Stories from the Old Attic

	
an hour ranting and shouting execrations and breaking things.  But 
when he demanded which of his knights had helped her into this 
situation, the princess, not willing to sacrifice any of the noble 
and completely innocent knights of the castle, invented the story of 
a secret lover from outside the castle walls.  

The king suspected that his daughter was lying, or trying to 
lie--for the girl was so honest that she could not dissemble with 
conviction--so that he was now even more uncontrollably enraged than 
before; he now began screaming directly at his daughter and breaking 
larger and more expensive things.  And because he could think of 
nothing but her duplicity and disobedience and his injured honor and 
her betrayal of his affection, he coldly (or rather hotly) 
determined to banish her from the kingdom.  "For," he argued, "I 
will love not those who love not me."  He therefore cruelly turned 
the girl and the child over to the traders of a passing caravan from 
a distant land who would take them past the borders of the kingdom.  

Even as she saw her father's look of hatred as she was packed into 
the wagon at the rear of the caravan, the princess did not alter her 
resolve to keep her secret, for now she knew that if the king knew 
the truth, her lady in waiting would most certainly be executed.  As 
for the lady in waiting, she was so stricken with grief over the 
king's actions that she very nearly took her own life.  But the 
princess had commanded her never to reveal the secret, regardless of 
the consequences, and the lady in waiting feared that the princess 
would be exposed by such an action.  So the woman, helpless to 
remedy the situation, instead fled the palace in tears.   

As the traders proceeded out of the kingdom, the princess resolved 
that, whatever should happen to herself, she would not see the child 
grow up a slave.  She therefore watched carefully for an opportunity 
and one night sneaked off from the traders as far as she could get 
in the cold and dark, and put the child near a hut, hoping and 	
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