79 lines
5.2 KiB
Plaintext
79 lines
5.2 KiB
Plaintext
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THE WEEPING PRINCESS
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Once upon a time . . . a greedy emperor forced his subjects to pay heavy
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taxes. Not only the poor were squeezed, but the nobles in this immense empire
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were highly taxed too. At last, tired of being crushed by taxes, the nobles
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held a protest meeting. When the emperor heard about this, he took fright for
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he feared a rebellion. So he sent out this proclamation to put an end to their
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complaints:
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"The nobleman that can make my daughter Sarah smile again, for she's
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mourning the loss of her fiance. will never pay taxes again."
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This caused an uproar at the protest meeting. Most of the princes decided
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there was no need now to complain, for each was quite sure he would succeed
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where others might fail. So off they went to get ready to try and make Sarah
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smile. But some of the nobles warned their fellows that, with his words, the
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emperor was not really abolishing any taxes at all. From that day on, a long
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procession of noble knights trooped from all over the empire to the palace to
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try and console the weeping princess.
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The crowds cheered them as they passed, but when they returned with bowed
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heads, the same crowds booed and whistled at their failure. The days went by
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and the list of defeated knights grew longer . . . Indians, Circassians, Arabs
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and Turks . . . from all over the provinces came bold young men, bouncing with
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confidence and hope. But the minute the princess set eyes on them, she just
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wept and wept. The emperor was delighted, for each failure meant another
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taxpayer. Even the common folk seemed contented to see that the rich too did
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not always get what they wanted. The only unhappy person among them was Sarah,
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who went on weeping.
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One day, a Mongol prince seemed to be on the point of winning a smile. He
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thrummed his balalaika for hours, playing first a sad tune, then a more
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cheerful one, till he finished by playing a merry jig. The princess sat for
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ages staring at him eyed and the onlookers thought she was about to smile.
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Instead she burst into floods of tears, to everyone's disappointment. A
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Kurdish chief, famed for his humour, who had already kept the court in fits of
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laughter, tried to steal a smile from Sarah with his witty remarks. But the
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princess's dark eyes filled with tears. Noblemen came from as far away as
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Persia, but in vain.
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The only person who had not yet appeared was Omar, the chief of the tiniest
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farthest away province. A bright, intelligent young man, he had cleverly got
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the better of certain greedy ambitious relatives that tried to take away his
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power when he succeeded his uncle as chief. The emperor's messengers had taken
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a long time to reach this remote realm, and though Omar set out at once, on
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hearing the news, he rode for many days on his fine black horse. Then, one
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evening, he reached the palace. When the tired and dusty traveller explained
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to the stable boys why he had come, they laughed in scorn. But they had orders
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to obey, so they told him to enter.
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"It's late," they said, "and you won't see the princess till tomorrow."
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The emperor's other daughters, however, were soon told of the new arrival.
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"He's the most handsome of them all!" exclaimed one of the servants. So
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Marika, the emperor's youngest and prettiest daughter, with her sisters,
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peeked through a window at the sleeping Omar. Next morning, the emperor
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ordered the newcomer to be led before Sarah. The court crowded round to watch.
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Unlike all the other suitors, Omar did nothing at all to amuse the princess.
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He stared at Sarah without saying a word. And she stared back, with an empty
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look on her face. The two young people stared silently at each other. Then
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Omar went back to the emperor and said:
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"Sire! Give me your sceptre and I will solve the problem of Sarah."
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Surprised at such an odd request, the emperor followed Omar into Sarah's room.
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The other princesses clustered round, smiling and admiring the handsome young
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man. With a deep bow to Sarah, Omar straightened up and dealt her a blow on
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the head with the sceptre. Screams filled the air the emperor threw up hls
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arms in rage and his daughters fled in all directions. The guards drew their
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swords. Then the whole room stopped in amazement. For, out of Sarah's head,
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which had been chopped off by the blow, rolled broken springs and pieces of
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metal. The princess that never smiled was a doll! A perfect dolll And nobody
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had ever been aware of it except Omar.
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The only princess that couldn't stop laughing was Marika. The emperor
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glared at her.
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"Be quiet . . ." he ordered. But he too saw the funny side of it. For the
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crafty emperor had been making use of Sarah the doll as a way of guaranteeing
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himself a steady flow of taxes from all his subjects. And now, a man more
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cunning than himself had exposed his trick. The emperor had a sudden thought:
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he would rid himself of the cheeky Marika and gain an astute son-in-law able
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to help him hold onto his kingdom.
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"You should be put to death for this insolence," he said, "but I'm going to
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spare your life, if you marry my youngest daughter. Of course, you won't need
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to pay taxes!" Smiling at a happy Marika, Omar nodded silently. Down in the
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depths of his mind he was thinking:
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"One day, dear father-in-law, I'll be sitting on your Imperial throne." And
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he was, a few years later.
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