Princess and Peddler

Gallagher, Marie

December I, I926 THE COMMONWEAL lO3 PRINCESS AND PEDDLER By MARIE GALLAGHER ~'THE Princess is coming I" drawled the two bronze at giraffes at each side of the palace door. "The Princess is...

...shrieked the peacocks, spreading wide their purple and green tails...
...The Prince is coming l" drawled the two bronze giraffes at each side of the palace door...
...The sun and the moon and this marble palace are fine, beautiful things," he admitted, "but my treas- ure is more wonderful than any of them...
...If it were priceless not even a princess could buy it...
...What princess would want an almost priceless treasure...
...But the Princess did not appear...
...The giraffes stretched their necks like bronze trump- ets and announced to the palace and all who should care to hear it: "The Peddler has an almost priceless treasure for the Princess to buy...
...And when he came before the two bronze giraffes, he bowed...
...You are a prince, aren't you...
...The Princess is coming l" murmured the ivy, in a court whisper, clinging to the palace wall...
...But it was too late, for down from the white cur...
...And there he stood, dripping and looking up at that far-away window, and trying to sell his treasure...
...No," replied the Peddler...
...The Princess--" began the giraffes, but the Peddler interrupted them with a loud voice, and the giraffes were not angry at all, for rudeness was quite per- missible in a peddler...
...The Princess is watching from the window," an-nounced the giraffes...
...The Princess is coming...
...There is no princess anywhere who can'buy my treasure but you," he continued, without shaking, him- self free from one single drop of water...
...The Prince is coming," murmured the ivy in a court whisper, clinging to the palace wall...
...It is the most beautiful treasure in the world, and it is not for sale to any princess but you," explained the Peddler to the curtain which no longer fluttered...
...tained window high up in the palace wall, came a shower of cold water and it went through all the Peddler's rags and glistened in his bright hair and on his brown patches of skin...
...q4;hite Myrtles by a Deserted House Why do your pallid faces press Against the pane...
...In other Mays Soft eyes gazed from those darkened squares And smiled to see your fluted sprays . . . The villagers can never know As I, of faun and dryad born, What yonder haunted blossoms see Beyond the blinds this summer morn...
...The peacocks moved haughtily nearer the palace...
...And I am no prince to be giving gifts to prin-cesses," said the Peddler...
...With a smile that the peacocks did not understand, the Peddler left them and approached nearer the palace...
...I have an almost prieeless treasure for the Prin- cess to buy," he said with a low bow to the peacocks...
...Instead, there came sauntering down the garden path between the indignant peacocks, a peddler...
...No," replied the Peddler...
...He had rags on his head in the form of a hat, and all his bright hair shone through them...
...Only a prince would accept such a drenching with equanimity...
...A faint sigh fluttered out from the palace...
...Do not tell a lie," admonished the giraffes...
...There are many treasures to be bought, but no other like mine, and I have brought it from the far parts of the world for you," he said to the white curtain...
...LoulsE CRENSHAW RAY...
...No, I am not," declared the Peddler...
...I have an almost priceless treasure for the Princess to buy," he said...
...And he had an easy grace that the wearing of rags must have given him...
...But they moved away and eyed him suspiciously over the purple and green screen of their fine tails...
...And the Peddler entered through the palace door...
...And he had rags on his body in the form of breeches and doublet and rags on his feet in the form of shoes, and patches of his brown skin showed through them...
...The Prince is coming l" shrieked the peacocks, waving their purple and green tails...
...December I, I926 THE COMMONWEAL lO3 PRINCESS AND PEDDLER By MARIE GALLAGHER ~'THE Princess is coming I" drawled the two bronze at giraffes at each side of the palace door...
...I have a treasure that only a princess can buy," said the Peddler, addressing a white fluttering curtain at a window high up in the palace wail...
...No, I am not," repeated the Peddler before he had half heard what they were saying...
...cried the ivy...
...You must be a prince in disguise," marveled the ivy...
...She is watching from the window," warned the ivy...
...Go away quickly, the Princess is losing her tem-per...
...The Princess will not buy your treasure," whis-pered the ivy in tones of dismissal...
...asked the ivy scornfully...
...The Princess thinks that you are a prince in dis- guise," communicated the ivy...
...Suddenly there was an excited trembling among the ivy, and the giraffes stretched their long necks and cleared their throats...
...Oh, if the Princess thinks so, I am," murmured the Peddler, with a suddenly princelike air...
...asked the ivy...
...The Princess thinks that you are," reproved the giraffes...

Vol. 5 • December 1926 • No. 4


 
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