“A Lost Paradise.” Rose Fairy Book, Andrew Lang, New York: Longmans, Green, 1948, pp. 131-137.

Tale Summary
There once lived a charcoal burner and his wife, who were very poor and destitute. One evening, the king was hunting nearby when he heard sobbing coming from within their hut, and stopped to listen. He learned they were poor and starving, and heard the woman say that it was all the fault of Eve, who should have been like her and not have any desire to know anything. The king was let inside and asked them to come with him to his castle to live as if they were in Paradise if only they obeyed his one condition. As they left, he instructed the woman to lock the door behind her and put the keys in her pocket. They reached the palace after walking several miles, and each was given all sorts of luxurious things that they had never even dreamed of. After bathing in green-marble baths and dressing in fine silks, the two were invited to dinner, when the king told him of his one condition: there was a soup tureen in the middle of the table, and they must not ever lift the lid or it would mean the end of their good fortune. They agreed, but still the woman was curious about what could be inside. For some time the charcoal burner and his wife lived very happily, and on occasion the king came to see them. He would smile at the man who had become rosy and plump, but would sneak a smug look at the woman. She had become quieter, refusing food, and wondered aloud about what was being hidden from them. One day when they were sitting down to eat, she began insisting that they look. The woman persuaded her husband, telling him that the king was too good-natured to turn them away, that no one would even know, that it would only be a peek. He felt that if it would make his wife happy, it was well worth the risk, and so he raised the handle as she leaned in to look. A small mouse sprang out and ran around the room, and although they tried, they could not recapture it. The king entered and ordered the couple to come out from underneath the table where they had hid from him, and told the charcoal burner that they would be escorted back to their hut, and that his wife had the key.
Fairy Tale Title
A Lost Paradise
Fairy Tale Author(s)/Editor(s)
Andrew Lang
Fairy Tale Illustrator(s)
Vera Bock
Common Tale Type
The mouse in the silver jug
Tale Classification
ATU 1416
Page Range of Tale
pp. 131-137
Full Citation of Tale
“A Lost Paradise.” Rose Fairy Book, Andrew Lang, New York: Longmans, Green, 1948, pp. 131-137.
Original Source of the Tale
Tale Notes
Research and Curation
Kaeli Waggener, 2023
Book Title
The Rose Fairy Book
Book Author/Editor(s)
Andrew Lang
Illustrator(s)
Vera Bock
Publisher
Longmans, Green
Date Published
1948
Decade Published
1940-1949
Publisher City
New York
Publisher Country
United States
Language
English
Rights
Copyright not evaluated
Digital Copy
Available at the Internet Archive
Book Notes
Presents a collection of fairy tales from the folklore of France, Italy and Spain