Beauty and the Beast
astonished. Her brothers embraced her with transports of joy, while her sisters who, to tell the truth, had not overcome their jealousy pretended to be quite as glad. They plied her with a thousand questions, which she answered very good-naturedly, putting aside her own impatience; for she too had a number of questions to ask. To begin with, this house of theirs was not the cottage in which she had left them, but a fine new one her father had been able to buy with the Beast’s presents. If not wealthy, he was in easy circumstances; with the bettering of their fortunes his sisters had found other wooers and were soon to be married; and altogether Beauty had the satisfaction of knowing that she had at least brought prosperity back to her family. ‘As for you, my dearest child,’ said the merchant, ‘when your sisters are married, you shall keep house for your brothers and me, and so my old age will be happy.’
This was all very well, but Beauty had to tell her father that she must leave him again in two months’ time; whereat he broke out into lamentations. ‘Dear father,’ said the sensible girl, ‘it is good of you to weep; but it is useless, and I would
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