The Prince and the Pauper
was easy to think this; but it was hard to brace himself up
to try it. Three times he stretched his hand a little way out into the dark,
gingerly; and snatched it suddenly back, with a gasp—not because it had
encountered anything, but because he had felt so sure it was just going
to. But the fourth time, he groped a little further, and his hand lightly
swept against something soft and warm. This petrified him, nearly, with
fright; his mind was in such a state that he could imagine the thing to be
nothing else than a corpse, newly dead and still warm. He thought he would
rather die than touch it again. But he thought this false thought because
he did not know the immortal strength of human curiosity. In no long time his
hand was tremblingly groping again—against his judgment, and without his consent—but
groping persistently on, just the same. It encountered a bunch of long
hair; he shuddered, but followed up the hair and found what seemed to be a warm
rope; followed up the rope and found an innocent calf!—for the rope was not a
rope at all, but the calf's tail.
The King was cordially ashamed of himself for having gotten
all that fright and misery out of so paltry a matter as a slumbering calf; but
he need not have felt so about it, for it was not the calf that frightened him,
but a dreadful non-existent something which the calf stood for; and any other
boy, in those old superstitious times, would have acted and suffered just as he
had done.
The King was not only delighted to find that the creature
was only a calf, but delighted to have the calf's company; for he had been
feeling so lonesome and friendless that the company and comradeship of even
this humble animal were welcome. And he had been so buffeted, so rudely
entreated by his own kind, that it was a real comfort to him to feel that he
was at last in the society of a fellow-creature that had at least a soft heart
and a gentle spirit, whatever loftier attributes might be lacking. So he
resolved to waive rank and make friends with the calf.
While stroking its sleek warm back—for it lay near him and
within easy reach—it occurred to him that this calf might be utilised in more
ways than one. Whereupon he re-arranged his bed, spreading it down close
to the calf; then he cuddled himself up to the calf's back, drew the covers up
over himself and his friend, and in a minute or two was as warm and comfortable
as he had ever been in the downy couches of the regal palace of Westminster.