
In a quiet cottage on the edge of an ancient forest, a young mother spends her evenings by the hearth, dreaming of golden castles while the fire crackles and her baby coos. The surrounding woods are alive with whispered legends of the Ouphe—a reclusive woodland keeper who once ruled the trees, marking those he allowed to fall and hoarding strange, green ash‑keys. These fables linger in the air, coloring the simple life of those who harvest timber and tend to the land.
One chilly night a weather‑worn stranger appears at the door, seeking warmth and a place at the fire. He speaks of distant places, of hawthorn trees white as snow, and of cranes wading among water‑lilies, his words weaving a subtle magic that both comforts and unsettles his host. As the woman prepares a modest meal, the stranger’s curious gaze lingers on the humble kettle and the modest loaf, hinting at deeper stories hidden within the forest’s shadowy borders.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (118K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2007-04-08
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1820–1897
A bestselling Victorian poet and novelist in her own lifetime, she was especially admired for vivid narrative poems and warmly imaginative writing for children. Her work ranged from lyrical verse to fiction, with a gift for storytelling that made her widely popular in the 1860s and beyond.
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