Old Peter's Russian Tales by Arthur Ransome
page 36 of 275 (13%)
page 36 of 275 (13%)
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resting in the hall, with his gold crown on his head and his blue hair
floating round him in the water, and his great body covered with scales lying along the hall. The Tzar of the Sea filled the hall--and there is room in that hall for a village. And there were fish swimming this way and that in and out of the windows. "Ah, Sadko," says the Tzar of the Sea, "you took what the sea gave you, but you have been a long time in coming to sing in the palaces of the sea. Twelve years I have lain here waiting for you." "Great Tzar, forgive," says Sadko. "Sing now," says the Tzar of the Sea, and his voice was like the beating of waves. And Sadko played on his dulcimer and sang. He sang of Novgorod and of the little river Volkhov which he loved. It was in his song that none of the girls of Novgorod were as pretty as the little river. And there was the sound of wind over the lake in his song, the sound of ripples under the prow of a boat, the sound of ripples on the shore, the sound of the river flowing past the tall reeds, the whispering sound of the river at night. And all the time he played cunningly on the dulcimer. The girls of Novgorod had never danced to so sweet a tune when in the old days Sadko played his dulcimer to earn kopecks and crusts of bread. Never had the Tzar of the Sea heard such music. "I would dance," said the Tzar of the Sea, and he stood up like a tall |
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