of his daughter,
and Aladdin, with his bull-bull,
lived long afterwards to enjoy his good fortune.
End of Aladdin and the Wonderful Lamp.
End of The Frog Prince and Other Stories by Walter Crane.
