The Prince and The Pauper


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further question or discussion, and the two little girls began at once to  
inquire into how he came to be where he was, and how he came to be so  
unroyally clad, and whither he was bound, and all about his affairs. It  
was a mighty relief to him to pour out his troubles where they would not  
be scoffed at or doubted; so he told his tale with feeling, forgetting  
even his hunger for the time; and it was received with the deepest and  
tenderest sympathy by the gentle little maids. But when he got down to  
his latest experiences and they learned how long he had been without  
food, they cut him short and hurried him away to the farmhouse to find a  
breakfast for him.  
The King was cheerful and happy now, and said to himself, "When I am  
come  
to mine own again, I will always honour little children, remembering how  
that these trusted me and believed in me in my time of trouble; whilst  
they that were older, and thought themselves wiser, mocked at me and held  
me for a liar."  
The children's mother received the King kindly, and was full of pity; for  
his forlorn condition and apparently crazed intellect touched her womanly  
heart. She was a widow, and rather poor; consequently she had seen  
trouble enough to enable her to feel for the unfortunate. She imagined  
that the demented boy had wandered away from his friends or keepers; so  
she tried to find out whence he had come, in order that she might take  
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Page
190 191 192 193 194

Quick Jump
1 85 169 254 338