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قراءة كتاب The Maker of Rainbows, and Other Fairy-tales and Fables
تنويه: تعرض هنا نبذة من اول ١٠ صفحات فقط من الكتاب الالكتروني، لقراءة الكتاب كاملا اضغط على الزر “اشتر الآن"
THE
MAKER OF RAINBOWS
AND OTHER FAIRY-TALES AND FABLES
BY
RICHARD LE GALLIENNE
AUTHOR OF
"AN OLD COUNTRY HOUSE"
WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY
ELIZABETH SHIPPEN GREEN
HARPER & BROTHERS PUBLISHERS
NEW YORK AND LONDON
MCMXII
COPYRIGHT, 1912, BY HARPER & BROTHERS
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
PUBLISHED OCTOBER, 1912
I · M
THAT THIS VOLUME SHALL BE ENTIRELY IN KEEPING WITH ITS FAIRY-TALE CONTENTS, I DEDICATE IT TO MY GOOD FRIENDS, ITS PUBLISHERS, MESSRS. HARPER & BROTHERS IN REMEMBRANCE OF KINDLY RELATIONS BETWEEN THEM AND ITS WRITER SELDOM FOUND OUT OF A FAIRY-TALE
CONTENTS
- chap. page
-
- The Old Coat of Dreams 1
- The Maker of Rainbows 7
- The Man with Something in His Eye 14
- Mother-of-Pearl 17
- The Mer-Mother 27
- The Sleepless Lord 29
- The Man with No Money 39
- The Rags of Queen Cophetua 42
- The Wife from Fairy-Land 51
- The Buyer of Sorrows 54
- The Princess's Mirror 60
- The Pine Lady 73
- The King on His Way to be Crowned 75
- The Stolen Dream 88
- The Stern Education of Clowns 103
ILLUSTRATIONS
- OFTEN SHE WOULD LIFT THE LID OF THE GOLDEN COFFER AND LOOK AT THE TATTERED ROBE Frontispiece
- A SUDDEN STRANGE NEW LIGHT WOULD SHINE OUT OF ITS PAGES Facing p. 30
- HE WENT FORTH INTO THE DAWN SLEEPLESS Facing p. 36
- THE HERALD ONCE MORE SET THE TRUMPET TO HIS LIPS AND BLEW Facing p. 56
- HER ONLY CARE WAS TO GAZE ALL DAY AT HER OWN FACE Facing p. 60
THE MAKER OF
RAINBOWS
THE OLD COAT OF DREAMS
A PROLOGUE
eople in London—not merely literary folk, but even those "higher social circles" to which a certain publisher, whose name—or race—it is hardly fair to mention, had so obsequiously climbed—often wondered whence had come the wealth that enabled him to maintain such an establishment, give such elaborate "parties," have so many automobiles, and generally make all that display which is so convincing to the modern mind.
Of course they were not seriously concerned, because, so long as it is a party, and the chef is paid so much, and the wines are as old as they should be, not even the rarest blossom on the most ancient and distinguished genealogical tree cares whose party it is, or, indeed, with whom she dances. There is only one democracy, and that is controlled by gentlemen with names that hardly sound beautiful enough to mention in fairy tales—that democracy of money to which the fairest flower of our aristocracy now bows her coroneted head.
Strange—but we all know that so it is. Therefore, all sorts of distinguished and beautiful people came to the publisher's "parties."
It would have made no difference, really, to their hard hearts, could they have known where all the champagne and conservatories and music came from—they would have gone on dancing all the same, and eating pâté de foie gras and sherbets; yet it may interest a sad heart here and there to know how it was that that publisher—whose name I forget, but whose nose I can never forget—was able to pay for all that music and dancing, strange flowers,