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"I should like to wait and play with them," said the Princess, "but I really am in such a hurry--I've lost my golden shoe."
"Oh, you're going to the Crab-boy, I suppose?" said the old woman.
"Down the road as straight as you can go, and you'll come to his hut,"
and she turned away to the children again.
Sidigunda took off her slipper, and poured out some drops from her magic bottle.
Immediately it grew larger and larger; and she had just time to spring in, before it galloped away with a series of bounds that made it very difficult to cling on.
Faster and faster it went, until the country seemed only a flying haze; and just as the Princess began to feel she could endure no more, it stopped abruptly before a small hut.
Outside the door a boy sat on a stone seat, playing on a long horn whose notes echoed among the rocky hills that surrounded him.
Princess Sidigunda looked at the boy with a friendly smile. He stopped playing, and made room for her to sit down beside him.
"I knew you were coming," he said. "You want to go to the Sea-grandmother, don't you?"
"Yes, I do!" said the Princess. "Do you live here all alone?"
"Why, of course," replied the Crab-herd, "I look after all the crabs of the district. You may see me collect them if you like, for if I'm to go with you now, I must shut them up safely before starting."
As he said this, he rose, and blowing a few notes on his horn, he walked slowly along, followed by the Princess.
As the horn sounded, crabs of every size and colour came darting out from the stones, and scuttled across the sand towards the Crab-boy.
There were red and green, yellow and brown, large and small--a procession growing larger and larger, until it reached an enclosed s.p.a.ce, into which the boy guided it, and then shut the gate securely.
The Princess had dropped down to rest upon a conch-sh.e.l.l, in the shade of some purple seaweed, and she looked up at the Crab-herd with her large blue eyes, while he counted his crabs, and chased in one or two of the stragglers.
"Is the Sea-grandmother's house far off?" she asked thoughtfully.
"Up in the great mountains, no distance from here. She lives in a cave, with plenty of s.p.a.ce for her knitting."
"Does she knit _much_?" enquired Sidigunda.
"Yes; she knits and spins too. She never leaves off; and never has for hundreds and thousands of years."
"What a very old lady she must be! Old enough to be a great-great-great-grandmother!" cried the Princess in astonishment.
"If you said three hundred '_greats_' you would be nearer the real thing," remarked the Crab-boy. "But come now, follow me, and we will start immediately."
Princess Sidigunda got up, and taking the Crab-herd's hand, they set off down the road towards the mountains.
As they reached the foot of the grey cliffs, the Crab-boy unfolded a pair of fin-like wings from his elbows, and began to swim upwards--leaving the little Princess with her arms stretched out imploringly towards him.
"Oh, _don't_ leave me here by myself!" she cried. "I shall never find my way to the Sea-grandmother!"
"Why there she is, just above us in that cave in the side of the mountain," said the Crab-boy. "Don't you see her beautiful white hair, and the flash of her knitting-needles?"
The Princess looked up, and there sat a beautiful old lady in a hole in the rock, high, high above them. A crowd of Sea-children played about her, and seemed to be carrying away the cloud-like white knitting as fast as it flowed from her busy fingers.
She bent her head towards Sidigunda, and nodded to her, without ceasing her work for a moment.
"Come, Princess, and talk to me!" she called in a sweet, low voice.
"Take your shoe off, and it will bring you here in a moment."
Sidigunda did as she was told--for the old lady spoke as if she were used to being obeyed without question--and found herself floating upwards, until she alighted on a broad ledge right in front of the Sea-grandmother.
"So you have come all this way to find your golden shoe?" the old lady said in her clear, even voice. "Sit down, and tell me all about it."
The Princess thought the Sea-grandmother's face young and lovely. It was smooth and unwrinkled; eyes clear as crystal, with blue depths in them, s.h.i.+ning out with a soft benign look; while her slim hands turned and twisted unceasingly, and her long green dress fell round her in wave-like folds.
Her smile was so soft and kind, that the Princess felt as if she had known her all her life.
"I have sent for your shoe, my child," she said. "Those tiresome grandchildren of mine give me a great deal of trouble. I can't keep my eyes on all of them at once, and so they are always in mischief!"
Sidigunda looked up in the gentle face; and sat down confidingly beside the Sea-grandmother.
"Do you always knit so busily, Grandmother?" she said, as she watched the white foamy fabric float off the needles.
"Of course, child. I have been working like this for thousands and thousands of years. Who do you imagine would provide the waves with nightcaps if _I_ ever stopped? When the wind blows and they dance, or when they curl over on the sh.o.r.e, they would be cold indeed, without my comfortable white nightcaps!"
"Can you get me my shoe, dear Grandmother?" asked the little Princess wistfully.
"Certainly, dear child. Though if you had not come at once, you might have had to wait a few hundred years or so, before I could have found it for you. The children wander so far now-a-days! Have you seen it?"
the Sea-grandmother continued, turning to some of the children who surrounded her.
"Oh, yes," they answered in chorus. "Just now it floated above us. We can fetch it in a minute!"
"Swim away then, as fast as you can!" cried the Sea-grandmother, and the children darted off like fish through the green clearness of the water.
The sound of their laughter had hardly died away in the distance, before they reappeared, dragging the golden shoe behind them; and the Princess, with smiles of joy, embraced them all as she drew it on to her foot again.
"Oh, thank you, dearest Grandmother! I don't know how I can show you how grateful I am," cried Sidigunda.
"By going home at once to your father and mother, and by promising me _never_ again to be disobedient," said the Sea-grandmother gravely.
"Give me your shoe, and I will order it to take you back to the Castle."
She stopped her needles for a moment, and pa.s.sed her hand over the slipper: then kissed the little Princess, and waved the knitting rapidly before her.
A white cloud seemed to float over Sidigunda, and she felt herself lifted up with a soothing motion, until on opening her eyes she found she was once more in the region of the fresh air and suns.h.i.+ne. Looking round, she saw the ruffled surface of the sea, and the waves breaking upon the sh.o.r.e before the Castle.
Her heart beat with happiness, as the golden shoe landed her safely on the beach; and she ran up through the little gate into the Castle gardens, right into the arms of her mother, who was pacing up and down with her attendants, in great anxiety.
Under the shade of some spreading fir trees the Princess related her adventures, begging the King and Queen to forgive her for her disobedience; and the whole Court was so delighted at her return that everyone forgot to scold her.
That evening bonfires were lighted on all the hill-tops; and a great banquet was held in the Castle, at which the Princess appeared amidst loud cheering, and, holding her father's hand, drank from a golden goblet to the health of her G.o.dfather, the Sh.o.r.e-Troll, and the Sea-grandmother.