Page:The queen's museum, and other fanciful tales.djvu/49

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

'Tell me how you came to know what it was that would interest my people.'

'I asked them,' said the Stranger. 'That is to say, I arranged that they should be asked.'

'That was well done,' said the Queen; 'but it is a great pity that my long labors in their behalf should have been lost. For many years I have been a collector of button-holes; and there was nothing valuable or rare in the line of my studies of which I had not an original specimen or a facsimile. My agents brought me from foreign lands, even from the most distant islands of the sea, button-holes of every kind; in silk, in wool, in cloth of gold, in every imaginable material, and of those which could not be obtained careful copies were made. There was not a duplicate specimen in the whole collection; only one of each kind; nothing repeated.