Twilight Land by Howard Pyle (black authors fiction txt) ๐
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- Author: Howard Pyle
Read book online ยซTwilight Land by Howard Pyle (black authors fiction txt) ๐ยป. Author - Howard Pyle
Swash! Down fell the Fiddler into the apple-tree and down fell a dozen apples, popping and tumbling about the queenโs ears.
The queen looked up and screamed, and the Fiddler climbed down.
โWhere did you come from?โ said she.
โOh, Ill-Luck brought me,โ said the Fiddler.
โNay,โ said the queen, โdo not say so. You fell from heaven, for I saw it with my eyes and heard it with my ears. I see how it is now. You were sent hither from heaven to be my husband, and my husband you shall be. You shall be king of this country, half-and-half with me as queen, and shall sit on a throne beside me.โ
You can guess whether or not that was music to the Fiddlerโs ears.
So the princes were sent packing, and the Fiddler was married to the queen, and reigned in that country.
Well, three or four days passed, and all was as sweet and happy as a spring day. But at the end of that time the Fiddler began to wonder what was to be seen in the castle. The queen was very fond of him, and was glad enough to show him all the fine things that were to be seen; so hand in hand they went everywhere, from garret to cellar.
But you should have seen how splendid it all was! The Fiddler felt more certain than ever that it was better to be a king than to be the richest man in the world, and he was as glad as glad could be that Ill-Luck had brought him from the rich little old man over yonder to this.
So he saw everything in the castle but one thing. โWhat is behind that door?โ said he.
โAh! that,โ said the queen, โyou must not ask or wish to know. Should you open that door Ill-Luck will be sure to overtake you.โ
โPooh!โ said the Fiddler, โI donโt care to know, anyhow,โ and off they went, hand in hand.
Yes, that was a very fine thing to say; but before an hour had gone by the Fiddlerโs head began to hum and buzz like a beehive. โI donโt believe,โ said he, โthere would be a grain of harm in my peeping inside that door; all the same, I will not do it. I will just go down and peep through the key-hole.โ So off he went to do as he said; but there was no key-hole to that door, either. โWhy, look!โ says he, โit is just like the door at the rich manโs house over yonder; I wonder if it is the same inside as outside,โ and he opened the door and peeped in. Yes; there was the long passage and the spark of light at the far end, as though the sun were shining. He cocked his head to one side and listened. โYes,โ said he, โI think I hear the water rushing, but I am not sure; I will just go a little further in and listen,โ and so he entered and closed the door behind him. Well, he went on and on untilโpop! there he was out at the farther end, and before he knew what he was about he had stepped out upon the sea-shore, just as he had done before.
Whiz! whirr! Away flew the Fiddler like a bullet, and there was Ill-Luck carrying him by the belt again. Away they sped, over hill and valley, over moor and mountain, until the Fiddlerโs head grew so dizzy that he had to shut his eyes. Suddenly Ill-Luck let him drop, and down he fellโthump! bump!โon the hard ground. Then he opened his eyes and sat up, and, lo and behold! there he was, under the oak-tree whence he had started in the first place. There lay his fiddle, just as he had left it. He picked it up and ran his fingers over the stringsโtrum, twang! Then he got to his feet and brushed the dirt and grass from his knees. He tucked his fiddle under his arm, and off he stepped upon the way he had been going at first.
โJust to think!โ said he, โI would either have been the richest man in the world, or else I would have been a king, if it had not been for Ill-Luck.โ
And that is the way we all of us talk.
Dr. Faustus had sat all the while neither drinking ale nor smoking tobacco, but with his hands folded, and in silence. โI know not why it is,โ said he, โbut that story of yours, my friend, brings to my mind a story of a man whom I once knewโa great magician in his time, and a necromancer and a chemist and an alchemist and mathematician and a rhetorician, an astronomer, an astrologer, and a philosopher as well.โ
โTis a long list of excellency,โ said old Bidpai.
โTis not as long as was his head,โ said Dr. Faustus.
โIt would be good for us all to hear a story of such a man,โ said old Bidpai.
โNay,โ said Dr. Faustus, โthe story is not altogether of the man himself, but rather of a pupil who came to learn wisdom of him.โ
โAnd the name of your story is what?โ said Fortunatus.
โIt hath no name,โ said Dr. Faustus.
โNay,โ said St. George, โeverything must have a name.โ
โIt hath no name,โ said Dr. Faustus. โBut I shall give it a name, and it shall beโโ
Empty Bottles
In the old, old days when men were wiser than they are in these times, there lived a great philosopher and magician, by name Nicholas Flamel. Not only did he know all the actual sciences, but the black arts as well, and magic, and what not. He conjured demons so that when a body passed the house of a moonlight night a body might see imps, great and small, little and big, sitting on the chimney stacks and the ridge-pole, clattering their heels on the tiles and chatting together.
He could change iron and lead into silver and gold; he discovered the elixir of life, and might have been living even to this day had he thought it worth while to do so.
There was a student at the university whose name was Gebhart, who was so well acquainted with algebra and geometry that he could tell at a single glance how many drops of water there were in a bottle of wine. As for
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