Riquet with the Tuft
“Riquet
with the Tuft” (French: Riquet à la Houppe), also known as “Ricky of
the Tuft”, is a French literary fairy tale was first published by
Charles Perrault in Histoires ou Contes du Temps Passé in 1697. In
the version by Charles Perrault, a fairy gives an ugly prince named Ricky
the gift of conferring wit upon the one he loves the best. Prince Ricky of
the Tuft comes to a kingdom with two princesses. The elder one is
beautiful but unintelligent and the younger one is intelligent but ugly.
The elder princess is saddened that her ugly but smart sister receives
more attention than her. One day, as the elder princess was going for a
walk in the forest to ease her sorrow, she is approached by Ricky who had
fallen in love with her after seeing portraits of her that circulated.
Ricky asks how a person so beautiful as she can be so sad, to which she
responds that she is sad because |
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she
is beautiful but lacks intelligence. Ricky then bestows the gift of
intelligence on the elder princess for a promise of marriage. A year
later, Ricky comes to marry her. She refuses on grounds that he cannot
hold her to a promise made before she gained her wisdom. The princess then
tells him that she was gifted at birth with the power to transform her
lover into a beautiful person by the same fairy who helped him. The
princess thinks of all the Prince’s good qualities and at once the
prince is transformed. The king has his daughter married to the prince who
has already made preparations for the wedding. |