ONE fine summer's day Earl Mar's daughter went into the castle garden,
dancing and tripping along. And as she played and sported she would stop
from time to time to listen to the music of the birds. After
a while as she sat under the shade of a green oak tree she looked up
and spied a sprightly dove sitting high up on one of its branches. She
looked up and said: "Coo-my-dove, my dear, come down to me and I will
give you a golden cage. I'll take you home and pet you well, as well as
any bird of them all." Scarcely had she said these words when the dove
flew down from the branch and settled on her shoulder, nestling up
against her neck while she smoothed its feathers. Then she took it home
to her own room.The day was done and the night came on and Earl Mar's
daughter was thinking of going to sleep when, turning round, she found
at her side a handsome young man. She _was_ startled, for the door had
been locked for hours. But she was a brave girl and said: "What are you
doing here, young man, to come and startle me so? The door was barred
these hours ago; how ever did you come here?""Hush! hush!" the young man
whispered. "I was that cooing dove that you coaxed from off the
tree.""But who are you then?" she said quite low; "and how came you to
be changed into that dear little bird?""
My name is Florentine, and my
mother is a queen, and something more than a queen, for she knows magic
and spells, and because I would not do as she wished she turned me into a
dove by day, but at night her spells lose their power and I become a
man again. To-day I crossed the sea and saw you for the first time and I
was glad to be a bird that I could come near you. Unless you love me, I
shall never be happy more.""But if I love you," says she, "will you not
fly away and leave me one of these fine days?""Never, never," said the
prince; "be my wife and I'll be yours for ever. By day a bird, by night a
prince, I will always be by your side as a husband, dear."So they were
married in secret and lived happily in the castle and no one knew that
every night Coo-my-dove became Prince Florentine. And every year a
little son came to them as bonny as bonny could be. But as each son was
born Prince Florentine carried the little thing away on his back over
the sea to where the queen his mother lived and left the little one with
her.Seven years passed thus and then a great trouble came to them. For
the Earl Mar wished to marry his daughter to a noble of high degree who
came wooing her.
Her father pressed her sore but she said: "Father dear,
I do not wish to marry; I can be quite happy with Coo-my-dove
here."Then her father got into a mighty rage and swore a great big oath,
and said: "To-morrow, so sure as I live and eat, I'll twist that
birdie's neck," and out he stamped from her room."Oh, oh!" said
Coo-my-dove; "it's time that I was away," and so he jumped upon the
window-sill and in a moment was flying away. And he flew and he flew
till he was over the deep, deep sea, and yet on he flew till he came to
his mother's castle. Now the queen his mother was taking her walk abroad
when she saw the pretty dove flying overhead and alighting on the
castle walls."Here, dancers come and dance your jigs," she called, "and
pipers, pipe you well, for here's my own Florentine, come back to me to
stay for he's brought no bonny boy with him this time.""No, mother,"
said Florentine, "no dancers for me and no minstrels, for my dear wife,
the mother of my seven, boys, is to be wed to- morrow, and sad's the day
for me.""What can I do, my son?" said the queen, "tell me, and it shall
be done if my magic has power to do it.""Well then, mother dear, turn
the twenty-four dancers and pipers into twenty-four grey herons, and let
my seven sons become seven white swans, and let me be a goshawk and
their leader.""Alas! alas! my son," she said, "that may not be; my magic
reaches not so far. But perhaps my teacher, the spaewife of Ostree, may
know better." And away she hurries to the cave of Ostree, and after a
while comes out as white as white can be and muttering over some burning
herbs she brought out of the cave.
Suddenly Coo-my-dove changed into a
goshawk and around him flew twenty-four grey herons and above them flew
seven cygnets.Without a word or a good-bye off they flew over the deep
blue sea which was tossing and moaning. They flew and they flew till
they swooped down on Earl Mar's castle just as the wedding party were
setting out for the church. First came the men-at-arms and then the
bridegroom's friends, and then Earl Mar's men, and then the bridegroom,
and lastly, pale and beautiful, Earl Mar's daughter herself. They moved
down slowly to stately music till they came past the trees on which the
birds were settling. A word from Prince Florentine, the goshawk, and
they all rose into the air, herons beneath, cygnets above, and goshawk
circling above all. The weddineers wondered at the sight when, swoop!
the herons were down among them scattering the men-at-arms. The swanlets
took charge of the bride while the goshawk dashed down and tied the
bridegroom to a tree. Then the herons gathered themselves together into
one feather bed and the cygnets placed their mother upon them, and
suddenly they all rose in the air bearing the bride away with them in
safety towards Prince Florentine's home. Surely a wedding party was
never so disturbed in this world. What could the weddineers do? They saw
their pretty bride carried away and away till she and the herons and
the swans and the goshawk disappeared, and that very day Prince
Florentine brought Earl Mar's daughter to the castle of the queen his
mother, who took the spell off him and they lived happy ever afterwards.
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