Charles Robinson (1870–1937) was a prolific British book illustrator.
“He will defend her,” said the mother of George. “And she will love him,” the mother of Bee answered. “She will love him,” a small, clear voice repeated.
The Duchess recognised it as that of a spirit that had long lived under the hearthstone.
“Little sister,” cried George, “little sister, look at the whole earth.”
The moon had risen above the lake, and only the broken fragments of its orb were reflected in the water. Bee still slept. The dwarf who had examined her came back on his crow. This time he was followed by a troop of little men. They were very little men. They had white beards reaching down to their knees. They were the size of children, but they had old faces.
The dwarfs leapt in the air to reach branches which the cut in thief light, and out of which they neatly built a lattice chair. Having covered it in moss and dry leaves, they made Bee sit there; then, all together, they seized the two poles, up! Hoisted is on their shoulders, and swung off to the mountain.
The kingdom of the dwarfs was deep and stretched under a great part of the earth. Though the sky was only visible here and there through openings in the rock, the open places, the roads, the palaces, and hall were not buried in the thickest night.
There was no indolence, and all applied themselves to their work. Whole quarters resounded with the noise of hammers; the shrieks of machinery echoed against the cavern roofs, and it was a curious sight to see the crowd of miners, goldbeaters, -jewellers, diamond polishers, handle their pickaxes, hammers, pincers, and files with the dexterity of monkeys.
They all three passed through the opening, left by the removal of the large stone and found themselves in a crevice of the rock where two people could not walk abreast. King Loc went forward first along the dark path and Bee followed, holding on to the skirt of the royal mantle.
King Loc sat down on this throne and made the young girl stand on his right hand.“Bee," he said to her, “this is my treasure; chose whatever you like."
"Well Bee, tell me if you love any one enough to marry him."
"Little King Loc, I love no one as much as that."
Then King Loc smiled, and seizing his golden goblet he proposed in ringing
tones the health of the princess of the dwarfs. And a vast murmur rose
from the depths of the earth, for the table at which they feasted stretched
from one end to the other of the dwarfish empire.
Bee began to cry. King
Loc took her by the hand and said to her:
“Bee, why are you crying and what do you want?”
And, as she had been sad for several days, the dwarfs seated at her feet
were playing to her very simple tunes on the flute, the flageolet, the
rebec and the cimbals.
...the old Nur looked into one of the glasses that filled the room. For the dwarfs have no books, those found among them come from man and are used as toys. To instruct themselves they do not refer as we do to signs made upon paper; they look into the glasses and see the subject of their researches. The only difficulty is to select the proper glass and direct it rightly.
“I am King Loc," answered the dwarf. "I have kept Bee with me to teach her the secrets of the dwarfs. Child, you have come upon my kingdom like hail on a garden of flowers. But the dwarfs, less weak than men, do not grow irritated as they do. I am too much above you in mind to feel anger at your acts, whatever they may be. Or all the advantages I have over you there is one that I will carefully keep; it is that of being just. I will send for Bee, and I will ask her if she wishes to follow you. I will do this not because you demand it, but because it is my duty."
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