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CHAPTER FIRST "Once on a Time" I
am going to tell a story,
one of those tales
of astonishing adventures that happened years and years and years ago. Perhaps you wonder why it
is that so many
stories are told of "once on a time", and so few of these days in
which we live; but that is easily explained. In the old
days, when the world was
young, there were no automobiles nor flying-machines to make one
wonder; nor
were there railway trains, nor telephones, nor mechanical inventions of
any
sort to keep people keyed up to a high pitch of excitement. Men and women lived simply
and quietly. They
were Nature's children, and breathed
fresh air into their lungs instead of smoke and coal gas; and tramped
through
green meadows and deep forests instead of riding in street cars; and
went to bed
when it grew dark and rose with the sun — which is vastly different
from the
present custom. Having
no books to read
they told their adventures to one another and to their little ones; and
the
stories were handed down from generation to generation and reverently
believed. Those who
peopled the world in the
old days, having nothing but their hands to depend on, were to a
certain extent
helpless, and so the fairies were sorry for them and ministered to
their wants
patiently and frankly, often showing themselves to those they
befriended. So people knew
fairies in those
days, my dear, and loved them, together with all the ryls and knooks
and pixies
and nymphs and other beings that belong to the hordes of immortals. And a fairy tale was a
thing to be wondered
at and spoken of in awed whispers; for no one thought of doubting its
truth. To-day the
fairies are shy; for so
many curious inventions of men have come into use that the wonders of
Fairyland
are somewhat tame beside them, and even the boys and girls can not be
so easily
interested or surprised as in the old days. So
the sweet and gentle little immortals perform
their tasks unseen and
unknown, and live mostly in their own beautiful realms, where they are
almost
unthought of by our busy, bustling world. Yet when we
come to story-telling
the marvels of our own age shrink into insignificance beside the brave
deeds
and absorbing experiences of the days when fairies were better known;
and so we
go back to "once on a time" for the tales that we most love — and
that children have ever loved since mankind knew that fairies exist. |